What can Jane Austen teach us about heartbreak 250 years later?

Jane and pain go hand in hand

Lesson Two: But don’t hold all your emotions inside either

Lesson Three: Love doesn’t always conquer all… sometimes money matters

Lesson Four: Sometimes second chances do work

In Persuasion, the 27-year-old Anne Elliot has all but given up on love. Her family persuaded her to ‘breakup’ with her first love, Wentworth, because they did not consider him to be of a high enough socioeconomic status. Eight years later, however, Wentworth is back in her life – as a high-earning naval captain. But is there any chance he would take her back? 

Compared to the flighty Marianne, Heather Thomas sees Anne as a much more Austen-approved example. She shows that “you could be heartbroken, but you could carry on”. While Anne isn’t exactly warbling All By Myself with a bottle of wine in hand (à la Bridget Jones), fans may contest that she doesn’t exactly “carry on” either. She quite literally spends the entire book unable to move on.

For modern Austen fans, this struggle to get over past loves is equally enduring. Asmaani was so inspired by Anne’s inability to move on that she decided to give her now boyfriend a second chance. 

She met him during Freshers Week and the pair got together. Feeling embarrassed she warned him “don’t talk to me again”, a request made all the more difficult by the fact that they were tutorial partners. A few days later he came back, asking her to give it another shot, and the pair are still together years later. “I guess what Anne Elliot experienced in eight years I experienced in eight days,” she jokes.

Lesson Five: There is always hope