Mr. Darcy Is the Original "If He Wanted To, He Would"
I'm not ashamed to admit it: Pride and Prejudice is my entire personality right now.
What I am a little ashamed to admit is that I hadn't read it until now, at 37, with a B.A. in English and almost ten years in book publishing on my resume. I spent a decade selling other people's stories, and somehow the most famous love story in the English language just sat there, waiting for me to have no professional reason to pick it up.
TBH, I've always been a little intimidated by the classics. Call it PTSD from reading for school, and then for work, for fifteen-plus years straight, but the "must-reads" everyone referenced always felt more like things I should want to read than things I actually did. So they piled up. And I let them.
Then I finally picked it up, crushed it in a week, and my takeaway? Everything they said. All of it. Completely true.
And Mr. Darcy — look, the man is the original "if he wanted to, he would." A hero who had to earn it. A woman who turned down the wrong proposal, held out for actual mutual respect, and didn't apologize for either. Written by someone who rejected a perfectly respectable marriage proposal herself, published under a pen name because that was the only way she could get the words out at all.
Austen knew exactly what women wanted and exactly what they deserved. She just put it on paper two hundred years before we had the language for it.