Question Home

Position:Home>Arts & Humanities> Becky from "Vanity Fair"?


Question:

Becky from "Vanity Fair"?

Why is she "guilty" and Rawdon if good, at the end? He accepted the governorship, so he is no better than a pimp. Why such a double standard? At the least, they should both be guilty.

Additional Details

1 week ago
I thought more of him using the governorship after all, and everyone
calls him "reformed" and "nice man", and she is "guilty". If he was so
nice and wonderful, he should not have had accepted that. Instead he
played reluctant and made others to persuade him. If he was "nice" he
had to deny. Otherwise, either he knew or not, the acceptance made him
a pimp.


Best Answer - Chosen by Asker: 1 week ago
I thought more of him using the governorship after all, and everyone
calls him "reformed" and "nice man", and she is "guilty". If he was so
nice and wonderful, he should not have had accepted that. Instead he
played reluctant and made others to persuade him. If he was "nice" he
had to deny. Otherwise, either he knew or not, the acceptance made him
a pimp.