Benedict’s offer of Sophie to be his mistress is critical to Bridgerton Season 4. Leading up to this season, there has been a lot of discussion about whether this part of Benedict and Sophie’s story should be removed. Bridgerton Season 4, Episode 4, “An Offer From a Gentleman,” makes plenty of changes to how the offer plays out in Julia Quinn’s An Offer From a Gentleman.
Most notably, Benedict’s approach is entirely different. It’s less hostile or manipulative and more generous (from his perspective) and sensitive. Not to mention, this season has conversations about mistresses, their place in society, and their impact on those in it across the four episodes in Part 1. Using the book as a launchpad, Bridgerton makes its own argument for the offer’s purpose, and it’s compelling and necessary.
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On its surface, the offer creates conflict for Benedict and Sophie that is directly tied to their interclass romance. Like the other three seasons, this one will end with a Happily Ever After. To get there, the storytelling must have an arc, and conflict is a key component in that. Without it, the show would be quite boring, and the characters wouldn’t experience much growth.
The offer comes at the best time in the story and the season’s structure. Bridgerton Season 4, Episode 1, “The Waltz,” leans into the fantasy with the Lady in Silver and the masquerade ball. Bridgerton Season 4, Episode 2, “Time Transfixed,” gives Benedict and Sophie distance to understand their motivations. Benedict and Sophie, not under the disguise of the Lady in Silver, get to know and fall for each other in Bridgerton Season 4, Episode 3, “The Fields Next to the Other Road.”
Through the socioeconomic lens, those episodes gradually elevate the conflict and tension. In “An Offer From a Gentleman,” there are multiple moments where the writing and Luke Thompson’s performance make it abundantly clear that the idea of Sophie becoming his mistress is bopping around Benedict’s head. That only works for the character and the story because of all that comes before it.
There’s also Netflix splitting this season into two halves. What bigger cliffhanger is there than an offer that turns everything between the season’s leads on its head? Readers of Quinn’s book will know, broadly, what’s coming. Still, this offer is a big place to leave Benedict and Sophie for Bridgerton’s month-long hiatus. It encapsulates their interclass romance. Benedict’s offer for Sophie to be his mistress is merely a flimsy band-aid to a much larger conflict for them individually and as a pair.
What the Offer Means for Sophie
Will Mondrich clearly describes the issue by saying, “We must marry according to class, but we don’t always love that way.” Different classes and romance are circles that cannot overlap in a “good” society. The only way that Bridgerton can make an offer that seemingly subverts the rules of said society is to show and tell its implications for both Sophie and Benedict. It does so from the masquerade ball in “The Waltz.” Sophie, a maid and an illegitimate daughter of a nobleman, can only attend – and not work – an event of such prestige by disguising herself.
“Time Transfixed” unpacks that further with details like Sophie not being able to call her father by that title and watching Araminta’s face harden at the sight of the Earl of Penwood’s “ward.” Despite her father’s vow of protection, Araminta works to isolate Sophie long before he dies. Araminta is cruel in saying Sophie commits a crime to dress up as something she’s not, though she is the daughter of an Earl, and calls her an “error” and someone “beyond hope.”
Araminta’s treatment of Sophie only escalates in turning Sophie’s perception of her mother upside down. Still, she keeps a connection to her mother through a necklace that is consistent in the constant upheaval. But, according to Araminta, Sophie’s mother “let herself become a mistress.” That language is specifically hurtful; it blames Sophie’s mother instead of realizing the power dynamics between her and Sophie’s father. To twist the knife, Araminta says that Sophie’s mother only believed that her father loved her. There’s no wonder why, particularly in the grief of her parents, Sophie sees that the dream of more in life and love is ill-fated. As an illegitimate daughter, she is bound to have nothing more than her mother – no title, dignity, or husband.
So, of course, she clings to the position of a maid because any livelihood becomes everything. “The Fields Next to the Other Road” Mrs. Crabtree reminds that even a rumor that “she has been defiled by a gentleman…could ruin her reputation for life.” Therefore, her livelihood depends on her reputation. Then, in “An Offer From a Gentleman,” Mrs. Wilson says that mistresses don’t live in the ton, and it “would not like to associate with a house of that kind.” So, not only can Sophie understand what her mother must have dealt with, she knows what is expected of her. By the time Benedict makes what he believes to be a grand gesture, Sophie’s reaction is entirely earned.
So, of course, she clings to the position of a maid because any livelihood becomes everything. “The Fields Next to the Other Road” Mrs. Crabtree reminds that even a rumor that “she has been defiled by a gentleman…could ruin her reputation for life.” Therefore, her livelihood depends on her reputation. Then, in “An Offer From a Gentleman,” Mrs. Wilson says that mistresses don’t live in the ton, and it “would not like to associate with a house of that kind.” So, not only can Sophie understand what her mother must have dealt with, she knows what is expected of her. By the time Benedict makes what he believes to be a grand gesture, Sophie’s reaction is entirely earned.