Jane can fall in love, and she can joke, but she has uniformly good sense, even better then Lizzie's, at times. She shows this repeatedly, as, for example, when she wonders about what the truth is about Wickham's stories about Darcy. By contrast, Kitty really does not show a serious side of her nature, and there is streak of poor judgment that is clear in her, such as the implication that she knew about Lydia's elopement in advance, but never acted to prevent it.
One example of alliteration in Pride and Prejudice is "doors are never unlocked" from Chapter 50. This phrase repeats the "d" sound.
ive never herd of that book but they should:]
I think that the message of Pride and Prejudice is to never judge someone by first impressions. Darcy and Elizabeth both have very poor first impressions of eachother when they first meet, and yet by the end they in deeply in love!
He is grateful to his brother-in-law but also worried, as he does not know whether he will be able to return the sums he thinks the former must have spent to convince Wickham to marry Lydia. He then vows never to let her visit them and to "lock up" Kitty till her 25th birthday!
Atonement
Yes, in "Pride and Prejudice," Lydia Bennet elopes with George Wickham to Gretna Green, a town in Scotland known for its lenient marriage laws, without her family's knowledge or consent. This scandalous elopement causes much distress and embarrassment for the Bennet family.
There have been many unofficial sequels to Pride and Prejudice that have been published, but Jane Austen never wrote one. However, the BBC did adapt one such fan work, Death Comes to Pemberely, by PD James, into a three part mini-series.
Lizzie never married.
The difference would be the report itself. Elizabeth has a much stronger personality in the book then she does in the movie. As well as in the book the mother is more over the top. Lastly, and most important, in the book they never kiss on the lips, and in the movie they do (Which may seem small, but it's symbolism, and it's pretty much all about the problem of the novel and exagerates the thyme.)As well as the report it's self is the difference would be the fact that the is much more detailed conversation in the book than the movie. There is also the sheer fact that movies never do grip a book entirely because most movies can't have everything books do(because the time of a movie has to be reasonable.)
Darcy initially disapproved of Elizabeth Bennet's family, particularly her mother and younger sisters, due to their lack of propriety and social status. He also had a dislike towards Mr. Wickham, who he believed was dishonest and had wronged him in the past.
All I can find on the 1938 Pride and Prejudice was that it was a television production. Almost none of the early television productions are unavailable, as they were nearly never recorded. There is a link to the only reference to the 1938 production I have seen below.