Jane Austen’s Letters: Letter 54, Sun, 26 June 1808, from Godmersham


Anna Austen Lefroy, age 25

Dear friends and readers,

This is another longish letter just chock-a-block with diurnal detail of Jane Austen’s life (see letter 53): all that is omitted is (ironically) the three hours in the morning we are told she spent in her apartment at Godmersham: reading and writing.

We do get by implication and explicitly a portrait of Austen’s oldest brother’s family, Mary, her two children (little Caroline as model for Fanny Price), and adolescent Anna rejected and excluded from Godmersham because her stepmother cannot bear to have the child of her husband’s first wife around. It was Anna who supplied letters, who attempted to edit and finish Sandition; the memoir of Austen is a product of these three children, and I suggest they idealize the aunt as a antidote or counter-weight to the stress and alienation they felt going on in their household when they were young.


An idyllic illustration of Steventon graced the front of the 1870 Memoir: how James’s children yearningly saw the house from the vantage of their own hurt memories

The biography of most help for this kind of letter is David Nokes’s Jane Austen, as the core and development of his book depends on a careful analysis of the letters. Thus he picks up, more sympathetically than one would predict:

…it was actually Mrs. J.A. who felt most ill at ease at Godmersham that summer. It was her first visit to the house for more than ten years and, naturally, she made a point of exclaiming how much she was ‘struck with the beauty of the place.’ But the truth was that she felt rather overawed by its grandeur, and her children, too, found it rather daunting. ‘I don’t think I was very happy there, in a strange house’, Caroline recalled. ‘I recollect the model of a ship in a passage, and my cousins’ rabbits out of doors, in or near a long walk of high trees.’ Jane Austen noticed the little girls unease…… ‘Little Caroline looks very plain among her cousins’….& tho’ she is not so headstrong or humoursome as they are, I do not think her at all more engaging.’

Beyond Anna and Caroline, we have Harriot Bridges (Edward’s sister, the woman who opened up to Austen at Goodnestone, married to Mr Moore and frequently openly bullied by Mr Moore. We are told that Harriot “admired Emma very much but MP was her favourite of all’ (LeFaye, p 556n.)

Child-daughter (Anna) and wife (Harriot) abuse are part of this letter.

Also Austen’s continuing concern and identification with older women living alone, mostly impoverished. Mrs Knight (luckily for Jane) is an exception to this rule.

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Silhouettes done later in life by James-Edward Austen-Leigh, ostensibly of Barton Cottage in S&S, it is redolent of idealized memories of Steventon and later Chawton cottage

The letter opens with Austen thanking Cassandra “for writing to me on Thursday, & very glad that I owe the pleasure of hearing from you again, so soon, to such an agreable cause …” The cause of the letter was Frank’s history of himself reaching Jane in the form of a letter from Henry, another brother. Unexpected in the tonal feel but said explicitly is Jane is angry that Frank’s story is transmitted to them by Henry. Why not tell her and Cassandra directly seems to be the idea. Jane has this special relationship with Frank.

The Lefroy letter puts before them a real person, people, not an ideal: there is Frank again. They are glad to hear of his health & safety, and then a quiet ironic statement:”he wants nothing but a good Prize to be a perfect Character.” He is thinking of his wife, Mary Gibson; she shall go to the Isle of Wight to live with Mrs Craven.

Jane professes herself understanding what has not been said: Mary wants time off from her sisters-in-law and mother-in-law and enters into the whole thing too. She apparently hopes her mother will go with Mary. In the event, she didn’t.

I am very unsure about which Mrs Craven this is; if it cannot be Martha and Mary Lloyd’s mother who died in 1773; the Mrs Catherine Hughes Craven (cited in LeFaye, 513) did not live on the Isle of Wight.

Martha is not there and Edward can sleep in that bed when he’s brought Jane home by carriage. I notice that Anna is displaced. Her bed goes for young Edward.

This reminds me of how Margaret Dashwood is un-summarily kicked out of her room to make way for Edward in the 1995 film Emma Thompson (I’ve noticed this before) has read Austen’s letters too. Admittedly, Austen seems not to think of this ejection with compassion for the girl child, only of her delight in seeing Edward’s oldest son. But then her letter will be read by Cassandra, perhaps aloud to Anna, and she does not want to make the girl feel worse.


Silhouettes of deer, also by JEAL when older

The teacher is a Dr Goddard, same name as headmistress in Emma.

Then Austen’s relief at being given a ride and now, when she wants and needs it.

I have been so kindly pressed to stay longer here, in consequence of an offer of Henry’s to take me back some time in September, that not being able to detail all my objections to such a plan, I have felt myself obliged to give Edwd & Elizr one private reason for my wishing to be at home in July.

The private reason is Austen’s having rejected the brother, Catherine and Aletha Bigg’s brother: Harris Bigg-Wither. If the sisters come and find Austen there it will be uncomfortable. We see here how secretive this family was, for Elizabeth and Edward do not know of the pressured proposal. To me this opens up another aspect of these Austens: keep all secret from the outer world, and also from one another if one can.

Then Jane does hope to have Aletha and Catherine’s visit at Castle Sqaure. Even looks forward to her: her “honor as well as my affection is concerned.” She will not drop a friend because she did not marry the friend’s brother. She keeps her loyalties up — that’s more than many people.

I can imagine Mary Crawford uttering this sentence. Elizabeth has said she’d like the Austen women to be at Godmersham for Xmas. “A legacy might make it feasible — a legacy is our sovereign good.

Another reference to the Rev Mr Jefferson: now she has some money she will buy Mr Jefferson’s works. Austen was apparently impressed.

In the mean while, let me remember that I have now some money to spare, & that I wish to have my name put down as a subscriber to Mr Jefferson’s works. My last Letter was closed before it occurred to me how possible, how right, & how gratifying such a measure would be.

I found myself also remembering the touching scene in S&S where Edward says were the Dashwoods to have money he imagines book and music seller stores to be ransacked. Also Erasmus: “When I get a little money I buy books; and if any is left over, I buy food and clothes”

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The Isle of Wight

And now Austen responds to Cassandra’s account of her taking Anna to the Isle of Wight:

Your account of your Visitors good Journey, Voyage, andsatisfaction in everything gave me the greatest pleasure. They have nice weather for their introduction to the Island, & I hope with such a disposition to be pleased, their general Enjoyment is as certain as it will be just. — Anna’s begin interested in the Embrakation shows a Taste that one values. — Mary Jane’s delight in the Water is quite ridiculous. Elizabeth supposes Mrs Hall will account for it, by the Child’s knowledge of her Father’s being at sea

The trip described here is to the Isle of Wight. We can see here that Elizabeth Austen was among those listening to Cassandra’s letter telling of the trip read aloud. Mrs Hall here may be the maidservant at Castle Square (Lefaye, 530) What’s interesting is Austen finds this delight ridiculous; one needs to account for it. The child would be Frank’s daughter, Mary Jane, who was 14 months old. Austen may be laughing at the polite hypocrisies of attributing such feeling to a child.

Austen concludes the opening gambit:

Mrs J. A. hopes as I said in my last, to see my Mother soon after her return home, & will meet her at Winchester on any day, she will appoint. — And now I beleive I have made all the needful replys & communications; & may disport myself as I can on my Canterbury visit.

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The river Stour passes through Canterbury town center

So, disporting herself in her imagination and through writing: a group of those at Godmersham visited a group at Canterbury:

It appears that a group of people from Godmersham went to Canterbury to visit friends there and what’s best was there: “Kindness, conversation & variety, without care or cost”

It was a very agreable visit. There was everything to make it so; Kindness, conversation, & variety, without care or cost. – Mr Knatchbull from Provender’ was at the W Friars when we arrived & staid dinner, which with Harriot- who came as you may suppose in a great hurry, ten minutes after the time-made our number 6.- Mr K. went away early;- Mr Moore & we sat quietly working & talking till 10; when he ordered his wife away, & we adjourned to the Dressing room to eat our Tart & Jelly.-Mr M. was not un-agreable, tho’ nothing seemed to go right with him. He is a sensible Man, & tells a story well

There is also a man bullying and humiliating his wife, Mr Moore orders his wife out of the room! Not un-agreeable?

The following morning:

Mrs C. Knatchhull & I breakfasted tete a tete the next day, for her Husband was gone to Mr Toke’s, & Mrs Knight had a sad headache which kept her in bed. She had had too much company the day before;-after my coming, which was not till past two, she had Mrs M[illes] of Nackington, a Mrs & Miss Gregory, & Charles Graham; & she told me it had been so all the morning.– Very soon after breakfast on friday Mrs C. K. — who is just what we have always seen her-went with me to Mrs Brydges’ & Mrs Moore’s, paid some other
visits while I remained with the latter, & we finished with Mrs C. Milles, who luckily was not at home, & whose new House is a very convenient short cut from the Oaks to the W Friars.

We have to remember that Mrs Knight has supplied Austen with the money she is using and enables her to hold up her head equally with others during such a trip. She is intent on getting time alone to talk with the woman:

We found Mrs Knight up & better-but early as it was ­only 12 o’clock — we had scarcely taken off our Bonnets before com­pany came, Ly Knatchhull & her Mother; & after them succeeded Mrs White, Mrs Hughes & her two Children, Mr Moore, Harriot & Louisa, & John Bridges, with such short intervals between any, as to make it a matter of wonder to me, that Mrs K. & I should ever have been ten minutes alone, or have had any leisure for comfortable
Talk.­Yet we had time to say a little of Everything. — Edward came to dinner, & at 8 o’clock he & I got into the Chair, & the pleasures of my visit concluded with a delightful drive home.

Now recall that the Hughes married into the Cravens (Catherine Hughes married John Craven and their children were the schoolmates of the Austen and Fowler children (LeFaye, 513n.) The Bridges are those who in earlier letters welcomed Austen to Goodnestone Farm and include as a clan Edward to whom Austen has been attracted and who has been kind to her, making her feel less humble and genuinely wanted.

Mrs & Miss Brydges seemed very glad to see me. – The poor old Lady looks much as she did three years ago, & was very particular in her enquiries after my Mother; ­And from her, & from the Knatchhulls, I have all manner of kind Compliments to give you both.

On the letter writing: there seems to be in Austen’s mind the idea she and Cassanda will be able to return to these texts later to compare letters and remember:

As Fanny writes to Anna by this post, I had intended to keep my Letter for another day, but recollecting that I must keep it two, I have resolved rather to finish & send it now. The two letters will not interfere I dare say; on the contrary, they may throw light on each other.

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Jane’s focus returns to the doings at Godmersham

Mary begins to fancy, because she has received no message on the subject, that Anna does not mean to answer her Letter; but it must be for the pleasure of fancying it. —

Elizabeth Austen has now given signs all was not well:

I think Elizth better & looking better than when we came. — Yesterday I introduced James to Mrs Inman;–in the evening John Bridges returned from Goodnestone–& this morning before we had left the Breakfast Table we had a visit from Mr Whitfield, whose object I imagine was principally to thank my Eldest Brother for his assistance. Poor Man! – he has now a little intermission of his excessive solicitude on his wife’s account, as she is rather better. – James does Duty at Godmersham today.

I think of George Eliot’s Lydgate with his sensitivity and high ideals and how Rosamond Vincy with her narrow obtuse mind mastered him. Poor James indeed.-

I note the Knatchbulls keep coming up. Eventually Fanny Austen Knight was to marry in and the group be part of the Austens’ claim on higher gentility and promotions. Amid a new welter of detail, Austen’s genuine concern for Mrs Knight comes out

The Knatchbulls had intended coming here next week, but the Rentday makes it impossible for them to be received, & I do not think there will be any spare time afterwards. They return into Somersetshire by way of Sussex & Hants, & are to be at Fareham-& perhaps may be in Southampton, on which possibility I said all that I thought right-& if they are in the place, Mrs K[night]. has promised to call in Castle Square; ­it will about the end of July. — She seems to have a pros­pect however of being in that Country again in the Spring for a longer period, & will spend a day with us if she is.-
You & I need not tell each other how glad we shall be to receive attention from, or pay it to anyone connected with Mrs Knight. – I cannot help regretting that now, when I feel enough her equal to relish her society, I see so little of the latter. —

More of the same:

The Milles’ of Nackington dine here on friday & per­haps the Hattons. — It is a compliment as much due to me, as a call from the Filmers. — When you write to the Island, Mary will be glad to have Mrs Craven informed with her Love that she is now sure it will not be in her power to visit Mrs Craven during her stay there, but that if Mrs Craven can take Steventon in her way back, it will be giving my brother & herself great pleasure.-

The Milles are another clergyman family; the Hattons the wealthy people at Eastwell who meant to make Austen feel welcome. the Filmers a baronet family, also owning a big estate, and perhaps friends with the Hattons. Mary Austen is all politeness to Mrs Craven (Arnie Perlstein claims this is the Catherine Hughes who was struggling against her marriage), but note her sarcasm over Frank’s wife’s keeping her distance from Frank as well as his family:

Namesake is an irony; Mary Gibson Austen was not named after Mary
Lloyd Austen:

She also congratulates her name­sake on hearing from her Husband.- That said namesake is rising in the World;-she was thought excessively improved in her late visit.­ Mrs Knight thought her so, last year.

Henry’s health (he falls very sick in 1816):

Henry sends us the welcome information of his having had no face-ache since I left them. You are very kind in mentioning old Mrs Williams so often. Poor Creature! I cannot hoping each letter may tell of her sufferings being over. — If she wants sugar, I should like to supply her with it

Mrs Williams may be yet another genteelly poor woman living alone; it’s hard to tell which Mrs Williams Austen is referring to (Lefaye, p 578). I like very much Austen’s empathy and think of the legacy she left Mme Bigeon, Henry’s French housekeeper.

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This portrait of the famous 19th century scientist-engineer, Michael Faraday (1791-1867) is said to be by Harriet Jane Moore. Whether related to the Moores below I know not.

In closing Austen reverts to the how the Moores are not decamping from Godmersham. Wrotham Gate is Rev Moore’s fine vicarage, a plum; Wrotham Gate was said to be a very rich living, best living in Kent (that’s saying something).

The Moores went yesterday to Goodnestone, but return tomorrow. After Tuesday we shall see them no more — tho’ Harriot is very earnest with Edwd to make Wrotham in his Journey, but we shall be in too great a hurry to get nearer to it than Wrotham Gate. — He wishes to reach Guilford on friday night-that we may have a couple of hours to spare for Alton.

Austen will therefore miss her Walker cousins. Sheregrets not seeing the people at Bookham because she lokes the Cookes (as we’ve seen). Of course she doesn’t have a traveling purse of her own.­

I shall be sorry to pass the door at Seal’ without calling, but it must be so; — & I shall be nearer to Bookham than I could wish, in going from Dorking to Guilford — but till I have a traveling purse of my own, I must submit to such things.

Since Jane’s visit to Harriot and Harriot opening up to Jane with candour at Goodnestone how Harriot longs not to visit the Finch-Hattons, Austen is so curiously reticent to admit she may be seeing a case of wife abuse in her friend.

The Moores leave Canterbury on friday — & go for a day or two to Sandling. — I really hope Harriot is altogether very happy — but she cannot feel quite so much at her ease with her Husband, as the Wives she has been used to. —

I’ll say.

