Letter from my terrace in Palma 30 'Five proposals of marriage'
Five
proposals of marriage
Jane
Austen’s ‘Pride and Prejudice’ is noted for its opening sentence: ‘It is a
truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good
fortune must be in want of a wife.” It should also be famous for its three
proposals of marriage. They were all made to Elizabeth Bennet.
First,
there is Mr Collins’s pompous proposal, more like a sermon than a declaration
of love. In fact, love does not come into it. He begins, “My reasons for
marrying are, first…” and so he goes on for a page or so. It gets worse rather than better.
Then
there is Darcy’s first proposal, which was absolutely disastrous. It received
Elizabeth’s famous reply ‘You are mistaken, Mr Darcy, if you suppose that the
mode of your declaration affected me in any other way, than as it spared me the
concern which I might have felt in refusing you, had you behaved in a more
gentlemanlike manner.’ Accusing him of not being a gentleman was a deadly blow
indeed. But how skilfully she speaks!
What a complex sentence to form and deliver in the heat of the moment!
Next
comes Darcy’s second attempt, and we have to wait till the end of the novel to
have it. Elizabeth thanks him for everything he has done to help her family. He
asks her to forget about her family. She was all he was thinking of. He then
says, “If your feelings are still what they were last April, tell me so at
once. My affections and wishes are unchanged; but one word from you will
silence me on this subject for ever.” It is brief and to the point. But it is
successful. Between his two proposals
Darcy has changed and Elizabeth has changed too, both for the better.
Less
famous are two other proposals which have beauty because they are from the
heart. They are made by men unused to expressing themselves well or even
expressing themselves much at all.
The
first is the proposal of Captain Fraser to Poppy Tyrell in the novel ‘A Master
of Craft’ by W. W. Jacobs and published in 1901. Around the turn of the19th to the 20th
century Jacobs wrote several novels and short stories about seafaring men and
their adventures when in London between voyages. The short stories are still
worth reading. Try the collection called ‘Many Cargoes’.
For
many, many pages Fraser has not mentioned his feelings for Poppy because she
has been elusive and reticent.
Finally,
they have been talking together hesitantly with long pauses of silence, neither
having the courage to say what is really on their mind. Then Fraser decides to
leave.
“I
wanted to say something before I went,” said Fraser, slowly, as he paused at
the street door, “and I will say it.”
Miss
Tyrell, raising her eyebrows somewhat at his vehemence, waited patiently.
“I
have loved you from the moment I saw you,” said Fraser, “and I shall go on
loving you till I die. Goodbye.”
He
pressed her hand again, and walked down the little front garden into the
street. At the gate he paused and looked round at Poppy still standing in the
lighted doorway; he looked round again a few yards down the street, and again
farther on. The girl still stood there; in
the momentary glimpse he had of her he fancied that her arm moved. He came back
hastily, and Miss Tyrell regarded him with unmistakable surprise.
“I
thought – you beckoned me,” he stammered.
“Thought
I beckoned you?” repeated the girl.
“I
thought so” murmured Fraser. “I beg your pardon,” and turned confusedly to go
again.
“So I
did,” said a low voice.
The
last proposal is from a timid Dane to a pretty Italian woman who has been
longing for him to muster his courage and ask her to marry him. Jorgen Mortensen finally proposes to Giulia
at the end of the Danish film ‘Italian for Beginners’. The film was written and directed by Lone
Scherfig and was first shown in 2000.
A
little context here. Jorgen Mortensen is shy and one of those good people who
is not gifted in anything except his honesty. He lives in a city in Denmark
where he meets Giulia who is working as a waitress. Along with the other people whose stories are
told in the film Jorgen attends classes of Italian for beginners. At the end of
the film the whole group go to visit Venice and there Jorgen finally makes his
proposal and here it is.
“Giulia,
I know you don’t understand what I’m saying, but I’m going to say it anyway. I
am 10 years older than you, and I’m not really any good at anything. I don’t
have any family anymore. I’m not good at my job. I don’t have any hobbies,
except for taking Italian lessons. I don’t really have an ear for languages. I
can’t even say anything to you in Italian. I think I’m probably a bit boring.
And I certainly don’t have as much personality as you do. And, as for sex, I’m
not really comfortable with it anymore. I know that you don’t understand what
I’m saying, but if I don’t say it now, I’ll never say it.
I love
you, Giulia. And I’d like to be with you forever. I would like to have children
with you, and I want to see you get older and become old. I will love you every single day from when I
wake up until we sleep together at night. I would like to marry you, Giulia.”
In
fact, Giulia understands him much more that he thinks, and all ends well.
In its
simple way, that it is powerful. Very powerful. There’s no need for fine words
if you speak from the heart.
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