Even without considering her strong male characters, Austen's novels are highly instructive for men. The mere fact that her novels give men an opportunity to see romance through the eyes of an uncommonly perceptive woman should be enough to recommend them. Even if we men do not want to see courtship through a woman's eyes, who can say we do not need to? She has a strong sense of a man's role in courtship and his responsibility for the course that a courtship takes. More than one male character in her novels proves himself a scoundrel by playing with the affections of a woman. Austen's first rule of courtship is one I have frequently repeated to my sons: Men are responsible not only for behaving honorably toward women but also for the woman's response; if a man does not intend to enter a serious relationship, he has no business giving a woman special attention or encouraging her to attach herself to him. Austen sees clearly that men who play with a woman's affections are fundamentally egotistical. They want the admiration and attention of women without promising anything or making any commitment. Few lessons of courtship are more needed in our own day (19).
"Let us cross over the river and rest under the shade of the trees." - T.J. "Stonewall" Jackson
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
First Rule of Courtship
Excerpt from Peter J. Leithart's Miniatures and Morals: The Christian Novels of Jane Austen. I know I will circle back to this in a few years. My son is three but I already know I will frame future conversations around this "first rule of courtship."
Labels:
Courtship,
Jane Austen,
Peter J. Leithart,
Training Children
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