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Fairy tale coach turning into a pumpkin

Now turning to Cassandra directly:

Good-bye. I hope You have been long recovered from your worry on Thursday morning – and that you do not much mind not gong to the Newbury races– I am withstanding those of Canterbury. Let that strengthen you.

These races English people did and do delight in. Austen died near one. But she and Cassandra can’t go. They lack a fairy coach. Cassandra is to be strengthened by realizing Jane going through the
same thing.

A less than affectionately intimate, a slightly more distance formal close: “Yrs very sincerely, Jane.

There have been two Cinderellas (meaning put-upon hurt women) in this letter: Anna Austen and Harriot Bridges-Moore. A few more uncomfortable ones:, Mrs Inman, Mrs Williams, Mary Gibson Austen (Mrs F. A.) Nokes wants us to see Mary Lloyd Austen (Mrs J.A.) among these. Perhaps but then she has such a source of consolation in inflicting her power on her step-daughter.

Mary’s stigmatizing and cruelty to her stepdaughter has been a motif of the past few letters. We see Cassandra is trying her best to make it up to the girl. Nokes (and others) make the point that Mary Gibson was singularly uneager to see her husband again when he returned. That’s what makes the Austen sisters and mothers uncomfortable. I surmise that like many others when she woke up from her dream of her romance, she was not keen on her sexual bargain nor aspects of his behavior to her. He was rigid.

Letters 43, 44; 45, 46, 47, and 48, 49, 50, 51, and 52, 53.

Ellen

Lady Gaga and Jane Austen: on not quite making the cut for super-numinosity


Lady Gaga, a mainstream image, twilight faux feminine innocence


Lady Gaga, performing masculinity

Dear friends and readers,

File this under a “and now for something competely different” category but please do not think it irrelevant to Austen who herself has become an numinous icon whose presence and about whom stories are told which have hardly anything to do with her books: the origin of her cult is in the publication of her novels even if it first took off in 1870 when her nephew unwitting produced the terms which would enable the cult to get started (see my “Continent Isolated: Anglocentricity in Austen Criticism:” Re-Drawing Austen: Picturesque Travels in Austenland [English translation of Italian title], edd. Beatrice Battaglia and Diego Saglia. Napoli: Liguori Editore, 2005. Pp. 325-338, and comment). Nor is the soft-core parodic porn irrelevant, for Graham-Smith’s Pride and Prejudice and the Zombies presents just such material.

I got into a conversation on Lady Gaga with anibundel whose insightful intelligent blog (I should have been a blogger) has been featured in Atlantic and who is my older daughter, Caroline. On one level (as my comment afterward, which I also include, suggests) Caroline-anibundel shows the pornification of our culture. Insightfully we see how not only the masochism of girl rock culture today, but also how women dressing as man are perform masculinity the way homosexual men dressing as woman are perform femininity. On another. we see an attempt to make oneself into one of these numinous icons (such as Marilyn Monroe and other celebrity women, including princesses have become). I don’t think Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta quite succeeding, and it would be interesting to understand why. I suggest Lady Gaga is not coming across as unguarded and enigmatic enough; there’s something pathetic going on.

Caroline-anibundel wrote as follows (suitably edited for this blog):

1. This is Lady Gaga’s biggest hit to date, “Bad Romance.” In it, she is trying to temper what was originally a wildly sexual piece into something (mostly) far more mainstream. (But note her microphone looks oddly like a dildo.) The faux old english ballroom setting was what caused me to ask if Dr.Who was going to suddenly materialize in his TARDIS. I apologize for the commercial at the front of this video. This is what network TV does now.
http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/video/lady-gaga-rocks-bad-romance-15025935
In comparison, here is the original video for “Bad Romance”: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qrO4YZeyl0I

2.This is Gaga’s latest release “Edge of Glory” reworked for the piano, and performed in what looks to be the dining room in Downton Abbey. This should give you a good sense of the odd pretentiousness of the proceedings, and why I said it was a bit near-Great-Performances parody.

3. I am a touch irritated that I can’t find her rendition of “Orange Colored Sky” which was the best number by far. Sadly instead everyone’s pimping the “White Christmas with an extra verse” that she did from that same setting. This setting with a small jazz band was the best showcase for her voice. (Again, obnoxious 1min long commercial alert)
http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/video/lady-gaga-dreams-white-christmas-15025902

4. As to why people call her a Lesbian cross dresser, well, here. This was her summer release:

You’ll note there’s a tribute to Bette Milder and the mermaid thing (Gaga even appeared at one point with the fishtail in the wheelchair when promoting this video.) You’ll also get a sense of the “weird’n’wacky” outfits that Gaga wears normally. But the part that caught everyone’s attention was the shots in the cornfield. The “New York Italian tough” sitting on top of the piano that she’s singing to in her shift is actually herself, in male drag. Originally it was meant as a masturbation reference. Once she got wind that the most shocking part of the video wasn’t the odd outfits (and that no one under the age of 35 remembers bette milder) but that the idea of her in drag, she changed tactics and started doing all her public appearances in character as this new york italian tough who is gaga’s secret boyfriend from back home. That lasted maybe all of 6 weeks, which was when the next single came out.

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Lately “she” has begun to appear without her signature frilly cap

My reply:

The first video and the last used masochistic and punitive imagery; probably the first “Bad Romance” was better as it had less gadgetry and more a single mood, but it is a woman (women) offering herself (themselves) up to men to do with as they please. Masochistic over-the-top. That’s softened in the mainstream by having the guys dance too, but the use of a dildo as the mike offsets that. Nos 2 and 3 are boring in comparison, but yes mainstream and she makes these gestures she assumes or wants to be part of her signature act/performance. She has a hoarse individual voice. I agree the plush stuff comes from PBS kind of masterpiece theater or other pop norms. Glamor is the pretense. The last video had some startling self-harm stuff. Her feet, the heels and ankles bleeding. Vagina dentata with naked behinds, all got up military style. I did see right away the person on the piano was her as well as the one seated. The image that came to mind was her offering to fellatio him (only “him” is her).

On the whole, the first and last are what’s called the pornification of mainstream by second wave feminist.

But you’re right. This is not a lesbian act. Nonetheless, the imagery is imagery gay people often find entertaining especially some of the uses of grotesquerie, of big and little.

The young girl — Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta (I wonder if these are really all her names, it’s a parody of a type of naming) — is super thin and anorexic in Video 1 is very Italian New York. There is an attempt here at compensatory iconographies of victimhood. She is trying to make herself into one of these super-numinous icons — from Marilyn Monroe to Madonna, from Mary Queen of Scots to Princess Diana to Jane Austen: these are women who became female icons which function as symbols women and men pour their own needs into. In Lady Gaga, the compensatory portion is not strong enough; Helen Mirren for example, comes across as having iron in her veins, she walks the walk as they say, a queen, a Marlene Dietrich. Lady Gaga is too much the twilight princess.

So I don’t think Lady Gaga quite succeeds, and offer this explanation, but to tell the full truth, I am not really sure why. Maybe it’s more that she’s not bigger than life. Helen Mirren who I likened her to is a second rank icon. Beyond that though Lady Gaga doesn’t have “it” the way Madonna has — I saw through her act to the Italian New York teenager, just a little coarse who would otherwise be going for “big hair”,a large diamond ring, a Mrs and a nose job, to say nothing of a big house in suburbia and husband in a suit.She looks like Barbra Streisand too.

Digression and coda: The above conversation took off from something the admiral in our house said (our captain). His argument was originally about 18th through 20th century cross-dressing, cross-dressing on the UK stage and television (there’s still very little of it on US TV or the stage — except maybe these teen videos). He argued that there is a difference between a woman playing a man’s role and a woman in breeches part. Breeches part you have one sex dressing as the other and it was done so men could look at women’s behinds, calves, and thighs: it is not performing masculinity but rather calling attention to women’s legs, especially their calves and behinds; breeches parts please heteronormative sexually oriented people. When women played men’s roles in complete disguises (the way Sarah Bernhardt did Hamlet or Peg Woffington Sir Harry Wildair in The constant Couple) they were not sending up heterosexuality so much as literally trying to be men, suggesting a strong lesbian impulse which validates heterosexual norms. When Lady Gaga in that last video doubles herself as a woman before a man and a transvestite male, she suggests a lesbianism as she performs masculinity in her male guise just the way homosexual men dressing as woman perform femininity.


Peter Capaldi as Vera Reynolds (from Prime Suspect 3).

It’s a form of gay entertainment. It’s not normalizing but sending up.

Thus the admiral. I chose Capaldi in Prime Suspect 3 because he goes well beyond sending up. He makes the typology poignant-tragic.

Ellen

P. S. I apologize for the UTubes which did not appear. I am not good at making UTUbes appear. Those that are not here may be reached by taking the URL and feeding it into your Firefox (or whatever you use) and hitting “enter.”

Jane Austen and the Occupy movement: a few thoughts (tiny excursion on Trollope too)


An Occupy group during the daytime about a week and a half ago


Two people from an Occupy group preparing to walk to DC two days ago

Dear friends and readers,

In keeping with the ethos of OWS, this is a developing blog. It is not a finished blog. I await other thoughts from other people in the comments.

I’ve been talking/writing with someone oflist about Jane Austen and the Occupy movement and funnily enough, I found to try to express what my sense of what she might have thought of it, clarified to me aspects of it.

So, If Austen thought the Occupy movement like the French revolution I imagine she’d have hated and feared it. Her sister-in-law’s husband guillotined; her whole family dependent on and manipulating and sychophantic before the ancien regime patronage system.

But OWS is not like the French revolution at its start. It grows out of a 20th century idea about the effectiveness of non-violent civil disobedience, which if it did seem to work sometimes no longer is working (I see “seem” because remember MLK was murdered with impunity). We see that on TV in the last week everywhere (including outside the US — take a look at the Egyptian riots, where the horror tear gass is supplied by the US gov’t and the US gov’t gives a huge amount to the Egyptian gov’t).

I kind of think that were Austen to understand that this Occupy movement is not like the French revolution, and were we to explain to her what is meant by non-violent civil disobedience and how it’s manipulated through the media (both would take a lot of history and understanding of nationalism and colonialism and public media in the early to mid-20th century), and we could get her to see this, she might see the movement as what it is fundamentally — or primitively — starving poor people living out in the cold in tents, revealing to the world their state of need, and standing for the 99%. If she could get that, she would shudder as her family and she kept a strong carapace as essential to gaining respectability, and whatever people say on the Net, I’ve learned face-to-face no one shows themselves really in need, it’s not socially acceptable, and people face-to-face at meetings keep their distance from this movement. Austen’s whole family was into protecting themselves, maintaining outward respectability in order to get what they could wrest from the world. ON that level she might have turned away from Occupy which is not about respectability but need, open vulnerable need. Jane Fairfax can’t stand when Miss Bates reveals their desperate shifts.

It’s something new, a new kind of unacknowledged despair, a new way to try to make a political statement, a reaction to the lack of political power most of us now have (the vote is nullified several times over). Unions destroyed in most places. The OWS people thought they could shame the powerful; that doesn’t work anymore. Non-violence is now meant shamelessly with brutal violence and on TV. That woman Chancellor was defiant — you cannot shame her. Listen to the sound of her heels. She won’t resign. Her salary alone brings her $400,000. She is a flunky (Carlyle’s term) of the 10% (it’s not 1%, more like 10).

OWS not a party movement, no leaders, and yet it’s not anarchical, Indeed they were very orderly at Zuccotti, that was part of the surprise. it’s being called Anarchy to bad-mouth it, but it’s not that either.

But Gandhi’s technique is obsolete. See Under the Sign of Sylvia: The Occupy Movement: What We Are Being Taught (especially Bill Moyers’ essay: How Wall Street has Occupied America).


Zuccotti Park destroyed

The politically powerful in the US now control the airwaves, they have hijacked education for several decades, so the understanding of what we see as information is utterly skewed (it’s nothing to tell the most egregious lies on the “news”). Since this is still partly a Trollope list I’ll hazard this on Trollope: from his New Zealander we see he understands most gov’ts to be oligarchies backed by military power used ruthlessly. He would not have understand how Gandhi could get away with his astute manipulations of non-violence and simply not been surprized when the paramilitary police came out in the dead of the night with the law and gov’t to back them up. He says the vote is a small part of liberty and would understand people getting together, but not this way, not in poverty and not through doing deals through individuals. He might have thought of them as partly naive:


Characteristic sign

Trollope’s world was crony capitalism and before any of the social ameliorations set up by gov’ts began in the first decade of the 19th century.

Ellen

Jane Austen’s Letters: 53, Mon-Wed, 20-22 June, 1808, from Godmersham


Colosseum, Rome, 1798 — Marmion has scenes like this

Ought I to be very much pleased with Marmion? — as yet I am not. James reads it aloud in the Evening — the short Evening — beginning at about 10 & broken by supper . . . [see my excursus in a comment]

Dear friends and readers,

This is another journal-letter, rather like the previous (52), only longer. Jane is still at Godmersham: she can enjoy summer at Godmersham, with Cassandra holding down the fort in Castle Square, with Mrs Austen and Anna Austen by Cassandra’s side. Jane Austen is intently alert to the difference between the luxurious existence of Godmersham and her own at Bath and Southampton and probable future (the Southampton menage would not keep up) and that her and Cassandra’s life tasks include taking care of and visiting old women alone and minding children.

This letter too is filled with specifics of people’s lives, some of which are not fully explained because we are expected to know the assumptions (as, for example, that Mr and Mrs Moore are watched acutely by Austen because, apparently, she and the rest of this clutch of Austen people and friends have been told that they don’t get along well, and perhaps that Mr Moore is even violent to Mrs Moore, a bully, off-stage). Sometimes statements are not fully explained because Austen does not fully explain this kind of thing, as her apparent lack of pleasure in Scott’s new wildly best-selling or at least read poem, Marmion, read aloud each night by brother James: this is indeed in character for him, and we see his wife cannot or does not stop all his reading loves. Each sentence is really loaded with this kind of thing. And just about nothing that we can see has been censored. Plus no letters are omitted.

So this is the kind of letter of which Cassandra totally approved and thought others could be allowed to see and read. No surprise really that on first blush it seems dull and certainly nothing unconventional can be seen. We have a whole series of these here, all longish.

We learn a lot about Austen from it and not superficial things either precisely because she epitomizes her life do intensely; it’s rather like reading the first couple of paragraphs of a rich novel and seeing how the passage (in an Arnoldian spirit) is the book in miniature, anticipates it. Not all learning is of her subjectivities and how she spends a social day — indeed read with care, we see that she spend 2-3 hours alone her apartment (that is her room and) each morning after breakfast — this is writing time, and given her intensity with no phones ringing, no internet, no chores, she could get quite a good deal done (written). We learn that Mrs Knight gave Austen money (the fee, the regular allowance) and this makes Austen feel better she says, pays for her pelisse.

It’s a letter of sight-seeing and visiting as a prime good thing to do for a social life. We also glimpse Austen trying again to form the small group of especially congenial women living together, one which includes Martha and Miss Sharp, the latter whom Austen manages to visit. They were even looking and found one Rose Hill Cottage, but it was beyond their means.

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Christ Church, Canterbury, 1798 by Turner

As the letter opens, it’s a continuation of the previous. Jane implies she cannot imagine Mary Lloyd Austen would have written down the particulars of the visit to Canterbury for real, much less those which would be likely to interest Cassandra. So she, Jane, will first talk of it.

