Bennett described an unrestrained explanation about today's society. However, he seems to be just trying to draw sorrow from readers. He mentioned the most heinous crime, the extreme situation, and the attempt to take over it as a normal phenomenon of society. He repeatedly said "We have problems" again and again. Some of the circumstances he said is considered a social deviation, but most societies are like this. He is very worried about children born unmarried.
Elizabeth Bennett - the hero of this novel. Mr. Bennett's second daughter, Elizabeth, is the wisest and most sensible among the five Bennett sisters. She reads very well, is quick and smart, and because of her strength her tongue is too sharp. Her basic understanding of Darcy eventually defeated her first prejudice against him. Mr. Darcy - a wealthy gentleman, the protagonist of Pemberley, and the nephew of Mrs. Catherine De Boer. Darcy is smart and sincere, but his excessive pride despises his social disadvantage. In the process of the novel, he relaxed the consciousness of the class, learned to appreciate her love for her strong personality and love.
What is bothering me most is the serious social difference between the Bennet family and Darcy. In this book, Bennett is a gentleman of the land and owns a mansion, but this does not mean that it suffered an economic loss. Mr. Bennet has no son, so the heritage will interact with the closest male relatives when he died. Mr. Collins was the relative of a man closest to his father, so he inherited the mansion. A gentleman in the land is usually a gentleman farmer, and I am getting most of my income from a working house. The majority of gentlemen are second, third and fourth sons of nobility, but not all. Darcy is a gentleman and is directly related to a family called a nobleman. Mr. Bennett has nothing to do with famous families, but from long gentlemen. Strictly speaking, Bennet and Darcy are in socially same position, Darcy is more prominent in the hierarchy.