Being in a certain environment could make or break you, it could change the person you are as well as the people you may surround yourself with. In Oscar Wildeś The Importance of Being Earnest the setting plays a massive part of the story for two reason. One of the reasons is the main character acted as two completely different people in various settings of the story; just as the setting changes the main character, it also changes the people around when they observe the two different sides of him.
Known as Jack in the country, Ernest in the city. He escapes country life by pretending to have a brother, Ernest, who continuously gets into trouble in the city and requires his assistance. He is the guardian of Cecily and wants to marry Gwendolen, but is not allowed to because her mother does not approve of his being found as an infant in Victoria Station, which is a train station. Jack in “The Importance of Being Earnest” tells Algernon at the beginning of the play that “when one is in town he amuses oneself. When one is in the country he
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Gwendolen Knows Jack ass and she liked him and I and so does Cecily. So Earnest decided to throw Jack overboard causing him to tell the truth about who he is, now that Gwendolen knows the truth about his real name is she still in love with him? He defends his practice of "Bunburying" as a commonplace among men of his social set. In an article I read it said “When Gwendolen arrives with her formidable mother, Moncrieff steers Lady Bracknell out of the room to leave Worthing and Gwendolen alone. The young woman confesses that she has always wanted to love someone named Ernest, and she refuses to give a thought to any other name such as Jack, telling him, "It does not thrill.” Are people going to like him if he told them who he really was ? Gwendolen will only marry Ernest and without that name she wouldn't marry