But there's no doubt that there are the makings of a great Lady Bracknell in her.
According to the terms of "Earnest," Lady Bracknell is right.
"Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit," says Lady Bracknell.
This Lady Bracknell must have heard me say it on one of my courses.
"I like Lady Bracknell's summary of land," Violet called from the head of the table.
Are these not lines worthy of Lady Bracknell?
Lady Bracknell arrives in pursuit of her daughter.
An octogenarian, Lady Bracknell, is living in an upstairs room.
Lady Bracknell, for instance, embodies respectable, bourgeois society in the play.
Surely they didn't lose both: as Lady Bracknell might have said, that looks like carelessness.