Harriot continues affectionate in the way she was at Goodnestone in 1805 (letter 46). They walked together to call on the matriarch elderly Mrs Brydges. Louisa and Elizabeth to Mrs Milles: these are charitable visits in effect. The younger unmarried women pay respect to and keep company the elder widows. White Friars is a mansion at Canterbury and there is Mrs Knight who is giving Jane an allowance each year; there’s no guarantee and it may be withdrawn at any time, but it does seem from previous letters and this one that Jane genuinely liked this woman, saw good qualities in her so
beyond her giving Jane money (a sign of this benevolence), Jane really had no trouble praising her, enjoying her company. “Gentle, kind and friendly” are as positive words as one gets in the Austen idiolect. Mrs Knight also asked after Cassandra and Mrs Austen.

Mrs Baskerville is someone who sells perfumes or does your hair; fifteen minutes into Jane and Harriot’s visit to Mrs Knight, Elizabeth and Louisa rushed (“hot”) from Mrs Baskerville and then in 5 minutes Mr Moore himself. It’s clear from Austen’s language that she has been told very adverse things about Moore; nonetheless Austen cannot pretend to dislike him after one visit, even if Mary Lloyd Austen (or Mary Gibson Austen) does. He’s a gentleman in manners but “not winning.” Not appealing, not trying to appeal. And then the sentence (brief) Arnie made a lot out of: “He made one formal inquiry after you.” That does suggest constraint on his part and signalling Cassandra should be constrained in turn.

Austen then comments on Mr and Mrs Moore’s little girl who she compares with the present “idol” of the immediate family at Southampton: Frank and Mary Gibson Austen’s child, a Mary Jane likened to Mr and Mrs Moore’s little girl: very small, very pretty, delicate, nice dark eyes, Mary Jane’s fine color

Austen does not like to hear the egregious over-the-top praise people give to infants. Harriot does not overdo the ecstasy: “Harriot’s fondness … is just what is amiable & natural & not foolish.”

There is an older girl from a previous marriage, just like in James Austen’s case, a Caroline and Austen finds her “very plain.” (Who is she to say? but never mind). Then a switch of topics: Edward is magnanimous about providing rides. He will take Jane to Southampton in order for him to visit with his mother and other sister. He offers to ferry Jane to Southampton so he can visit with his mother and Cassandra and hopes to spend “a whole day with you,” and bring his namesake son. She worries Cassandra will need more bed for the two and tells her the date to be ready by: July 8th to reach Southampton on the 9th.

Two, more significant passages:

This morning brought me a letter from Mrs Knight, containing the usual Fee, & all the usual Kindness. She asks me to spend a day or two with her this week, to meet Mrs C. Knatchbull, who with her Husband comes to the W Friars to day–& I beleive I shall go.-I have consulted Edward–& think it will be arranged for Mrs J. A.’s going with me one morning, my staying the night, & Edward’s driving me home the next Evening.-Her very agreable present will make my circumstances quite easy. I shall reserve half for my Pelisse.


White Friars, Kent, 1786

You give twice or twice as much when you give graciously and make the recipient comfortable. Nonetheless, Jane must now spend a day or two with her, and meet Mrs C. Knatchbull. The name is that of the man Fanny Austen Knight married. Mrs C K seems to be the widow of Knight II, living with and near Mrs Knight. Another older woman. Certainly plenty of models for Miss Bates.

The a reference to the Bigg sisters, usually slightly fraught these,
memories of the refused proposal coming in here.

I hope, by this early return I am sure of seeing Catherine & Alethea;­& I propose that either with or without them, you & I & Martha shall have a snug fortnight while my Mother is at Steventon.

We see this dream group and life Austen wanted: the group of tightly knit relative/lover women: Jane and Cassandra, Martha –
they are missing only Miss Sharpe.

I like Jane’s truth-telling about what it feels like to adults to endure children a good deal; they have to stretch themselves. Mary does find herself independent of her children: “We go on very well here, Mary finds the Children less troublesome than she ex­pected, & independent of them, there is certainly not much to try the patience or hurt the spirits at Godmersham.”

Then a curious passage: Austen will “initiate Mary into the “mysteries of Inmanism.” The poor old Lady is as thin & chearful as ever, and very thankful for a new acquaintance otherwise (pp 129-30) Jane had brought Elizabeth and Louisa before.

What Austen means by initiating Mary into the mysteries Inmanism. They are imitating acts of kindness practiced by the children of Godersham — in the way of children they took it into their heads to regard visiting an old poor widow allowed to live in a park-keeper’s cottage as an adventure or treat (LeFaye p 589 note 5). So it’s visiting someone who is crippled and lives alone a deprived existence. Uneducated unwanted by anyone for real poor single women are what Jane and Cassandra fill their lives with. It’s better to do this than do nothing and theirs is an analogous case.

It reminds me of a visit in Brideshead Revisited to a nanny, very old lady allowed to live in an attic in the house. Maybe because the old woman seems to live this innocent life to those not identifying with her. Maybe such women were kept innocent by the culture, simpletons.

I take it there is a real deeply gratification to serving others, including very elderly single ladies. There but for the grace of luck and time and place go I (Austen identifies with Miss Smith.)

Austen then remarks on the friends & acquaintances (and she is also even handed towards servants who are people too) she saw while at Canterbury whom she assumes will please Cassandra.

I find John Bridges grown very old & black, but his manners are not altered; he is very pleasing, & talks of Hampshire with great admiration.-Pray let Anna have the pleasure of knowing that she is remembered with kindness both by Mrs Cooke & Miss Sharpe. Her manners must be very much worsted by your description of them, but I hope they will improve by this visit.­ Mrs Knight finishes her letter with “Give my best love to Cassandra when you write to her.”-I shall like spending a day at the White Friars very much.-

So Austen visited her long time close friend, now a paid companion, Miss Sharpe. She wants Anna to know they remember her with kindness — so we see in an earlier visit how Anna had become part of this circle. Apparently Cassandra was complaining of Anna’s manners and Austen again quietly taking Anna’s side: Anna will get better; in the meantime with Mrs Knight sending love in a postscript.


Anna Austen Lefroy, early young womanhood

The last part tells of the breakfast before in the library), of how the others were hot and complained, but that she and Louisa can feel “alike as to the weather, & are cool & comfortable.

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1996 Emma: Mrs Elton picking Strawberries at Donwell

What we are seeing here is a group of people who have little work to do; they are people of leisure looking for how to fill their days. The rest of the party stay pleasantly at home and are “quiet and comfortable” – that’s how Jane sees it. She speaks of “merriment” at dinner between Edward Louisa, Harriot and herself.

Wednes­day– The Moores came yesterday in their Curricle between one & two o’clock, & immediately after the noonshine which succeeded their arrival, a party set off for Buckwell to see the Pond dragged.

Five of the males (Edward & James Edward, James, John Bridge driving Mary go with the Moore to see the pond dragged.

Here is this odd passage about Mr Moore: Austen watches him and Mrs Moore intently; Arnie might be right in this: he was seen as an eligible match. Maybe the stories about him that are apparently so negative are the way the women around reconciled themselves to his having married someone else. Mr Moore was expected to talk more; Fanny told her Mr Moore did not act like his usual self “our being strangers made him so much more silent and quiet”. She would not have watched but that she was given a reason. All she can see is Mr Moore’s “manners want Tenderness — & he was a little violent at last about the impossibility of her going to Eastwell.” That is he won’t let his wife go to Eastwell (a lovely house and landscape owned by the Finches). They are all intently watching this couple” Mary is “disappointed in her beauty,” James “admires her and finds him conversable.”

My guess is they have been told he is a cruel man to his wife and there has been evidence of this in public — bullying and controlling where she goes to in front of the others.

It was the Moores who took her answer to Mrs Knight: yes to the money she’s to get and yes she’ll come and visit. Jane says she has no trouble in answering – pretending now that she is rich:

I wrote without much effort; for I was rich — & the Rich are always respectable, whatever be their stile of writing.”

Then a plan for the next day and the following Tuesday — more of the same. Says Jane summing up “These are our engagements; make the most of them.” Think of the life of Emma Woodhouse, and we see a resonating line (this is June too): “I want to hear of your gathering Strawberries, we have had them three times here.”

Jane imagines Cassandra fills up with this kind of thing despite her refusal to pretend to feelings she doesn’t have and determination to remember Goodneston is a foarm.

Mr Waller is dead, I see, — I cannot grieve about it, nore perhaps can his Widow very much — Edward began cutting Stfoin on saturday and I hope is likely to have favourable weather;-the crop is good.- There has been a cold & sore throat prevailing very much in this House lately, the Children have almost all been ill with it, & we were afraid Lizzy was going to be very ill one day; she had specks & a great deal of fever.-It went off how­ever, & they are all pretty well now.-I want to hear of your gathering Strawberries, we have had them three times here.-I suppose you have been obliged to have in some white wine, & must visit the Store Closet a little oftener than when you were quite by yourselves.-

There’s a little teasing here: she means that Cassandra will present herself as self-sacrificing, forced to gather strawberries and eat them and have wine with it. But really she is delighted to do it with the excuse of a guest beyond her mother (Anna):

One begins really to expect the St Albans now, & I wish she may come before Henry goes to Cheltenham, it will be so much more convenient to him. He will be very glad if Frank can come to him in London, as his own Time is likely to be very precious, but does not depend on it.-I shall not forget Charles next week.-

A sudden rush together of details about the brothers.

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Netley Abbey, Hampshire, old photo

Then Austen has a letter from Cassandra and we get the usual repeat of extravagant praise — couched in quieter language It may be half-mocking as Diane says and Austen notes Cassandra’s very long sentences critically.

& now to my agreable surprise I have to acknowledge another Letter from you.-I had not the least notion of hearing before tomorrow, & heard of Russell’s being about to pass the Windows without any anxi­ety. You are very amiable & very clever to write such long Letters; every page of yours has more lines than this, & every line more words than the average of mine. I am quite ashamed-but you have certainly more little events than we have.

Have they agreed to fill their letters with this kind of trivia? I am not the only one to come to the conclusion that the swapping back and forth was their way of making themselves useful, one to sit with the mother and the other to help Elizabeth with her children.

Its a joke that one can hear of someone walking by a window without anxiety as if it were an earth-shaking event. The nothingness of their lives is felt here. And now Jane does break down for a bit:

Mr Lyford supplies you with a great deal of interesting Matter (Matter Intellectual, not physical)-but I have 1 nothing to say of Mr Scudamore. And now, that is such a sad~ stupid attempt at Wit, about Matter, that nobody can smile at it, & I am quite out of heart. I am sick of myself, & my bad pens.-I have no other complaint however, my languor is entirely removed

Something is driving her to pretend to accept all this. An agreement with Cassandra?

Now something that might have mattered does come to mind: Scott’s Marmion, but Austen does not like it. It’s James who reads it aloud, the family poet. I’ve tried Marmion and find it dull myself. It’s in ballad stanza, very conventional martial kind of story. I’m not surprised Austen doesn’t like it. Diane talks of how different a writer Austen is from Scott; she did like the novels but the poetry was and is poor and Austen see through the fashion for it here. The cant. She might do also because she’s jealous. And yes we see here how Austen feels these long long days — exquisite wastes of time as she wades through and then the evening when they read too short, and then she is frustrated to listen to Marmion. Scott is published and she not and she does _know herself his equal_ even if no one else does.

Then Austen turns half-mockingly to Cassandra’s letter for her to have matter. (This does remind me of myself sometimes). Again one of these distant Austens was visited. “I am glad of your various civilities have turned out so well & most heartily wish you Success & Pleasure in your present engagement.” Jane says she will think of Cassandra at Netley tonight and tomorrow too.

Maybe it was this kind of validation of Cassandra’s existence that made Jane mean so much to her. Who else would do this? Profess even half-mockingly to care?

Netley is a picturesque ruin people in Southampton went for visits to (LeFaye p 613). Again how people of leisure and taste spend their days.

If the stawberries remind us of Emma, so the news of Mrs Powlett anticipates Mansfield Park. It’s a newspaper item about a woman eloping from her husband with another man. The news story as quoted by LeFaye shows the leering language of a nasty shallow mind being fed. Jane Austen calls it “a sad story” That she takes the sex outside marriage seriously as a transgression is suggested by her association: she saw this woman taking the Sacrament “the last time that you and I did …”

Everyone gossiping about it; it was in the Courier, Austen says (but LeFaye can’t find it there) and Mr Moore guesses who is the man.

***********************************

Jane Austen (Olivia Williams) writing at Godmersham

“Yes, I enjoy my apartment very much, & always spend tow or three hours in it after breakfast — the change from Brompton quarters to these is masterful as to Space”

Here’s where we may glimpse her writing: at last. I admit to me some of these letters are a kind of wasteland and I think to give it up, and then I come across a detail here or there which gives insight into the core matter of the novels (where the stories and characters come from) or Austen’s attitude towards her fiction or some serious comment about life. Here is when she writes. We learn at some point Jane stayed in Brompton and it was very cramped and she did not forget it; the experience makes her appreciate Godmersham’s easily available amenities even for her.

Then the line which shows her awareness of Caroline and anticipates Fanny Price. I still think that the line disparaging Caroline is for Cassandra’s benefit, no Jane denies Cassandra’s imputation that Jane finds Caroline more engaging precisely because Caroline doesn’t fit in and is “more plain” than her cousins: and “not so headstrong or humoursome” as they are.

Here are the Bertrams too. Cassandra was right even if her teasing and very different attitudes (thick skinned) leads Austen to deny her own as we see them in MP.

A kind of strained existence going on underneath here.

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The Godmersham children, Fanny Austen Knight (Imogen Poots) at center (2008 Miss Austen Regrets)

Her brother [James Edward] is to go with us to Canterbury tomorrow, & Fanny completes the party. I fancy Mrs K. feels less interest in that branch of the family than any other.

Mrs Knight doesn’t care for James and Mary’s children, but then underneath she may not care for them (selfish) , but Jane says “I dare say she will do her duty however, by the Boy.” Jane means that Mrs Knight will still leave James-Edward money. Note nothing for Caroline.

His Uncle Edward talks nonsense to him delightfully-more than he can always understand. The two Morrises are come to dine & spend the day with him. Mary wishes my Mother to buy whatever she thinks necessary for Anna’s Shifts;-& hopes to see her at Steventon soon after ye 9th of July, if that time is as convenient to my Mother as any other.-I have hardly done justice to what she means on the subject, as her intention is that my Mother shd come at whatever time She likes best.-They will be at home on ye 9th

How good of Mary to allow Mrs Austen to buy clothes for Anna. We see how Anna is under the thumb of this stepmother. The others are afraid to buy needed things for her.

I always come in for a morning visit from Crondale, & Mr & Mrs Filmer have just given me my due. He & I talked away gaily of Southampton, the Harrisons Wallers &c. – Fanny sends her best Love to You all, & will write to Anna very soon.-

Crondale is another village close to Godmersham and the Filmers had a seventeenth century house there. Again the picturesque poetic place is one Jane’s relatives think she will like to go to and the Filmers speak of Austen’s taste for this with respect. People try not to insult her. And we have another male talking gaily with Austen of the place and doings at Southampton — teasing and gossiping.

The privileged oldest girl at Godmersham Fanny sends love to Cassandra and promises to write to the very unprivileged girl at Steventon and Southampton — Anna. What a sad life Anna did live. How glad she must have been to marry — only to find endless babies, and genteel poverty and its frustrations and enclosure as a married woman her lot.

