Category: Jane Austen

  • How Badly Would I Survive Longbourn?

    A Modern Woman Tests Jane Austen’s Gold Standard

    I’d last maybe a week in Longbourn before Mrs. Bennet fainted from the scandal. Not because I’d run off with an officer like Lydia, I’d like to think I have better sense, but because I’d open my big modern mouth at the worst possible moment.

    Lizzy Bennet makes it look easy: she refuses a dreadful proposal, spars with Darcy, and still lands a fairytale ending. But if you think every Regency heroine could just say no and skip away free, you’re reading it wrong.

    One thing I love about Pride and Prejudice, and why I use the Bennet sisters as my gold standard for how Regency women should behave, is that Jane Austen wrote women who bent the rules just enough to survive. They didn’t break them carelessly, and when they did? There were real consequences. That tension is what makes the story matter.


    🕰️ The Survival Test: Could I Do What They Did?

    Let’s break it down, sister by sister, because every Bennet girl shows us a different survival strategy.


    Lizzy Bennet: The Rebel With a Brain

    Lizzy says no to Mr. Collins, huge risk, big reward. Turning down a secure, respectable match when you have no fortune? Unthinkable. She does it because she knows herself, and is just lucky (and clever) enough to catch Darcy’s eye later.

    Would I? I’d want to say no. But with my family’s future hanging over me, would I crumble? Possibly. Lizzy’s defiance works because she stays within the bounds of sense, and the story never forgets that.


    Jane Bennet: The Angel

    Sweet, reserved Jane survives by being flawless. She’s pretty, gentle, careful not to show too much feeling too soon, and almost loses Bingley because of it. But she knows the rules: don’t scare him off, don’t look desperate. Be gracious, be good.

    Would I? Absolutely not. One glass of punch and I’d be sarcastic about the entire assembly. Jane’s sweetness is a discipline all its own.


    Charlotte Lucas: The Realist

    Not technically a Bennet, but vital. Charlotte says yes to Collins, a man Lizzy rejects in disgust, because at 27 with no beauty or money, she knows exactly what the world expects of her. She chooses security over romance and never complains.

    Would I? If I were trapped? Probably yes. And I’d redecorate that parsonage every day to make up for the company.


    Lydia Bennet: The Warning

    Lydia’s freedom is pure recklessness. She runs away with Wickham for the fun of it, not realizing she’s dragging her entire family’s reputation into ruin. If Darcy hadn’t stepped in, the Bennets would have been social outcasts forever.

    Would I? Probably not Wickham, but I see how easy it is to make bad decisions when you’re sure you’re too clever for consequences. Lydia’s lesson: rebellion without a plan is ruin.


    Kitty Bennet: The Follower

    Kitty has no plan at all, she’s just swept along by Lydia’s boldness. She giggles at soldiers, copies Lydia’s mischief, and nearly goes down with her if not for family intervention. She’s proof that drifting through life is a survival tactic, but not a safe one.

    Would I? Honestly? If I didn’t have the backbone for Lizzy’s boldness, or the goodness for Jane’s charm, I’d probably hide behind a stronger sister and hope to stay out of trouble.


    Mary Bennet: The Misfit

    Mary tries to survive by being virtuous, or at least sounding like she is. She moralizes, lectures, and plays dreadful piano solos when no one wants them. She’s so desperate to be noticed for her “goodness” that she makes herself invisible instead.

    Would I? Some days, yes. If I were overlooked at home, I’d probably hide in books and sermons too. Mary’s safety comes from being irrelevant, not exactly inspiring, but effective.


    🎭 The Real Stakes

    The magic of Pride and Prejudice is that every one of these girls plays the hand she’s dealt, and the cost of each choice is real. There’s no modern fairytale fix. You can’t slam the door on a dull suitor and then open an Etsy shop to pay the bills. You can’t run away and expect your family to shrug it off. Choices ruin you, or save you, but they always matter.


    🗝️ My Gold Standard

    So here’s my personal survival test, and the lens I’ll use for every adaptation, retelling, and modern twist I watch this year:

    ✨ Does it remember the stakes?
    ✨ Does it honor how tight the rules were?
    ✨ Does it earn its bold heroines the way Austen’s did?

    If not? It’s just playing dress-up.


    📌 Coming Next

    So here we go: I’m rereading the novel, then watching every adaptation I can get my hands on, from BBC classics to modern reimaginings, wet shirts, bad wigs, Hallmark chaos, maybe even zombies. And through it all, I’ll keep asking: How badly would I survive Longbourn?

    The answer: probably not long.
    The fun part: finding out who does better, and who deserves to be thrown out of Meryton for scandal.

    Tea’s on, book’s open. See you soon.


    Tell Me Yours!

    How long would you last in the Bennet house? Who’s your Regency survival twin: Lizzy, Jane, Lydia, or maybe poor Mary? Drop it in the comments on my Facebook page, and brace yourself for my next overly opinionated rant.