The town of WHAT?After the WHAT-shire?It wasn't clear what the fuck happened when Elizabeth first found out Wickham wasn't as good as he looked either. And another part about sisters sending each other letters that can't be made public because of "lines under the words" or such again wasn't clear what was happening. There is no note explaining what it means, it may mean something sexual but it's a bad way to add such detail to the story. I'm reading the Pseudguin Classics of Pride and Prejudice. I skipped the introduction because it contains spoiler. Is it worth reading after I finish the book? Is there something valuable in it? In my experience unless it's about the historical context of such novels, it's just shitty analysis of the text with little to no value.Despite such faulty writing it's undeniably a good book. But it may have been better a more modern text, I don't understand maybe up to 5% of the text I am reading.
>>24924785Sorry for the turned pic btw. The people who made my Samsung phone are braindead idiots.
broke my neck reading
>>24924785I mean both of these questions completely genuinely: how old are you, and is this the first novel you've read from this time period?
>>24924785Are you retarded? It's written right there: the town of ———. Also, learn to flip your fucking pictures, retardcunt.>tfw ywn have slow anal sex with lydia while she rambles about bonnets and officers
>>24926524>>24926103Don't evade the question in the OP, idiots. None of your answer have any value, seething pseuds.
>>24924785>why is a book written during the Naploleonic Wars delberately vague about troop movements