Austen has a PS in which she teases: Oh she longs for news from Bath and the Perrots. Right.

But she is also serious, a final detail that matters: Rose Hill cottage. Cassandra has found a place she and Austen and maybe Martha could live together. They have not given the dream up. “I am almost sorry that Rose Hill Cottage should be so near suiting us, as it does not quite.” Almost doesn’t win the race. She is almost sorry it doesn’t suit because it’s doesn’t quite. She does not put statements in positive form does she? The meaning is it hurts to know of the place because it almost would have done.

Chawton is a year away. We see Edward growing older and being more decent in this letter let us remark too


There is no Rose Hill Cottage anymore, but here is an 18th century cottage (said to be used by smugglers), renovated and for rent, Hampshire (modern photo)

Letters 43, 44; 45, 46, 47, and 48, 49, 50, 51, and 52.

Ellen

Delay in close reading Austen’s letters: updating website; why continue (Austen murdered by arsenic?!)


A family member taken to prison by means of a lettre de cachet

Dear friends and readers,

Sorry for the delay on Letter 53 & close reading of Austen’s letter project. This week I’ve been working on my website for the first time in over a year — or more. I’m putting up a few documents, papers I gave at conferences, published reviews, published brief essays; to do this right I’ve got to put in links in other parts of my website and change old links. All of which is arduous and time-consuming and I try to keep up my blog so I let the letters slip. The additions and corrections which link to Austen include:

An recently published essay-review which explains the laws and customs which allowed for the widespread violence in the era to women: Trouille covers women in the UK and takes her argument to 2011 in France and Europe: Wife Abuse in 18th century France.

A review of my etext edition of Montolieu by Isabelle Tremblay (in Eighteeenth Century Fiction) and a discussion of Caroline de Lichtfield, an important source for Austen’s S&S. This one I had to fix as it had stopped showing on my website and it took an hour for me to figure out why.


Henry Singleton’s painting illustrating a scene from Caroline de Lichtfield

I admit the length of Austen’s letters and the amount of detail about friends and neighbors I know little about and have to look up or find out about each time (or ignore and that loses part of the point) is daunting, plus the letters manifest the same frustrating lacunae, censoring (not as much in this set but then probably because the letters come closer to the idea of utter conventionality that controlled Cassandra’s behavior and own letters) and a new reticence on Austen’s part as she grows older (causes various which I’ve been trying to describe at any rate). I don’t want to give up as we have not yet gotten near the most interesting ones in the collection: where Austen openly speaks of her writing; there again it’s frustrating because of (again) censorship, Austen’s lack of critical acumen and language, again reticence (this time not to discuss the parallels in her life because her letters are read by the very people she’s alluding to in the books in various ways). But she does tell a lot, and we don’t realize how much because we have it.

Among other things — there’s also exploring all the myths of romance and — the latest — arsenic poisoning. It seems to me silly to talk of murder; who hated Austen so to murder her. No one could kill her for her money (joke alert) or powerful personally rooted connections. As Catherine Delors notes in her blog, arsenic was used medicinally. People used it to fight venereal disease — and venereal disease was widespread and deadly. It may be in desperation she was led to use it medicinally. I can’t reach the article Catherine points to, but to prove such a contention you’d have to have very specific description or unearth the corpse. Austen describes her symptoms well enough that people diagnosed her as having Addison’s disease. Perhaps that same description can be used to suggest someone using arsenic medicinally — that’s how this man is doing it. Close reading enigmatic passages again.

What unites much of what I’m referring to in this blog is the reality of family internecine quarrels: how women and men too were forced into wretched marriages; the tools used to enforce the use of individuals for family aggrandisement. It is true that Austen uses her friends and family as part of the matter of her novels’ world: of course she did, that’s what she knows and what she has cared intensely about. But no one would have killed her: proof she was discreet enough and people refuse to look at the realities of families sufficiently that people today still want to ignore the parallels of Jane and her mother and sister’s displacement and poverty and the stories in her novels.

Ellen

Foremother Poet: Sylvia Townsend Warner (1893-1978)


Sylvia, with a loved and loving cat

Dear friends and readers,

Let me place this foremother poet blog with my Austen Reveries in honor of Austen’s possible lesbian spinsterhood, and yet regard it as an overdue extension of my other foremother blogs celebrating Jane Dowson’s Women’s Poetry of the 1930s: A Critical Anthology. There I told of five women poets of the left: Nancy Cunard, Winifred Holtby, Ruth Pitter and Valentine Ackland, the last of whom from 1930 on was the life-long partner of Sylvia Townsend Warner, who doesn’t need me to commemorate her: as, gentle reader, there’s a beautiful website, recordings of her reading her poetry, blogs which pick out her most beautiful private poems, to say nothing of a great biography by Clare Harman, and insightful essay on her and Valentine Ackland (see essay in comments).

Nonetheless, tonight I want to live through her poems as a poet of the solitary and solitude and at the same time echo others who have reminded the world that Townsend wrote and acted as a passionately politically committed woman of the left, tireless in her concern for the poor, deprived, and vulnerable, for cultural freedom and intellectual liberty, an anti-fascist, a radical spirit. Dowson’s selection omits the fairy poetry, everything that can be seen as twee, and offers strongly anti-war, Muriel Ruykeyser kind of verse, lesbian love poetry in the modern mode.

Some Make This Answer

Unfortunately, he said, I have lost my manners.
That old civil twitch of visage and the retreat
Courteous of threatened blood to the heart, I cannot
Produce them now, or rig up their counterfeit.
Thrust muzzle of flesh, master, or metal, you are no longer
Terrible as an army with banners.

Admittedly on your red face or your metal proxy’s
I read death, I decipher the gluttony to subdue
All that is free and fine, to savage it, knock it
About, taunt it to stupor, prison it life-through;
Moreover, I see you garnished with whips, gas-bombs, electric
          barbed wire,
And affable with church and state as with doxies.

Voltage of death, walking among my fellow men
Have seen the free and the fine wasted with cold and hunger,
Diseased, maddened, death-in-life doomed, and the ten
Thousand this death can brag have reckoned against your thousand.
Shoddy king of terrors, you impress me no longer.

Song for a Street-Song

What, do you plan for children now?
A child is a pretty thing,
A thing of promise, a tender thing.
Day by day, year by year,
You love it more. War is near,
And dogs and strangers choking in the gas fume
Is a calmer spectacle than the fruit of the womb.
There’s the sting
When the drums go rub-a-dub!
There’s the rub!

What, do you plan for marriage now?
Love is a handsome thing,
A thing of tenderness, a growing thing.
Day by day, year by year,
If It knits you more. War is near,
And flesh that lay beside you in marriage-bed
Mangles your own he an when it is ripped and shred.
There’s the sting
When the drums go rub-a-dub!
There’s the rub!

What, do you plan for freedom now?
Freedom is a noble thing,
The mind’s sanction, a vital thing.
Day by day, year by year,
It claims you more. War is near,
And freedom in muck of warfare maimed and defiled
Is a bitterer hazard than loss of mate or child.
There’s the sting
When the drums go rub-a-dub!
There’s the rub!

We plan for love and children now,
And freedom, that noblest thing.
We gather to us everything
That’s growing and tender, vital and dear,
To arm us more. War is near.
Against that enemy pang of the quickened sense
Is the swiftest weapon, is the surest defence.
There we cling
While the drums go rat-a-plan!
So we plan!

Drawing You, Heavy With Sleep

Drawing you, heavy with sleep to lie closer,
Staying your poppy head upon my shoulder,
It was as though I pulled the glide
Of a fun river to my side.

Heavy with sleep and with sleep pliable
You rolled at a touch towards me. Your arm fell
Across me as a river throws
An arm of flood across meadows.

And as the careless water its mirroring sanction
Grants to him at the river’s brim long stationed,
Long drowned in thought; that yet he lives
Since in that mirroring tide he moves,

Your body lying by mine to mine responded:
Your hair stirred on my mouth, my image was dandled
Deep in your sleep that flowed unstained
On from the image entertained.


West Chaldon, one of Sylvia and Valentine’s homes

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A young Sylvia Townsend Warner, with kitten

I should say at the outset that until a few years ago I didn’t know that Sylvia Townsend Warner wrote poetry, nor that I had a volume of her Collected Poems, edited by Claire Harman in my house until Jim and I joined Library Thing and we catalogued our library. Then I discovered my treasure. I had thought of Warner’s books as Jim’s books: two volumes of fairy stories, biography of T. H. White, an Arthurian. Jim likes fantasy reading and enjoyed the tales especially Kingdom of Elfin. I believed he tried the T. H. White biography. This is not my thing. But then I read Claire Harman’s collection and introduction; Harman writes excellent biographies: her Fanny Burney is beautifully written, and has the merit of being the only one of the biographies frankly to demonstrate how fictionalized are the journals and diaries, and to argue this is inevitable, and does not detract from their greatness, indeed is partly responsible for it. Her Jane’s Fame commits the rare feat of providing new insights, new careful close reading — to show, among other things, that her family was generally against her having a vocation or career as a writer.

Sylvia Townsend Warner is known best for her fantasy stories and as a lesbian; her work is usually presented as belonging to the world of Arthurian Glastonbury romance of the type the Powys brothers were writing in the 1930s, a set of people and writing turning away from the modern technological industrial world. What is forgotten is the Powys brothers and those who wanted to turn away were often profoundly anti-capitalist, anti-materialist; they belong to the world described by Patrick Wright in his The Village that Died for England, and On Living in An Old Country, or (simply) Tank. She is not to be classed (as she sometimes is) with the kind of child-conservatism found in Dodie Smith’s comic masterpiece, I Capture the Castle.

Reading Warner’s poems reveals a Bronte-like undercurrent, grim, filled with despair, horror, quiet dread and the humor is hard. Harman says these poems could be fitted very well in one of Powys’s Arthurian romances; better yet, let us look at the currents as not unlike Thomas Hardy. And they are wholly unlike the child-like tone of Tolkien at times, and have nothing of the complacency of Sayers in her verse (who also was part of this upper class genteel set of the later period). They do seem a woman’s poems (the despair, melancholy, indirection) and often there is something strongly gothic in the pictures of the houses (haunted of course). Blake too, the brief ones with their sudden stinging protest (however muted what is being protested against is) with titles like “The Little Lamb.” Wonderfully she is outside what counts somehow and seeing futility and yet anguished over it. The best are very quiet.

Now here are two of these in her fairy vein:

From The Espalier (1925)

What voice is this
sings so, rings so
Within my head?
Not mine, for I am dead,

And a deep peace
Wraps me, haps me
From head to feet
Like a smooth winding-sheet.

Before my eyes
Reeling, wheeling,
Leaf-green stars
Have changed to purple bars

And flickered out,
Spinning, thinning,
Up the wall,
That has grown very tall

Only that voice —
Distant, insistent;
Like the high
Stroked glass’s airy cry;

Echoing on,
Winds me, binds me
As with a thread
Spun from my own head.

O speak not yet!
Forget me, let me
Lie here as calm
As saints that nurse their palm;

Whilst like a tide
Turning, returning,
Silence and gloom
Flow in and fill the room.

Some of her poems remind me of Elizabeth Bishop. This might seem a far-flung analogy, but the tone and indirect of the metaphoric surface are alike to me. So the following reminds me of Bishop’s “In the Waiting Room.” Warner is a poet of solitude:

Also from The Espalier:

Sitting alone at night
Careless of time,
From the house next door
I hear the clock chime

Ten, eleven, twelve;
One, two, three —
It is all the same to the clock,
And much the same to me.

But to-night more than sense heard it:
I opened my eyes wide
To look at the wall and wonder
What lay on the other side.

They are quiet people
That live next door;
I never hear them scrape
Their chairs along the floor,

They do not laugh loud, or sing,
Or scratch at the grate,
I have never seen a taxi
Drawn up at their gate;

And though their back-garden
Is always neat and trim
It has a humbled look,
and no one walks therein.

So did not their chiming clock
Imply some hand to wind it,
I might doubt if the wall between us
Had any life behind it.

London neighbors are such
That I may never know more
Than this of the people
Who live next door.

While they for their part
Should they hazard a guess
At me on my side of the wall
Will know as little, or less;

For my life has grown quiet,
As quiet as theirs;
And the clock has been silent on my chimney-piece
For years and years.


Sylvia Plath’s (yes the poet Sylvia Plath) Wuthering Heights

King Duffus

When all the witches were haled to the stake and burned,
When their least ashes were swept up and drowned,
King Duffus opened his eyes and looked round.

For half a year they had trussed him in their spell:
Parching, scorching, roaring, he was blackened as a coal.
Now he wept like a freshet in April.

Tears ran like quicksilver through his rocky beard.
Why have you wakened me, he said, with a clattering sword?
Why have you snatched me back from the green yard?

There I sat feasting under the cool linden shade;
The beer in the silver cup was ever renewed,
I was at peace there, I was well-bestowed:

My crown lay lightly on my brow as a clot of foam,
My wide mantle was yellow as the flower of the broom,
Hale and holy I was in mind and in limb.

I sat among poets and among philosophers,
Carving fat bacon for the mother of Christ;
Sometimes we sang, sometimes we conversed.

Why did you summon me back from the midst of that meal
To a vexed kingdom and a smoky hall?
Could I not stay at least until dewfall?

Her rhythms are insistent and strong. Not that I’m against the fairy poems: Townsend Warner created an internally consistent fantasy world — perhaps Tolkien would be comparable in this. Perhaps little known are her individual books of poems and how these intertwine. These two come from Boxwood (1960). In the first you see that Warner was another woman poet who looked back through to her mothers in writing, to earlier women:

Anne Donne

I lay in in London;
And round my bed my live children were crying,
And round my bed my dead children were singing.
As my blood left me it set the clappers swinging:
Tolling, jarring, jowling, all the bells of London
Were ringing as I lay dying-
John Donne, Anne Donne, Undone!

Ill-done, well-done, all done.
All fearing done, all striving and all hoping,
All weanings, watchings, done; all reckonings whether
Of debts, of moons, summed; all hither and thither
Sucked in the one ebb. Then, on my bed in London,
I heard him call me,. reproaching:
Undone, Anne Donne, Undone!

Not done, not yet done!
Wearily I rose up at his bidding.
The sweat still on my face, my hair dishevelled,
Over the bells and the tolling seas I travelled,
Carrying my dead child, so lost, so light a burden,
To Paris, where he sat reading
And showed him my ill news. That done,
Went back, lived on in London.

I know we don’t forget what a hard life Anne Donne had but it’s not common to bring her alive and use Donne’s refrains this way. Warner opens her book with a series of lyrics called “Boxwood” which interweaves myth, books, landscape. This is the fourth:

The book I had saved up to buy
Was come, and I
Unwrapped it and went out to be
In privacy,
As though to read such poems were
A kind of prayer.
And any bank, and any shade,
Will do, I said,
To be the temple of this hour­
So why not here
Where these old creaking chestnuts frown?
There I sat down
And read the poems; but the tree
Spoke them to me.

You can find very hostile remarks by Warner on women readers and feminism (by-the-bye); this too was common in the pre-1940s era. Yet Lolly Willowes (1926) is the story of a spinster who becomes a witch and was nominated for the Prix Femina The Corner that held the World is about medieval nuns (very eccentric); in Mr Fortune’s Maggot (1927) we meet a missionary sodomite out to convert others.

