Humour in 'Pride and Prejudice'

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How is humour shown in a) Mr. Collins

                   b) Mr.Collins’s character?

Humour is a key theme in the novel “Pride and Prejudice.”  It plays a major role in entertaining the reader and providing important characteristics and features of the characters in the novel.  Humour is shown in the responses of characters towards one another and the episdary style, which creates humour as it is written from the point of view of the character rather than the style in which the rest of the novel is written in.  

In chapters 1-20 the reader learns about the character of Mr.Collins.

        Mr.Bennet’s estate brings him two thousand pounds a year, but on his death a distant male relative, Mr.Collins, will inherit both his estate and this income.  In chapter 13, Mr.Bennet receives a letter from Mr.Collins in which Mr.Collins informs Mr.Bennet that he will be joining them for dinner.  In his letter, Mr.Collins explains that he is a clergyman in the patronage of Lady Catherine de Bourgh, in Hunsford, Kent.  He hints a way of resolving the problem of entailment and proposes to visit the family for a week.

        Jane Austin’s use of the letter in chapter 13 is a very clever introduction to the character of Mr.Collins as it gives the reader a brief insight to his character even before the reader meets him. The letter reveals Mr.Collins as a person with an astonishing pomposity.  We also learn that he is artificial, haughty, proud and very self-important.

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“I flatter myself that my present overtures of good will are highly recommended.”

The pedantically worded letter reveals Mr.Collins’s artificiality.

        Furthermore, humour is conveyed in Mr.Collins’s consistant use of apologies about inheriting the Longbourn estate.

        

“I cannot be otherwise than concerned at being the means of injuring your amiable daughters, and beg leave to aplogise for it, as well as to assure you of my readiness to make them every possible amends- but of this hereafter.”  Chapter 13.

This may have seemed very comical to the reader as Mr.Collins feels that his apology will make the ...

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