bodice, 1615-18 by unknown designer
this bodice is made of linen, embroidered with silk thread
this bodice can be found in: Glasgow Museums

Kiana Khansmith

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@linmeiwei
bodice, 1615-18 by unknown designer
this bodice is made of linen, embroidered with silk thread
this bodice can be found in: Glasgow Museums

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oh okay
real asf
After reading Emma, I was really surprised to notice (well, maybe not that surprised, given Austen's lack of physical description) that Emma's hair color is never actually specified in the novel. So... the blonde hair is just an adaptations thing?
How did this come to happen? I'm really intrigued by this!!!!
Adaptation consistency is so interesting across the others too (not complete consistency since there have been brunette Emmas): Jane Bennet tends to be fair and Elizabeth darker, Darcy is generally not blond⌠I guess one adaptation sets the visual language compellingly and then the others follow!
Rewatching the 1996 Emma (the Goop one) to celebrate Jane Austenâs 250th birthday (happy birthday, Jane!) and itâs struck me how Emma tells George Knightley practically every thought that flows through her headâŚand he still loves her.
As my flatmate says, thereâs no accounting for taste.
The Other Bennet Sister ~ Text Posts [16/?]

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Interior of a Drawing Room, Anonymous, Italian, 1838, watercolor.
Thought this might help others who struggle when writing. I know I get in my head too much.
Girls just wanna have fun
I canât get over Emma in this bit of the novel, after she discovers that not only is Frank Churchill engaged to Jane Fairfax but that Harriet isnât fussed about it in the least, and she turns out to be wrong about pretty much everything she had ever thought:
How Emmaâs predictions/schemes score by that point in the novel:
1. Mr and Mrs Weston: (dubious) 1
2. Harriet and Mr Elton: 0
3. Mr Elton and herself: 0
4. Herself and Frank Churchill: 0
5. Frank Churchill and Jane Fairfax: (emphatic) 0
6. Mr Knightley and Jane Fairfax: (generous) 1
7. Everything she ever thought about the Martins and their motivations: 0
8. Mr Knightley and herself: (at this point in the novel) 0
9. Harriet and Mr Knightley: 0
You begin to have doubts?
đ
Here is wishing everyone just a sprinkle of Emma Woodhouseâs self-belief!
Just reading Emma again and coming to this passage again and still it makes me laugh out loud.

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Do you ever wonder what Darcy thought his marriage with Elizabeth would look like when he proposed the first time?
Like, did he think she would just keep insulting him and that would be fine? Or what?
That is indeed fun to think about! Because the narrator gives us a few glimpses into his head, but not too many, so we get to imagine a lot.
Elizabeth has never insulted him to his face before the first proposal, though, so he's definitely not gonna think she'll do that in their marriage. That's why he's so shocked when she does insult him in her rejectionâshe has never done it before.
Unlike the rest of the Bennets save Jane, Elizabeth is polite and follows social etiquette. She only skates on the line of impertinence in a way that simply comes off as playful banter and teasing. She openly disagrees with Darcy sometimes, but that is not the same thing as insulting him, and never does it to him in an overtly rude way. Even when she tells him his flaw is to hate everyone, I don't think that has to be read as an insult, just flirting, because he smiles at her when she says it and immediately afterwards thinks he was too attentive to her. To him in these moments, they're either just having a discussion or flirting, and at worst she seems annoyed with him a couple times, no big deal.
Now, Elizabeth herself does insult her manners at the end, but she's doing it in a playful self-deprecating flirty way, and Darcy obviously doesn't agree with her read of herself, nor do I:
âMy beauty you had early withstood, and as for my mannersâmy behaviour to you was at least always bordering on the uncivil, and I never spoke to you without rather wishing to give you pain than not. Now, be sincere; did you admire me for my impertinence?â âFor the liveliness of your mind I did.â âYou may as well call it impertinence at once. It was very little less...
The only characters that think that Elizabeth has bad manners are Miss Bingley, Mrs. Hurst, and Lady Catherine, and we certainly can't take their reads as being fair ones!
In fact, not only does Elizabeth not insult Darcy, but there are times when Elizabeth actually says seemingly nice things about him in front of his face, such as when she calls him "a man of sense and education," says he is "all politeness," or comes to his defense when Mrs. Bennet starts insulting him at Netherfield during Jane's illness. Elizabeth also says things to him which seem very flirty, like when she turns down his offer to dance a reel in the cutest way possible.
So, to go back to your original question, OP, about what Darcy thought his marriage with Elizabeth would be like, he probably thought they would continue to have spirited discussions in which she sometimes disagreed with him and sometimes teased him, which sounds fun, and overall she would be affectionate to him because he's seen she has a loving heart toward her family, and thus everything would be unicorns and rainbows đ
Which makes it sooo delicious when she turns him down and he gets to find out he was utterly wrong đ
Ironically, I think their marriage would indeed be like that fantasy version after the second proposal though!
Recent Period Drama Starter Kit:
Earth tones, "Mood lighting" (I can't see a thing), torture lace ups, and beach waves
Even Ben Fensome did a parody of the Sense and Sensibility trailer.
Accurate

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Smiling Bats
Bodleian Library, MS. Ashmole 304; 13th century; England, St. Albans; f.47v
I love them so much.
Everyone loves to doodle Bat
Spitalfields brocaded silk dress c.1885, the fabric c.1765
Kerry Taylor Auctions