Some bibliography:

Valentine Ackland, For Sylvia: An Honest Account, London, Chano & Windus, 1985.
Barbara Brothers, ‘Writing Against the Grain: Sylvia Townsend Warner and the Spanish Civil War’ in Mary Lynn Broe and Angela Ingram, eds, Women’s Writing in Exile, Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1989, PP·350-66.
Claire Harman, Sylvia Townsend Warner: A Biography, London, Chatto & Windus, 1985; London, Minerva, 1985.
Claire Harman, ed., The Diaries of Sylvia Townsend Warner, London, Chatto & Windus. 1994.
William Maxwell, ed., The Letters of Sylvia Townsend Warner, London: Chatto & Windus; New York, The Viking Press, 1982.
Wendy Mulford, This Narrow Place: Sylvia Townsend Warner and Valentine Ackland … Life, Letters and Politics 1930-1951, London, Pandora, 1988.
Sylvia Townsend Warner, ‘The Way By Which I Have Come’, Countryman, xix, no. 2, 1939. pp. 472-86.
PN Review 23, vol. 8, no. 3. 1981, special edition on Sylvia Townsend Warner.


Sylvia and Valentine’s first home

Ellen

Gmail trouble

Dear friends and readers,

My google mail disappeared for number of hours and that has given me quite a scare. I got a frozen message for many hours which claimed to be fixing an error in my mail storage. So anyone who wants to contact me, please remember that I have two other addresses available on two further site: beyond ellen.moody@gmail, there’s Ellen2@JimandEllen.org or emoody@gmu.edu.
I’m also on facebook (Ellen Moody) and twitter (Miss Sylvia Drake)

Thank you for staying in contact with me,

Ellen

Jane Austen’s Letters: Letter 52, Wed-Fri, 15-17, June 1808, from Godmersham to Castle Square

There are things that happen and leave no discernible trace, are not spoken or written of, though it would be very wrong to say that subsequent events go on indifferently, all the same, as thought such things had never been.– A. S. Byatt, Possession


Olivia Williams as the older Jane Austen at Chawton Cottage (2008 Miss Austen Regrets)

Dear Friends and Readers,

It’s four months since Letter 51 and either Jane and Cassandra have been swapped by their families or themselves chosen to swap themselves. I find something odd or wanting explanation about this periodic change of place and long periods apart. Jane says “to be without you at Godmersham is also odd” but from our vantage of these letters, it’s the norm. Of course I’m ignoring that the statement does not refer to Jane being “without” Cassandra; in the context it means the people at Godmersham being without Cassandra: “You are wished for, I assure you.” Elizabeth was felt to need someone to help her, and it’s the brisk conventional Cassandra whom Elizabeth and her daughter, Lizzy, want, but as can be seen by the self-deprecatory remarks in the letter and Jane’s description of what she does, that she does hardly anything to take care of the children. She “tenders” her services to read to the children when Louise Bridges goes, but does not think she will be necessarily accepted “in her stead.” She’s “languid,” “solitary,” (actually she often makes up the number of the people in a room), “an incumbrance.”

I don’t mean her tone is melancholy or unhappy. On the contrary, she is self-controlled and when ironic, far more accepting of her situation than she has been thus far in the correspondence. Things which would call forth irritation and annoyance are treated with a flatter non-acid way. For Anna (apparently making a fool of herself in her over-enthusiasms), Jane says: “Tell her, with my love, that I like her for liking the quay.” When she mentions people’s assertion of their happiness, she is ironic but not vengeful (as she could be in the earlier letters). People act “very kindly”. She’s not the less aware she is a dispatchable extra in these lives’ dramas (see second to last sentence of letter), but she’s living with it better. It’s even “a pleasure” to see Edward. These memories are so strong: last letter was 9 years ago, now she remembers 14 years ago with clarity. Her recent world of women in kept up in her mind as memories and awareness of Miss Sharpe.

We see more of this pinpointing of a specific number of years in the later letters. I am willing to credit the fragmentary story of Austen’s sea-spa romance one summer, a young man who died before they could meet again. This would be when they were living in Bath and traveling around the coast in summer. (Tomalin, p. 178). In the present letters she has stopped the incessant bitterreferences to pregnancies and dead babies; she is no longer threatened by this fate a now older, poor, and too smart probably. We do get her pity for women burdened with endless children and poverty. But in the last letter (51) she said of an actor’s wife she should go and live with him (give up her business). A new sense of attachment that counts there.

So, now Cassandra in Castle Square, and Jane at Godmersham. This letter shows a growth in self-control; there is a poignancy in the story of Anna left out and cutting off her hair; Austen has her usual ironies: “Which of all my important nothings shall I tell you first; You know how interesting the purchase of a sponge-cake is to me.” Not that she doesn’t care if her trunk doesn’t arrive: “Would you believe my trunk is come already; and what completes the wondrous happiness, nothing is damaged” (!). Not like what happened at Bath in 1797, She tries to make herself useful, but doesn’t manage it; the same problems of getting in the way when others want to travel and they have no room for her (“an incumbrance” that’s what she is). But she is more cheerful from her time at Southampton and enjoys Godmersham’s landscape and luxuries more than last time. We hear of Cassandra’s doings too: who she visited, and how she took Anna to the Isle of Wight, and about EAK and Elizabeth’s children compared to James and Mary’s little JEAL and Caroline. My epigraph signals I do think important things are occurring offstage, like much re-writing and writing of novels.

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Cassandra (Gretta Scacchi) bidding adieu to Jane who is on her way to Godmersham, Mrs Austen (Phyllida Law) in background (2008 Miss Austen Regrets)

So, first the trip to Godmersham: Jane had been in London with Henry. They were at the Bath Hotel, and Henry saw them off. “Them” is Mary Lloyd Austen and Jane. James, her elder brother, went first. This suggests that Jane had been visiting Henry and Eliza and either James and Mary came too or they met up. If they met up, it’s a sort of avoidance.

Where shall I begin? Which of all my important nothings shall I tell you first? At half after seven yesterday morning Henry saw us into our own carriage, and we drove away from the Bath Hotel; which, by the bye, had been found most uncomfortable quarters-very dirty, very noisy, and very ill provided. James began his journey by the coach at five. Our first eight miles were hot; Deptford Hill brought to my mind our hot journey. into Kent fourteen years ago; but after Blackheath we suffered nothing, and as the day advanced it grew quite cool. At Dartford, which we reached within the two hours and three-quarters, we went to the Bull, the same inn at which we breakfasted in that said journey, and on the present occasion had about the same bad butter. At half-past ten we were again off, and, traveling on without any adventure reached Sittingbourne by three.

Since reading Daphne Philips’s useful book, The Story of Reading, I’ve been aware of the conventional set of traveled roads and routes all these genteel type people took. (The title is misleading; it’s about how people journeyed in the UK in Austen’s era. Thus it’s no surprise that they take the same road, go to the same Inn with the same “bad butter.” Austen is so aware of food. Nokes goes over the particular circumstances surrounding this visit of Jane’s to Godmersham (on pp. 322-23) of his book. Jane had been at Brompton with Henry and Eliza, in a house designed by a Polish count who rebuilt the opera house; nearby were Miss Pope (No 17), Mrs Billington (singer, No 15), Mr Liston (comedian, No 46). I wonder what is the proof that Eliza and Henry knew these people. Nokes writes as if it’s Mary who makes the complaints and Jane recording them; as I read the letter it’s Jane who is caviling.

What really interests me is this sudden memory of 14 years ago; that would be 1794, before the letters begin. This is the time of Eliza’s flirtation with Henry; Cassandra staying in Rowling with Edward and Elizabeth. Again it’s Nokes who describes this time (pp 145-52).

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Mr Knightley (Mark Strong) greeting a servant, asking servant how his family is (1996 Emma by Andrew Davies)

The same servant mentioned earlier; and Austen treats him equably; I noticed that her tone here is much friendlier all around. Our brothers are now James and Edward. Jane really seems pleased and the way she talks of Edward and Elizabeth startling unless we are to take her comments as sarcastic ironic: “a very affectionate welcome. That I received such from Edward I need not mention; but I do, you see, because it is a pleasure”. This is not the same woman who wrote of Bath in 1797.

Daniel was watching for us at the door of the George, and I was acknowledged very kindly by Mr and mrs Marshall (the landlords), to the latter of whom I devoted my conversation, while Mary went out to buy some gloves. A few minutes of course did for Sittingbourne, and so off we drove, drove, dorove, and by six o’clock were at Godmersham.

Our brothers’ were walking before the house as we approached, as natural as life.

I think her genius comes out now and again. Diane points to the above places as Jane gets into the coach (drove, drove, drove) and then upon arrival. She’s now writing to the moment in the Yellow room is how she might describe herself (from Richardson).

Fanny and Lizzy met us in the Hall with a great deal of peasant joy; we went for a few minutes into the breakfast parlour, and then proceeded to our rooms. Mary has the Hall chamber. I am in the Yellow room — very literally — for I am writing in it at this moment. It seems odd to me to have such a great place all to myself, and to be at Godmersham without you is also odd.

Then family news

You are wished for, I assure you: Fanny, who came to me as soon as she had seen her Aunt James to her room, and stayed while I dressed, was as energetic as usual in her longings for you. She is grown both in height and size since last year, but not immoderately, looks very well, and seems as to conduct and manner just what she was and what one could wish her to continue. Elizabeth, who was dressing when we arrived, came to me for a minute attended by Marianne, Charles, and Louisa, and, you will not doubt, gave me a very affectionate welcome. That I had received such from Edward also I need not mention; but I do, you see, because it is a pleasure. I never saw him look in better health, and Fanny says he is perfectly well. I cannot praise Elizabeth’s looks, but they are probably affected by a cold. but they are probably affected by a cold. Her little namesake has gained in beauty in the last three years, though not all that Marianne has lost. Charles is not quite so lovely as he was. Louisa is much as I expected, and Cassandra I find handsomer than I expected, though at present disguised by such a violent breaking-out that she does not come down after dinner. She as charming eye and a nice open countenance, and seems likely to be very lovable. Her size is magnificent. I was agreeably surprised to find Louisa Bridges still here. She looks remarkably well (legacies are very wholesome diet), and is just what she always was. John is at Sandling. You may fancy our dinner party therefore; Fanny, of course, belonging to it, and little Edward, for that day. He was almost too happy, his happiness at, least made him too talkative. It has struck ten; I must go to breakfast.

The child Cassandra has had some allergic reaction. By size I suppose Austen means robust as well as tall. Austen does not lose her caustic undercurrent: legacies (which she doesn’t get) make Louisa fat. The Bridges again connect us to Goodnestone Farm, the brouhaha about the invitations and Edward Bridges (Letter 46). I can see why Gwyeth Hughes invented the romance of Miss Austen Regrets. This little Edward is again the boy who favored Austen so; their congeniality continues. He is so happy to see her

The tete-a-tete with Edward in the next section again puts me in mind of Miss Austen Regrets and the depiction of Jane’s relationship with Edward. I suggest again (I wrote and published a paper on the calender underlying S&S) that Chapters 1-6 of S&S were first written in the wake of the Austens going to and at Bath when the early bitterness and left over feelings from the later 1790s were so vivid; it seems now Austen’s feelings have undergone decided change.


Edward and Jane tete-a-tete at Godmersham (2008 Miss Austen Regrets)

So after breakfast the “tete-a­tete with Edward in his room:” he wanted to know James’s plans and mine, and from what his own now are I think it already nearly certain that I shall return when they do, though not with them. Edward will be going about the same time to Alton, where he has business with Mr. Trimmer, and where he means his son should join him; and I shall probably be his companion to that place, and get on afterwards some­how or other. I should have preferred a rather longer stay here cer­tainly, but there is no prospect of any later conveyance for me, as he does not mean to accompany Edward6 on his return to Winchester, from a very natural unwillingness to leave Elizabeth at that time. I shall at any rate be glad not to be obliged to be an incumbrance on those who have brought me here, for, as James has no horse, I must feel in their carriage I am taking his place.

Again this incessant (never ceasing) problem of getting from A to B; her sensitivity to herself as the extra, the not-needed, the burden. She withes at this position, but note she never thinks to buck or defy it. She now lacks the right to a space; she is demurring to the behavior of a 3 year old, feeling perhaps ridiculous in the boa

We were rather crowded yesterday though it does not become me to say so, as I and my boa were of the party, and it is not to be supposed but that a child of three8 years of age was fidgety. I need scarcely beg you to keep all this to yourself, lest it should get round by Anna’s means. She is very kindly inquired after by all, her friends here, who all regret her not coming with her father and mother.

I did notice that Anna was left behind; Anna’s friends who miss her would not include Mary Lloyd Austen the stepmother. We see that Cassandra tries to make this up to the child by reading from Jane’s letters

I left Henry, I hope, free from his tiresome complaint, in other respects well, and thinking with great pleasure of Cheltenham and Stoneleigh. The brewery scheme is quite at an end: at a meeting of the subscribers last week it was by general, and I believe very hearty, con­sent dissolved.

Henry has turned 37, an age when people do begin to be troubled by organ malfunctions and there is no modern medicine. In 1816 this will come near to killing him or severely constraining his activities. I’m not sure what is meant by the brewery scheme. My guess is an investment which Henry decided against. He is ever having to think of how to make money. Jane has not forgotten the adventure of Stoneleigh, the money near relatives fought over; it seems that Henry had some scheme to make money through going into business and it has been dropped. Now I’m not sure what is meant by the brewery scheme. My guess is an investment which Henry decided against. He is ever having to think of how to make money.

A simple sentence which means much:

The country is very beautiful. I saw as much as ever to admire in my yesterday’s journey.

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Anne Hathaway as the young Jane at Steventon (Becoming Jane, 2008), hurt, left out

A break and then Thursday. We see how hurt and left-off Anna felt, and how Austen understood this. Cassandra was taking her to Southampton as if that was sufficient treat – at least she was freed of a resentful mother.

I am glad to find that Anna was pleased with going to Southampton, and hope with all my heart that the visit may be satisfactory to everybody. Tell her that she will hear in a few days from her mamma, who would have written now but for this letter.

Then the vignette of the leisured life of the rich which she has temporary enjoyment of:


Godmersham today (a photo)

Yesterday passed quite a la Godmersham: the gentlemen rode about Edward’s farm, and returned in time to saunter along Bentigh with us; and after dinner we visited the Temple Planta­tions, which, to be sure, is a Chevalier Bayard of a plantation. James and Mary are much struck with the beauty of the place. To-day the spirit of the thing is kept up by the two brothers being gone to Canterbury in the chair.

I cannot discover, even through Fanny, that her mother is fatigued by her attendance on the children. I have, of course, tendered ; my services, and when Louisa is gone, who sometimes hears the little girls read, will try to be accepted in her stead.

Cassandra may have been urging Jane to make herself useful and Jane doesn’t see where there is an opening. She will not be here many days long. The Moores are partly expected to dine here tomorrow or Saturday.

I feel rather languid and solitary — perhaps because I have a cold; but there years ago we were more animated with you and Harriot and Miss Sharpe. We shall improve I dare day as we go on.

