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      <title>My épico stream by Fra Teddy</title>
      <link>https://padlet.com/teddy_star47/p616d6t5j7ro</link>
      <description>Hecho con carisma</description>
      <language>en-us</language>
      <pubDate>2017-05-17 16:18:27 UTC</pubDate>
      <lastBuildDate>2017-05-17 16:19:16 UTC</lastBuildDate>
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         <title>REVIEW OF &quot;PRIDE AND PREJUDICE&quot;</title>
         <author>teddy_star47</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/teddy_star47/p616d6t5j7ro/wish/172378491</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<div>In Longbourne, England lives with Mrs. Bennet withluxurious  five daughters.
<br>Major Jane is beautiful and sensitive, the second intelligent and spiritual Elisabeth.
<br>At the Bennet in the lodge of Netherfield Park, the wealthy Bingley bachelor moves, who is in love with Jane's recipe. Suddenly though, Bingley returns to London and breaks every relationship with Jane.
<br>The break between Jane and Bingley is attributed by Elisabeth to Darcy, an aristocratic friend of Bingley, who, still attracted by Elisabeth, has always watched with detachment and superiority the Bennet family of modest social extravaganza and with her disgusting ways aroused in the girl's feelings of aversion. In addition, Wickham, Bingley's friend and Elisabeth's little sisters, offered her a negative image of Darcy.
<br>Elisabeth therefore rejects outrageously the marriage proposal that Darcy does in spite of her reservations with regard to the Bennet.
<br>Time passes and Darcy has the opportunity to show Elisabeth his true nature of the aristocratic gentleman.
<br>When Elisabeth comes to know that her sister Lydia has fled with Wickham, he helps her find her and pledges her to get married. At her second marriage proposal Elisabeth can only consent. The misunderstandings between Bingley and Jane are also clarified, and the two engage with Mrs. Bennet's great happiness.
<br>
<br>The limitations of Jane Austen are: all of her plots are similar and repetitive (marriages, ballets, gossip: Jane Austen’s little world); her works don’t show her period, the new literary movement (she was late). But she shows some elements of her time (the movement of Romanticism): Elizabeth is unconventional, she challenged the public opinions, she defends poor people (typically of Romanticism) as Wickham (initially he appears a victim, then he elopes with Lydia). Unlike the Augustan writers she restricted her view to the world of the country gentry.
<br>She was revalued thanks to Virginia Woolf in the 20th century. She lived during the Romanticism. Her life was uneventful.</div>]]></description>
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         <pubDate>2017-05-17 16:18:59 UTC</pubDate>
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