The Last Man In The World Stylistic Analysis

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INTRODUCTION
Jane Austen is a familiar name to general readers and scholars alike. Austen is an unfailing favorite. Familiarity with Austen is not through her text alone, various writers thereafter have taken up the courage to create further sequels and epistolary works to pay their homage to Jane Austen. Among them is the present day writer Jane Dawkins, who pieces together a literary patchwork, quilt to tell the story of Lizzy’s first eventful year as Mrs. Darcy i.e. Letters from Pemberley, published in 2007.
In this continuation of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, one of the best loved novels in the English language, Elizabeth Benet, now Mrs. Darcy and mistress of Pemberley, finds herself living a very different life of wealth and privilege. …show more content…

Fitzwilliam Darcy: The Last Man in the World ' – by Abigail Reynolds (2009)

Conclusion
Edward Said observes, “Interpreting Austen depends on who does the interpreting, when it is done, and no less important where it is done.” As scattered letters in a book, they add flavor. Putting all that aside, one finds that the two books, Letters From Pemberley and More Letters From Pemberley to be filled with wit, humor, and a delightful dj vu to the original Austen work. The key here is insight, and talent, and so readers find themselves greatly enchanted, thoroughly engrossed, and in part, hugely disappointed when they finally came to an end.
Dawkins has very well portrayed ‘Elizabeth’s strategern for survival’, for her wit, repartee and reliance on irony as a shield against the restrictive society as well as against her own vulnerability. This can be easily sensed through the lines;
“Mr. Darcy and Georgiana are both uneasy and shy in social situations outside the family, and their circle is therefore small, so at least I shall be spared the agony of close inspection by a multitude!” Or when she writes;
“So, your sister is to be thrown into one large den of lions rather than several smaller ones and should be suitably grateful for it, I

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