Here she is trying hard and here we do have evidence of her feeling out of it, restless, and very different from the others. Without her occupation? writing perhaps. I guess Austen wrote several hours a day; in a couple of places in the Bath letters there was the long morning before she went out visiting, shopping, where-ever.

Then she remembers and longs for Miss Sharpe, Harriot (Bridges) and Cassandra as they were at Godersham 3 years ago (1805 — from the tantalizing missing years).

Edward and Elizabeth have had a new carriage made (these were expensive) and all is liked but “the lining, which does look rather shabby.”

Then we hear of two other women who may be will: Mrs Whitfield and Mrs Knight. Broadstairs is the Isle of Thanet, a seaside resort.

Miss Sharpe has now hired herself out as a lady’s companion, Miss Bailey and they are to go to Tenby (Wales). What a life Miss Sharpe must’ve had.

Then a new laundress: widow Kennet. Jane’s trunk redux (she had much fear over it and her clothes on her 1797 trip to Bath):

Would you believe my trunk is come already; and what completes the wondrous happiness, nothing is damage. I unpacked it all before I went to bed last night, and when I went down to breakfast this morning presented the rug, which was received most gratefully, and met with universal admiration. My frock is also given, and kindly accepted.

Pathetic gifts. They made that rug and probably the frock too. She leaves off here. I can see why.

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Sponge cake

Friday: I have received your letter, and I think it gives me nothing to be sorry for but Mary’s cold, which I hope is by this time better. Her approbation of her child’s hat makes me very happy. Mrs J. A. bought one at Gayleard’s for Caroline, of the same shape, but brown and with a feather. I hope Huxham is a comfort to you; I am glad you are taking it. I shall probably have an opportunity of giving Harriot your message to-morrow; she does not come here, they have not a day to spare, but Louisa and I are to go to her in the morning. I send your thanks to Eliza by this post in a letter to Henry. Lady Catherine is Lord Portmore’s daughter. I have read Mr Jefferson’s case to Edward, and he desires to have his name set down for a guinea and his wife’s for another

That Cassandra does not wish for more than one copy of the work by the Rev. Jefferson.

Your account of Anna gives me pleasure. Tell her, with my love, that I like her for liking the quay. Mrs J.A. seems rather surprised at the Maitlands drinking tea, but that does not prevent my approving it. I hope you had not a disagreeable evening with Miss Austen and her niece. You know how interesting the purchase of a sponge-cake is to me

Much irony when she returns, such as the approbation of the new baby’s cap (Mary is Mary Gibson Austen). That it’s the same fashion as the one Mary bought for Caroline. I assume Jane bought this one for this baby.

On the pamphlet by Jefferson, see the 1989 Jane Austen Society report by W.A.W. Jarvis.

Again an affinity, a congeniality of tastes and minds with Anna Austen who enjoyed the quay. Jane meets hardly anyone who appreciates the natural world and landscape, seascape around them.

A reference “Miss Austen and her niece”, tea-drinking & the Maitlands. Arnie Perlstein explained this as follows:

This Miss Austen is Harriet Lennard Austen, the middle child of Harry Austen, who was Revd. Austen’s first cousin. So Harriet Lennard Austen, who never married and was 7 years older than JA, was JA’s second cousin, is the “Miss Austen” JA refers to. Harriet Lennard Austen lived in Southampton with her elder sister, ELizabeth-Matilda Harrison, and her husband, John Butler Harrison. That married couple had a daughter also named Elizabeth-Matilda who in 1814 married her second cousin, William Austen, from the Francis Austen/Francis-Motley Austen branch of the Austen family. Elizabeth-Matilda Harrison is therefore the “niece” to whom JA refers. It sounds to me like CEA got along pretty well with her second cousin, and that CEA would have had a nice evening with her and the teenaged niece.

Ellen wrote: “I see James’ first wife’s father is related…and why Mary Austen should disapprove I can’t think but her old jealousy of any connection James had with any one before her. Her resentment.” Ellen, Mrs. Maitland was the identical twin_sister of James Austen’s first wife who died as we know in 1796! So of course Mary Austen, with her special issues having to do with smallpox facial scarring, would have been extremely jealous of the “ghost” of her husband’s dead first wife!

To which I add Austen’s well-known comment about the sponge-cake may refer to what the relatives ate and be a kind of mock on the nature of the conversation they had. They discussed sponge-cakes.

As Austen stopped here again.

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Scissors cutting a lock of blonde hair

While it’s very hard to sum up a woman of as many folds in her mind and tones as Austen is in these letters, if I were to try for what differentiates these later ones from those at Bath and those at Steventon I’d call it “self-control.” Austen is exhibiting self-control in these letters. The last phrase of this letter shows this in spades. There are several incidents referred to which in the earlier letters would have provoked biting kinds of satire, or sudden outbursts of irritation or scorn which here Austen does mock but in a controlled distant fashion or in such a way as to keep herself out of the sentence by phrasing what she is thinking more impersonally.

This is seen at the close of the letter: again Jane is in the way. If she is taken along to Bookham (which from previous letters we know she enjoys) she will inconvenience or perhaps threaten the plan altogether.

Mrs Cooke has written to my brother James to invite him and his wife to Bookham (in their way back, which, as I learn through Edward’s means, they are not disinclined to accept, but that my being with them would render it impracticable, the nature of the road affording no conveyance to James. I shall therefore make them easy on that head as soon as I can.

Note the avoidance of the active voice in the first sentence, the roundabout abstraction gerundive phrasing.

She thinks Sackree silly and absurd in her eager boasting and wanting others to know that wow she’s been in the palace. But the way she suggests this is gentle:

I told Sackree that you desired to be remembered to her, which pleased her; and she sends her duty, and wishes you to know that she has been into the great world. She went on to town after”taking”‘to William to Eltham and, as well as myself, saw the ladies go to Court on the 4th. She had the advantage indeed of me in being in the Palace.

I can just hear the imitation of Sackree’s excited tones. Compare this to the send-ups of those thrilled to ‘be in the world” in Austen’s Juvenilia.

I’m one of those who think the Juvenilia while brilliant are juvenilia and the mature books (starting in 1811 with Sense and Sensibility) the works of fulfilled capacious genius. I agree with Deborah Kaplan that this adult woman did leave some equal fragments (The Watsons, Lady Susan) and more unfinished (Sanditon) and uneven (Catherine, or The Bower), but one has to admit they are not finished. And Woolf and Q. D. Leavis are right to say the genius of the texts is in the endless polish and rewriting.

This last part of the letter tells of a walk — common enough in these letters where Austen as ever in her world of women criss-crosses a landscape with one friend-relative companion to meet others:

I am now just returned from Eggerton; Louisa and I walked to­gether and found Miss Maria at home. Her sister we met on our way back. She had been to pay her compliments to Mrs. Inman, whose chaise was seen to cross the park while we were at dinner yesterday.

Eggerton was a house owned by the Cuthbert family and Mrs Elizabeth Knight; LeFaye says Edward pulled it down in later years because he did not like “strangers” to be so close to Godmersham. He wanted to control all the space and was the owner of the land so could kick them out. Mrs Inman a neighboring tenant too. Maria is Maria Cuthbert. The sister’s name was Elizabeth (LeFaye’s note).

I had thought the Louisa mentioned was not EAK’s daughter and find that here LeFaye agrees with me. She thinks the references are to Louisa Bridges — this would explain why Austen can write of her that she’s “not so handsome as expected.” The habit of naming everyone the same small set of names before the 20th century makes identification problematic continually. The first Louisa is a child, and this is the adult woman friend.

The incident of Anna’s cutting off her hair comes up. We have seen that Mary Austen deliberately excluded this girl; that she was hurt; that Cassandra was trying to make it up to her by taking her on a trip. Young people will cut off their noses to spite their faces, and they will rebel where they want strongly when they are hurt otherwise. After all what has she got to lose? So Anna cut her hair. I can see this intense passion. Alas that she destroyed her novel when she was depressed later in life.

Austen is again controlled in the way she discusses it:

Anna will not be sur­prised that the cutting off her hair is very much regretted by several of the party in this house; I am tolerably reconciled to it by considering ‘t k that two or three years may restore it again.

I suggest this is also a way of siding with Anna. By not making such a huge fuss, she suggests they leave the girl alone. She suffers enough. And it will grow back. so what? Austen sensible here.

EAK and Elizabeth’s children can be a rowdy bunch in later letters; there are so many of them. I feel they are reflected in the denseness of the Bertram children to their visitor, Fanny. Both Caroline and Edward were sensitive adults and children. Jane is reporting therefore on how they are doing to her sister who gets this:

Edward and Caroline seem very happy here; he has nice playfellows in Lizzy and Charles. They and their attendant have the boys’ attic

I speculate on the next one from the earlier context of this letter: Cassandra is trying to compensate to Anna for not being at Godmersham. LeFaye tells us Captain Bulmore was a mariner who lived in Southampton. LeFaye imagines him as skipper of the ferry service over to the Isle of Wight. But the reference also includes a hotel. Something funny also happened for the reference is to Cassandra’s keeping her dignity up. Maybe then this is a reference to an adventure (sort of) that Cassandra and Anna had together. Mrs Craven is repeatedly (by a number of witnesses) said to have been a total bitch and so her “approbation” would be of course to anyone who kept up a phony (=dignified) surface and Austen tells her sister she will get her reward for her distress and sustaining a role if she gets to see her this way (I see “pleasant” as ironic).

She ends on her mother’s worry that their gift was accepted and big enough: My mother will be glad to be assured that the size of the rug does perfectly well. It is not to be used till winter.

Also the love to everybody that Mr Knightley denies has any reality in Emma but feels real enough here to me. Those at Godmersham are missing Cassandra and wish she were with them.

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Opening scene of Diana Fairfax as Mrs Dashwood and Tracey Childs as Marianne excluded from their home, left with meagre options


Irene Richards as Elinor reasoning (1981 BBC Sense and Sensibility)

The learning about Austen we gain from these letters is indirect. In the first letters from Southampton we still see how mortified she is when driven to compare herself to others – by visiting them! — who are much richer, higher in rank than she. We see in these early ones again how sincere or real is her dislike of social hypocrisies, both the accepted rituals and the break-down (as continually can happen) of unwritten social rules. This tells us important realities in her mind when she frames her novels, gives us her perception of experience: how important rank, money, position are in her novels.

I account for this the way I did last week: she’s achieved a modicum of space, control of her time, a modus vivendi which contains part of her original plan (Martha) and I think she’s writing away, even at Godmersham. Marianne remembered years later Austen went round with her writing desk in which she kept manuscripts. In this letter she is consciously admitting the Richardson method: she is writing to the moment: “I am in the Yellow room — very literally — for I am writing in it at this very moment.” There are two other places in the letter where she reminds her reader and herself she is writing to the moment.

I had really no idea how much autobiography is found in the novels, transmuted but there all the same. And for me we are getting to the best ones: those where she talks of what she reads and finally (in the last section) her writing, for that’s what she cares about, and at the end of her life had found peace insofar as she could and did write. She expressed her turmoil, her feeling at having been excluded, left with few resources, marginalized, not allowed to live the life she might really have wanted, and her regrets (yes regrets for what she had not known) in her books.

“My Jane Austen.” This is a phrase that Cindy Jones has many fans in her My Jane Austen Summer use and she herself uses it. On Austen-l a couple of people wrote about who is their Jane Austen. When today — or just now — I think of who is “my Jane Austen,” she’s the woman who opened her first publication, which she paid for herself (or tried to, mostly) and on the second page told her reader that the older man who her major character has spent ten years of their lives catering to, comforting, helping,
living with, left most of his estate to a young child because he was amused by a series of mindless shallow antics:

it was secured, in such a way, as to leave to himself no power of providing for those who were most dear to him, and who most needed a provision by any charge on the estate, or by any sale of its valuable woods. The whole was tied up for the benefit of this child, who, in occasional visits with his father and mother at Norland, had so far gained on the affections of his uncle, by such attractions as are by no means unusual in children of two or three years old–an imperfect articulation, an earnest desire of having his own way, many cunning tricks, and a great deal of noise–as to outweigh all the value of all the attention which, for years, he had received from his niece and her daughters …

Yes that’s my Jane Austen and why I’ve carried on reading her all these years.
Just this past week I had an experience of a similar aging person acting
similarly ungratefully to a depth of care and preferring shallow gestures and
antics. Austen never fails me; she is ever relevant from page 1 on.


Amanda Root as Anne Elliot ejected from Kellynch (1995 BBC Persuasion)

Letters 43, 44; 45, 46, 47, and 48, 49, 50, 51

Ellen

18th century actresses & historical fiction; Poldark dreams


Verity (Norma Streader) and Captain Blamey (Jonathan Newt) falling in love (1975-76 Poldark I)

Dear Friends,

I’m sometimes torn over where to put a blog. I’ve been putting my conference reports on Ellen and Jim have a blog, two for several years now and so thought it best to report on the recent EC/ASECS I went to over there; but the full truth is much in these sessions belongs here with Austen Reveries. The first report is about actresses’ memoirs, attitudes towards marriage in the era (from Dryden’s Marriage a La Mode), and historical fiction. So I’m writing this short blog to apprise my friends and readers here of this first report. I like to put my personal events and dreams on Sylvia so what I’m hoping for over my Liberty in the Poldark novels I’ve put there.

Ellen

Southey’s Letters from England: insightful pictures of England, circa 1807


Caroline Bowles Southey (1786-1854), Southey’s second wife and a fine poet and writer in her own right, Robert’s Window Study, Greta Hall

We have got the 2nd vol. of Espriella’s Letters, & I read it aloud by candlelight. The Man describes well, but is horribly anti-English. He deserves to be the foreigner he assumes. — Jane Austen, 1-2 Oct 1808, at Castle Square, Southampton (LeFaye 141)

Dear friends and readers,

I’ve been reading Robert Southey’s Letters from England in the evening since mid-summer, partly in reaction to Austen’s off-hand dismissal. I’ve discovered it to be a work of original genius: presented appealingly as the story of imagined journeys through England by a Spanish Catholic, Southey’s Letters from England is a perceptive cultural, indeed anthropological analysis of England, circa 1807. He is unusual for seeing in the way medicine is practised has to be seen in the understood of religious attitudes of people as much as their political maneuvering. His depiction of the economic and political doings of English people is relevant to our world today. There is a long varied disquisition on religion and religious sects at the time. Southey’s descriptions of places he loves (the Lake District for example), make parts of his book an exquistely lovely prose poem. He celebrates libraries; he analyses the literary marketplace of his day in a candid sophisticated way (book history!) He is funny. I especially loved his genuine concern for animals, his hatred of slavery, and empathy with the oppressed poor and vulnerable. His book is a rich gem.

Southey is disappointing when he comes to speak of specific women. While not overtly anti-feminist, not concerned with women as such most of the time, one chapter (Joanne Southcote) brings out a startlingly virulent misogynistic strain linking this book to his famous corrosive rejection of Charlotte Bronte’s book. His book does connect to Austen: she read and didn’t like it (she says for its anti-englishness) and fits into (soars above) the popular “letters from” genre of the era, which I find Austen often read.

Southey is particularly good for 19th century England; you would have to go far to find as ample, alive and interesting a book on England in the early 19th century as this. I recommend it to anyone seeking to get a feel for England rather than most 21st century books. The perspective is that of a radical left critique (for the most part). I found I could not easily summarize the book or rewrite in synopsis style, so after a brief introduction these are the summaries and evaluations I’ve been writing on Eighteenth Century Worlds at Yahoo (corrected) these months — with a few appropriate pictures.

