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Love quote of the day by Jane Austen: “A woman is not to marry a man merely because..."

etimes.in | Last updated on - May 26, 2026, 19:24 IST
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1/5

Jane Austen on love and marriage

“A woman is not to marry a man merely because she is asked, or because he is attached to her, and can write a tolerable letter.”— Jane Austen, Emma (1815)
Written over two centuries ago, this line from Jane Austen still feels startlingly modern. It quietly pushes back against the pressure many women—then and now—feel to say “yes” simply because a proposal has been offered, because someone is fond of them, or because they seem “good enough.” For Austen, marriage should not be a reflex to a proposal; it should be a thoughtful, intentional choice.

In her novels, Austen often explores the dangers of marrying for security, status, or convenience. Here, she adds one more layer: don’t marry just because the opportunity is there, or because you’re flattered, or because the man knows how to write a decent letter. A life‑changing decision, in her view, deserves more than momentary comfort or social approval.


2/5

The pressure years haven’t changed

Austen lived in a time when marriage was often treated as a woman’s main path to financial stability and respectability. A proposal, even from a man who wasn’t completely right, might feel like a lucky chance not to be refused. But in this line, she hints that social expectations should not override personal clarity.

Today, the forms of pressure look different, but the urge to comply remains. A woman may feel pushed to say “yes” because her family is eager, her friends are settling down, or she’s worried she “might never get another chance.” Austen’s words are a gentle reminder that fear of being alone, or fear of disappointing others, is not the same as genuine desire.

3/5

Flattery isn’t enough

The second half of the quote is especially cutting: “because he is attached to her, and can write a tolerable letter.” Being cherished and flattered can feel wonderful, but it doesn’t guarantee a healthy, happy marriage. A man may be fond of you, think you’re special, and even be quite charming on paper—yet still lack the maturity, values, or emotional depth that matter in the long run.

Austen suggests that attachment and manners are not enough. A woman should ask: Do I respect him? Do I trust him? Do I want to build a life with him, not just accept his affection? Marrying because someone “likes” you doesn’t guarantee that you’ll feel seen, supported, or safe in the years ahead.

4/5

The quiet independence in Austen’s work

Throughout her novels, Austen champions women who question, delay, and sometimes refuse proposals that would, on the surface, be “sensible” choices. Her famous heroines—Elizabeth Bennet, Emma Woodhouse, Fanny Price—don’t rush into marriage for safety, money, or convenience. They struggle, make mistakes, and grow, but they hold on to the right to choose according to their own standards.

This quote from Emma distills that independence into a clear principle: a woman is not the prize to be claimed by the first acceptable suitor; she’s a person with judgment, taste, and the right to say “not yet” or “not this one.” That quiet insistence on choice is what makes Austen’s love stories feel timeless rather than dated.

5/5

Why this quote is timeless

This insight still hits incredibly hard today because it completely dismantles the old-school pressure to marry early or settle for the first person who asks. It forces women to demand genuine compatibility and mutual respect instead of just feeling flattered that they were "chosen." In a culture that still low-key treats a woman’s relationship status as her ultimate achievement, Jane Austen’s mindset feels like a quiet act of rebellion. It reminds us that turning down a perfectly safe, comfortable option takes serious guts. Saying "yes" to a partner shouldn't be a desperate surrender to societal expectations, financial security, or family pressure—it needs to be a conscious choice to build a life with someone who actually understands your true worth.



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Copyright © Jun 4, 2026, 04.14AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service