My edition is a good older one: adequately enough annotated with an insightful introduction by Jack Simmon (Prof of History, University College, London), it was printed in 1951 by The Cresset Press. Particularly good are his notes connecting the book to England in 1951. For those on a budget who nonetheless do not want to resort to a struggle with a google book or find a facsimile reprint (book on demand), it’s a fine choice. You’ll cherish your volume when you’ve done.

There is a new expensive edition published by Chatto & Pickering, said to be the “first fully annotated, critical edition” by Carol Colton. I guess the word “fully” is key to this statement. Simmons’s notes are accurate, detailed enough and often give you good analogies from contemporary works and he reprints Southey’s notes by Espriella too. Chatto & Pickering’s critical blurb tells you how Southey “blurs the boundaries of fact and fiction to produce a complex work of literary merit — there is no other prose work of its kind during the Romantic period. Among the topics covered are: provincial customs, political intrigues; theater and sports; religious sects; poverty and criminality in urban centers; science and medical progress; Georgian London; social change” and the state of the army and navy.”

Note the values here. To say a work crosses the boundaries of fact and fiction would not have appealed then. It is true that like many travelogues a lot of the travel is half-imagined and our narrator is an imagined character. The blurb entirely omits the radical politics of the book and its relationship to our world today. Price 100 pounds now and 180 pounds later. ISBN: 978 1 84893 209 8

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Gretna Hall as first seen by Coleridge

Letters 1 – 3

I read the introduction and first chapter. It’s a book hard to summarize; much
of its quality thus far is a product of the interaction of the persona and what he sees. Since Southey’s Spaniard gentleman begins in Cornwall (I can’t seem to leave Cornwall in my reading these months) I can compare the opening to Collins’s Rambles Beyond Railways. Collins presents himself as an unnamed version of himself (hired journalist) and can fill us in on what he read about Cornwall to start; Espriella is a traveler who might be compared to an independent scholar i in a library. It’s not a job (like Collin’s is); Espriella travels for the love of it and to inform his fellow Spaniards what England is really like. The idea is he knows nothing and on top of this he admits his Catholicism may get in the way of understanding what he sees.

I wonder about this persona. In the introduction to the book, Simmons goes over Southey’s life and tells how he had a wealthy uncle who lived in Lisbon and went to stay with the uncle at a formative moment (early 20s, after the friendship with Coleridge reached its first collapse); he visited Portugal again after he married and spent 14 months there. He had been an ardent Republican and the experience of the Peninsula and how he saw France in 1793 made him begin to turn conservative. He was a radical politically and that meant religion, and we are told he hated Catholicism as this imprisoning repressive system/religion. He returned in 1801 to do aimless unquiet wandering, a struggling writers writing all the time (poetry which hardly ever makes anyone any money); a turning point was someone (there must be a person) began to give him reviewing for the Quarterly Review. After that he reviewed all his life and the payments for this, a small annuity (oh how wonderful such things are) were a kind of continual small grease to go on with as he wrote and wrote much else. In 1803 he and his wife were invited to visit Gretna Hall. He never left. A huge room was set up for him (with a lovely view) and from there he wrote as if his life depended on it — well at any rate everyone around him did depend too.

I can only think that the assumption of this religion is a kind of excuse to
fend off criticism of him. In her nasty comment Austen refers to this
Spanishness as simply an irritant. For my part he does not seem to be at all
Spanish, not even a little bit. His perspective is that of the middle class
English man when he describes the coach.

The first chapter reminds me of travel books which start with complaints, only
his depiction of Cornwall is of a place physically beautiful (desolate too) and economically desperate. Like many travelers he sees the travelers’ world and it is one of high bustle, inconvenience, with thus far comic vignettes – in the coach.

Southey’s book is very good. Witty, lively, and quietly critical of the established order. This is the moderate radical people speak of (an oxymoron I know).

A few examples: he tends to tell stories of catastrophic awful behavior to women as if it’s a half joke when he knows it’s not. A man who does not imprison his wife, but rather rows her out to an island rock at low water, and leaves her there to think he will not come back. He only returns when the tide is close to drowning her (p. 19)

Very hard physical labor performed by women (p. 22) pointed out to us as unfair affliction.

A sequence where he shows how the countryside around Launceston (Cornwall) is ruined by enclosures (25). Another where he points out how people are driven to starve and move into towns where they are beggars and prostitutes.

In Exeter he tells of how a literary society attached to a circuliating club which was lively and thriving was “broke” up by the gov’t because it was said to foster French Revolution ideas. A thrown-away line tells us this has been done in “every town, village, and almost every family in the kingdom”. When you read this, you can remember that he is talking as a Spaniard, who would be seen as a reactionary so this is a double mask.

In Devonshire he shows how a “notoriously venal” rotten borough really works, How few people live in Honiton, the number of representatives (p. 31) and so on

How Gilbert Wakefield was (in effect) murdered by the British gov’t by his imprisonment. This man was a “favourer of the French revolution.” He was locked up on a trumped up charga=e — having in an answer to a Bishop on the question of dissenters used the fable of teh ass and his panniers. It was a threat to rulers it was said. Public feeling ran high on his behalf. Nonetheless about a show trial (all pretense of justice acted out_), he was put in a prison under rules which permitted no visits. His family could not give him good regularly or warm clothes. (Prisons are themselves shown to be death-like horrible places.) He became very ill and nothing was done (like Edward Fitzgerarld). Shortly after Wakefield was released he died. (p. 35). Southey spoke to someone in power about it and said how much ‘more humane” it would be to repress such documents in the first place (no one believes Milton); the reply, ah but yes then the public would see “too open a violation of the liberty of the press.” Why people think that people in earlier eras were less sophisticated in their viciousness than we today I’ve never figured out.

So amid he wit and humor and realistic descriptions of counties, towns, roads, we have a quiet telling of the intense repressions of the 1790s and early 1800s.

Unexpected (I was not surprised by any of the details of the above) was Southey’s real sympathy for horses. So he was part of the new movement for sympathy for animals. There are a couple of striking examples by the third chapter. So, e.g., in his description of post-chaises, Southey shows how “the life of a post-horse is truly wretched.” One of them in the particular instance had been “rubbed raw by a harness.” They are given little or no rest between journeys. The rationale (as Southey knows) resembles that of slavery. The owner finds “it more profitable to over work their beasts and kill them by hard labour in two or three years than to let them do half the work and live out their natural length of life” (p. 32).

Jane Austen’s criticism is as usual so general (mild xenophobic resentment) and off the cuff it’s hard to say that she’s displeased because of the liberal perspective of Southey’s book, but it cannot be dismissed that that may be it.

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John Constable (1773-1837), Salisbury Cathedral from the Bishop’s Grounds (1825)

Letters 4 – 7

Salisbury Cathedral gives him a chance to critique the destructive behavior of all the fanatic religious cliques as well as the establishment, all the while celebrating its beauty. Although he does the strange beauty of their configurations justices, he does not like ugly modern iron bridges. Nor do I

He has carefully read earlier travel books — interesting this. A scholarly type.

Then he gets into London. I can see that a huge swatch of the book takes place in London. Southey was not that much of a traveler after all.

I read on into Southey’s first days in London and discovered two passages I’ve come across before. This is not a forgotten book. It’s read and remembered.

Both are part of an increasingly strong critique of fundamental customs in 18th and early 19th century life. Southey tells the story of one Governor Wall who during a crisis at sea became so hysterical and brutal he had three men flogged to death. The event was so ugly (it included the floggers tiring and everyone resting and then continuing) and horrifying that it went even beyond the bounds of what was considered acceptable. And what was acceptable was vicious. Wall had to flee and lived in hiding for many years; finally his own circumstances and the post-Revolutionary era made him think that the propaganda would be on his side. Not so. He was hanged — but not (as Southey points out) for brutality or over-flogging, rather on a point of law, whether what he had done was an execution (that would have been fine) or murder (not fine). In other words the court maintained the right and justness of flogging to death.

Southey’s retelling of the incident is part of larger chapter where he critiques the military system of the UK then. He says there should be a clearly demarcated limited term of service, for then you would get more volunteers. He clearly regards pressing as an outrage. The “grievous evils” of the military system includes the way the rich can buy a substitute and the poor can’t. The famous passage comes at the end of an account of the brutalizing and corrupt ways of spending time: he writes that “he who has once been a solider is commonly for ever after unfit for everything else.”

I’ve seen that quoted. I should add that Southey is horrified by the custom of leaving rotting bodies hanging and tells stories of families trying to retrieve their relative or friend’s body — thus reinforcing the thesis of _Albion’s Fatal Tree_ that friends tried to rescue bodies from the scapels of the medical establishment.

The other piece I’ve come across comes first in the sequence on London. Southey really gives the reader an idea of the immense crowdedness of London — or so it felt then. The remarkable variety and press of goods. Southey’s uses his Spanish persona and shows shopping in London is a mode of exhibiting oneself and one’s class instead of getting what you need.

He imagines the reader walking with him up the street past St Paul’s, and then critiques the way the streets around St Paul’s obscure its beauty which he says is not really cared about no matter what people claim. Why so? After the 1660 fire there was a chance to re-landscape and leave it free and that was ignored, and again in the 18th century there had been a chance to re-landscape and again no one did anything. The passage is too long for me to quote but it was quoted by J. R. H. Weaver after WW2 was over to support an argument for preserving an open view of the church after all around it had been destroyed (p. 51)

Southey also in a comic description reveals English people are bad at pageantry. This section may be intended as a satire on Spanish customs.

Byron has done great harm to this man’s general reputation and deprived us of good books showing that there was a middle kind of decency in the UK at the time – the political positions here are that of Radcliffe — Southey cannot inveigh against nunneries but he is not keen.

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“That might do,” John Everett Millais’s illustration for Trollope’s Small House at Allington (Chapter 20): shopping

Letters 8 – 17

Several superb chapters. This is really able satire which is at the same time realistic enough to present to the reader a sense of London life at the time.

Letter 11 describes London shopping showing beyond a doubt how much of it is done to forward your position, your caste, how the shops are themselves become very fancy in order to appeal to what I’d called identity-snob politics. The section reminded me of a brilliant chapter in Trollope’s Small House at Allingham where the DeCourcy’s go shopping for carpets and the cad of the novel who has jilted the novel’s wonderful heroine, Lily, sees what shits they are and also how much he is going to have to cough up in money earned beyond the dowry to keep this woman and her tribe in countenance. A new fangled “comfort” is spreading throughout London.

Southey’s tone is not harsh, but he makes some subtle points which are relevant still: such as “this metropolis of fashion” is actually growing more “monotonous in appearance” because of the need to appeal to this broader swathe of upper class or aspiring types. He can’t get over the windows and the verandas – which make a place colder. For the first time I realize the veranda in Persuasion which the Mary Musgrave and Charles are proud of is ludicrous in their climate. Part of the point.

Letter 12 a serious disquisition on larger politics. Southey shows that most people did not understand why a peace treaty had emerged, nor who the individuals in the parties were or what was at stake. He doesn’t say a lot (protecting himself) but enough to suggest it’s a matter of individuals jockeying for position. Here his not being a Spaniard is plain (the way he discusses Ireland). He is with Pitt for Peace and admires Addington

Letters 13 and 14 give real descriptions of typical rooms in London and typical dress, not so satirically presented. A production design person for a costume drama could do worse than read this. Details of furniture, of conveniences, of hats. Chapter 15 gives us the meals Londoners ate, the luxuries. This again brings out Southey’s humanity when it comes to animals. How savage and shocking really the brutal treatment of the animals in butcheries. Southey comes up close and gives details, we are to feel for these sheep covered wit their own blood, herded mercilessly and sometimes slaughtered slowly for fun. He makes us aware how much of the food on the English table comes from elsewhere. Also again politics. A law against brewing or roasting your own coffee to protect an industry. A long piece on the brutal uses of chimney sweeps – here as a Spaniard he can make points.

A great deal of the pleasure is in the style, natural, easy yet not infrequently aphoristic, as in: “If humanity is in better natures an instinct, no instinct is so easily deadened, and in the mass of mankind it seems not to exist. There’s some fun, like a rage for conveniences, the new ingenious mechanics and inventions (e.g., corkscrews). I’m with Southey on innovation 🙂

A letter on espionage — not for politics but revenue. We see how people preyed upon one another to snitch to the revenue officer such that vast protection rackets emerged. I felt I was reading a Dickens novel or material for one.

Letter 17: there is a realistic description of the insecurity and fragileness of the theater building itself as well as a funny treatment of the audience’s behavior: Southey is part of the modern (group who want quiet in a theater, who have come there to see the show, and such a segment of the audience was not the dominant force until later in the 19th century. I re-read Southey’s funny chapter on the rage for “comfort.” In 1807 these “proud islanders” seemed to want to enjoy themselves and have many conveniences and they could do so and get all sorts of things in London.

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Drury Lane Theater, mid-18th century

Letters 18 – 20

Letter 18 is about Drury-Lane Theater and our Spanish friend, Espriella, goes to a performance of The Winter’s Tale, which on one level astonishes him for its splendour, size (so many people brought together), beauty (richness and light).

However, the performance left much to be desired. I felt I was reading a cross between Charles Lamb dismayed at what in reality people can do on a stage when they try to enact something adequate to Shakespeare’s conceptions and a Voltaire-like take on the absurdities of the half-wild half-madness of a Shakespeare play. Not that he does not take time out to describe the impressiveness of Mrs Siddon’s arresting Hermione (surpassing in theatrical effect is what he called her performance, costume, presence), with a little on Kemble as Leontes.

Then the afterpiece which sounds like a full play in its own right of Don Juan — no playwright is named. He emphasizes the ending of whatever it was he saw, the statue saying this seemed to be the favorite part of the spectacle and himself found it a “high style of fancy, truly fine and terrifice. The sound of his marble footsteps upon the atage struck a dead silence throughout house.”

As a Spaniard he complains English writers are not very respectful of the Spanish stage or audience while their audiences continue to “delight in one of the most monstrous of our dramas.” About the content or themes, he has nothing to do. Austen does mention Don Juan and it’s a a cruel monster of depravity (despite the comedy).

I recently re-read Trollope’s Barchester Towers and he has a long rant by his narrator decrying the awfulness of sermons; Southey’s apparently milder send-up of these awful sermons is actually more radical in its content. Trollope protests against the boredom, egoism, and stupidity of what’s said without giving any idea of the probable content. Southey gives an idea of the content (moral and theological) and then tells of the trading and business of sermon-selling, sharing, the creation of “outlines” sold. He says the popular preachers are those most into histrionics and those who give upbeat accounts of the world which never trouble or disquiet the unthinking norms of their listeners at all. He gives a general outline and mocks the kinds of quotations used (Ossian!). It’s a wolf in sheep’s clothing for (as I wrote last time) many of these preachers are acting to forward their careers, make deals outside the pulpit, somehow make small bits of money then too.

After I read Catherine Jones’s The passionate Sisterhood, Southey went up enormously in my estimation. He was the only one of these male romantics really to support the women he married (plus some of those he had not married but were his friends’ “women”), he inflicted least children on them; I was impressed by his habits of hard-work and genuine cooperation and sacrifice of himself (not quite enough to forgive the putdown of Bronte which I fear he did on other women, or not enough to forget it), and I’ve liked very much his occasional poetry, radical abolitionist verse and early radical play Wat Tyler. Now I see much more to the man in his thought.

Letter 19 is a description of an English church service and here the Spanish point of view is serviceable. He is an outsider, not sympathetic, seeing in. It’s like somebody from Mars retailing these curious behaviors. The rigid hierarchies (e.g., the powerful own or rent their pews)). One problem is that as a satire which gives real insight it falls flat. A methodist perspective would read the meaning into these details and de-construct them. I suspect Southey was aware the mask here freed him from having to say something dangerous (risky)

It’s a letter I can’t do justice to. Southey attempts to characterize the religious spirit or attitudes of the British people as it were from an anthropological point of view. He sees a lack of mysticism, looks at the specific customs that go with each festival (what’s eaten, rituals of medicine). He find traces of Catholic or high church behavior (icons, lights). In Spain much in daily life is calculated to remind people of religion; in the UK it’s utterly played down, down to the outfits the priests wear and how they marry.

He finds the religion of death is cut off — meaning religious practices which bring people in their minds in close proximity to the world of the dead. He finds this strange: no consolation offered, just cut off, as if there is nothing there on the other side. He talks of being cut off from one’s sorrow, not given rituals or ways actively to cope (prayers). I can’t make out if this is ironic, but I think not.

He says this schism did result in a Bible in English, clergy who preach in English. He seems to see no gain here. It’s imaginary the claim that Roman Catholics cannot read their Bible in the vernacular he says. All they must do is translate the Vulgate (an approved text of course). He says that they drink wine is at least one thing left to them — so “they are right to make the most of what they have.” As to marriage, it brings poverty, which gets him to how the clergy is more a sheer profession or career in the UK.

It was also in France and Spain too.

How clergymen are commercial adventurers selling and buying curacies.

Letter 20: a passion for collecting, from books to tulips. Each type with their devotees explained:
A long piece on flowers and the tulip rage elsewhere.

A fun part is about how people collect china and cats – cats. He maintains that the English believe there is no such thing as a male “tortoise-shell colored cat.” Well there are. Court cases not so funny of someone suborning one another and trying to get someone hanged so he can get his hands on a certain kind of farthing.

I found of real interest Southey’s description of physical books, what people with mania collect (margins, tall books, rarities). The good is to preserve volumes that would otherwise perish. Private people allow others to use their collections (a class bias and connections would come in here though) and then Southey explodes in complaints about how public libraries run; badly managed, absurd restrictions. The want of convents is here deplored — in Spain did such places keep libraries open to the public?.

Letter 20: He of course is against the total want of respect for the Virgin Mary, “cold unimpassionated uninteresting” when it comes to stories, all moral lecture.

The best thing is the ambition of the preacher or clergyman, what they are there to get for themselves – rendered comically but there.

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Cover illustration for volume of gothic stories by women, Restless Spirits

Letters 21 – 25

From collecting as a significant habit of the English, Southey moves (Letter 22) onto coins as such (what they look like, how made, how recently debased and diminished, then a history of money (physical money), paper circulation and finally forgery and its dread punishments (hanging, remorseless and very
hard to get off). In this free-shaped sort of book, he can then extend his
remarks and there is an insightful discussion of the rationales given for
the draconian punishments for forgery, stealing and petty theft at the time.

Southey moves beyond the usual, we have to defend the reality of money, to a
more general principle I’ve never seen enunciated. A punishment should be
harsh not in accordance with the violence or cruelty of the crime itself,
but how easy it is to be done. I was startled. According to this, then
smoking marijuana should perhaps get torture? But such was the supposed
rationale. I rush to say this section by Southey is informed by his
rejection of such inhumanity, rigor and he is as against putting people into
prison for debt as Johnson in his famous Ramblers was, but I’ve never seen
the rationale before. Southey then speaks to this rationale: if it be that a
punishment should be fitted to the ease of the crime, he says the community
must make the crime harder. He comes out with suggestions of how to make it
hard to forge a note. He suggests something hard to engrave which is large
and visible to the common eye, and shows how this may be done.

Perhaps he means to expose this rationale as hypocritical, but as other of
his sections I’m not sure he is ironical here.

Then to the city, and where else but Westminster Abbey (Letter 23). The three
foundings (it was founded, then refounded, and then rebuilt). First when it
was converted from a temple of Apollo (Diocletian) and its second place
after Gastonbury Abbey; the miracle story told to explain this. Southey has
some fun with this, and then turns about and says anyone who says he does
wrong to tell such bogus nonsense would be wrong, for it is “important to
know what has been believed, whether it be truth or not.” He is
anthropological in this book. And sceptical too: no individual opinion can
be a “standard of truth” either. The ravages of the Danes, the long period
of the Tudors with gothic rebuilding. Southey as a Spaniard is against the
puritanical destructions; “instead of erecting tombs, their delight was to
deface the old.”

This leads into an interesting discussion of the gothic. In an earlier
chapter Southey had said the English are not mystic, and looks at these
monuments as symbols of power and prestige — Newton on one and the Earl of
Stanhope on another great pile. He gets a kick out of referring to Cromwell
(whose bones were dug up and thrown out and tomb destroyed) as “the
celebrated usurper.”

The strangeness of going round looking at tombs which moves into a portrait
of a verger who emerges as a gothic figure (in the genre sense) himself.

After the portrait of the gothic-like verger (Letter 23), we move round Westminster and our Spanish conductor tells us how the English have this habit of touching everything and you can find little quarrels played out by paying attention to what’s defaced or ruined. If they hate a book, they”ll cut out a leaf in it. He points to a major monument to Major Andre, hanged by Washington as a spy; the story is told in relief. Well it’s head was struck off after someone else struck off Washington’s (as a traitor). He ends saying that if the public “were indiscriminately admitted” into many of the public places, including churches, “everything valuable … would soon be destroyed.”

So much for the happy camper theory of contented non-violent English people.

Then skin and hair color and names (Letter 24). Southey offers the idea that the complexions and hair colors of English people show their favorite myths about their origins of themselves cannot be. If Celts were had fair hair and eyes, where does all this dark hair, dark eyes, and swarthy (brownish) skin come from. (Alas, he had not Steve Olson’s Mapping Human History to refer us to.)

Then names: how they reflect identity politics (the Bible), partisan ship (politics), snobbery (Cecilia Amelia and Wilhemina now shoving out Bridget, Joan and Dorothy; how abbreviations are formed, fashions from war heroes (news-stories of the day — like people today naming their children after favorite TV characters).

Months are latin-derived but not days and the “Saxon Paganism” of these leads him to say how no one in England gets married on a Friday; superstition denominates that bad luck.. St Swithin’s and valentine’s day (which Austen wrote her last poem when she lay dying upon). He sees this as sad vestiges of Catholicism, as well as their statuary Again I can’t tell if he’s ironic or which is his target (Spanish customs or English) or perhaps human nature itself as comical.

Ch 25: the prevalence of “vermin” everywhere (bed bugs) leads to foxes and fox-hunting and by a natural transition back to something more felt: Southey’s feeling for animals. The regulation shooting — murdering of birds — which in similar terms Austen dislikes. This wholesale butchery is described and what results from or swirls round it. The poaching laws which make it illegal for ordinary people to kill in order to have something to eat. Sales everywhere and sale signs too (including coaches), larders of inns supplied — in Southey’s account this gross killing is not done just for sport, but to make money, to sell the animals for food. He says the real reason more middling farmers resent the killing because they are not profiting. And the section ends:

“Some species by these continual persecutions have been quite rooted out, others are nearly extinct, and others only to be found in remote parts of the island. Sportsmen lament this, and naturalists lament it also with better reason.”

He would support Jane Goodall and the environmental as well as pro-animal lobbies today. The use of the word “persecution” is right. What have these animals done to be so persecuted? And it fits his persona too.

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Samuel Fildes (1848-1927), Applicants to a Casual Ward (1844)
Letter 26

The “field sports” lead to a chapter on the poor laws and workhouses which is immense, and one Southey shows much compassion and thought in. for the reader of 2011 that I summarize it separately. Southey’s description of the way the poor were treated in 1807 and the attitudes underlying this treatment is directly parallel to the treatment we see meted out to the poor (unemployed, people getting food stamps, disabled people) today.

He begins by saying with the Spanish “charity is a religious duty”. He then basically dismisses what the Spanish do, saying only they “support the poor” by alms, hardly adequate.

His interest is England. It’s a matter of law. So he goes back to Elizabethan times, the dissolution of the monasteries and describes the “disgrace” of the poor laws. These are supported by a system of parish taxation which is seen by those who pay the taxes as a grievance.

The agents are “overseers” and the office so troublesome only lower middle people do it, and they do it with “rigid parsimony.” They are lavish with their own enjoyments (salaries they get for doing this work). Each penny is given reluctantly and made to “feel his poverty as a reproach.”

This system is backed up by a “worst evil:” each parish bound to provide for its poor works hard to throw out everyone else no matter how sick, how desperate. “There is no liberty in England for the poor.” Anyone not belonging to a parish and poor is “apprehended as if he were a criminal” and “sent back to his parish.” Women giving birth are thrown out while doing so.

He says the “principle” of the poor laws is that the price of labor is enough to support a family; if the season is unusually hard, the parish assists them. Otherwise not. Southey says this behavior is backed up by the notion if you give poor people more than subsistence they will waste it in riot, drink or worse yet be idle. “Plausible” as this seems (Southey’s irony I’m beginning to see is very quiet), it’s “fallacious” and cruel. It assumes as its “as is the depravity of human nature.” In fact were the poor to have more than subsistence, they would and do when this happens save, live healthier more productive lives with opportunities for advancement from education.

But no one pays attention to this.

When the poor grow too old to work, they are thrown in workhouses. Humiliated by being forbidden to live as adults (separated from spouses so no sex can go on). The kind of people who work in work houses are those who get no better situation. Any children here grow up without love. For an older person it is particularly “heart-breaking” to be subjected to “harsh and unfeeling authority” from someone much younger “neither better born or bred,” just as often worse.

England boasts of its wealth, but it has huge numbers of people living in abysmal poverty. Southey then depicts a typical street in London and villages in winter. Riots break out in times of scarcity and the reaction is draconian punishment (this happens in Graham’s Four Swansthe novel I’m just now reading).

Beyond what human nature is, Southey fingers “the manufacturing system” as the “main cause” of all this misery. It is the “inevitable tendency of that system to multiply the number of the poor, and to make them vicious, diseased and miserable”. Rousseau is see by Southey (perhaps ironically) as committing “high treason” against “human nature” and blaspheming “Omniscient Goodness” by his comparing people in savage to people in social states. But Southey says then that they “who say society ought to stop where it is; that it has no further amelioration to expect, do not less blaspheme the one [God] and betray the other [human nature?]. As now set up the improvements of society do not reach the poor. The gentry are better lodged, better educated, but the poor live as “the slaves of old,” work hard, badly bed, not well taught at all [I add it’s in no one’s interest to teach them]. He says if we compare the well off in social states (modern) we see they have “full enjoyment of all” their powers, bodily and intellectual.” In savage states all have equal access to what is on offer, and he concludes therefore it’s better for poor people to be born in primitive society “than in a civilized country, where he is in fact the victim of the civilization”.

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St Paul’s Cathedral, London (photo)

Letters 27 – 30

Chapter 27 takes us through St Paul’s in the same thorough way as our
narrator took us through Wesminster (the monuments, the nakedness of the
church — to a catholic — its summit and a sublime view; this leads to Ch
27 all about Catholicism in England. It’s hard for me to grasp where Southey
is, much of it seems sympathetic to Catholics yet I read he disliked
Catholicism intensely — all his talk about nuns escaping persecution just
doesn’t feel ironic. I have a similar problem with the next chapter, on
non-conformity. I do think the underlying narrator is intensely sympathetic;
the point is made over and over that the establishment has nothing to fear
from either group and seems at heart against persecutions: of catholics or
nonconformists. But again I’ve read Southey opposed the extensions of the
franchise.

Then a lovely travelogue type chapter on the pictures, seaside places, which
is made to have some bite because Southey says such places have really grown
up as place where “parents” try to dispose of their daughters. (This has
connections to the Austen letters where the parents have brought the
daughters to Bath and then tour, except all the girls meet are other poor
fringe young women, mostly unmarried.)

Espriella is going to the lake district – where we (and Southey’s first readers) knew he lived.

Chapter 30 is a sort of satire and exposure of the picturesque. Southey’s theme is how “within the last thirty years a taste for the picturesque has sprung up; — and a course of summer traveling is now looked upon to be as essential as ever a course of physic was in old times …” Some flock to the shore, others to the mountains, some to lakes, yet more to Scotland …

Thus his commentary in his travelogue that people do this to palm off their unmarried daughters, to show off their material goods, as a form of conspicuous consumption (though he doesn’t use the term that’s what he means), enrichening Bath and doctors and encouraging mountebanks is attached to this new movement.

He would have approved of Marianne Dashwood’s satire on the use of cliched language.

Nonetheless, he is eager to set forth, and we get him packing and heading for the lake district. He does not go there directly but begins at a stage coach to Oxford and he provides a realistic yet comic description of what it was like to travel inside, on top of a coach and four just laden down with luggage, and what ensues is a very interesting description of the landscape and places.

Still reading this one — albeit very slowly — Southey turns just charming (there’s no other word for it) as he begins to travel in group of picturesque seeming places. As he says “it’s impossible not to like the villas” one sees as a tourist, “so much opulence, and so much ornament is visible about them,” all orderly and aesthetically so consoling. He has his narrator stand in the middle of a corn field looking about Oxford: it’s as good as a costume drama film adaptation (see p. 172). The only drawback is some of what happens in inns, for example, the habit of “calling for wine which you know to be bad, and paying an extravagant price for what you’d rather not drink” (p. 171)

He just celebrates Oxford — probably this reflects him as a reading man while threading in the bloody history of individuals; the services in the library, the kinds of degrees available, the history of the Bodleian, and then comes to the Cotswolds — wholesome with much being grown and farmlands everywhere. Not picturesque, better than that he says (so he agrees with Edward Ferrars in the dialogue with Marianne where she complains about cliched ideas and he sasy he prefers to see prosperous farmers, sunny skies, clean roads).

What is good is shown stoutly to be good. He doesn’t satirize to satirize at all.

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Christ Church, Oxford (photo)

Letters 32 – 35

Very soothing late at night last night. He doesn’t just celebrate Oxford but brings out lovely things (the old bells with their huge sounds and names) and funny oddities that have changed: he mourns the disappearance of the old topiary once made out of yew,and he points out the irony that these colleges were founded as religious places by the church at the time Catholic, but now Catholics and dissenters are excluded. He does point out how no degrees are gotten by most of the young men; Oxford is there for divinity study. To do law you go to London, medicine Edinburgh, music where the musician pleases. The exams though have been made real, not just pretend going-through the motions as they were before 1800. Protestantism does not build monumental buildings so the people have to depend on the vanity of donors (not to worry) and the buildings are often built for science or knowledge rather than religion.

When he moves on to Godstow he retells the story of Rosamund first poignantly and then (in effect) deconstructs it: tells what probably happened and ironically suggests why the distance.

The beauty of the landscape is presented under the aspect of its uses. What hops look like, how grown, the uses is typical.

I now think the reason I can’t tell when he is satirizing the UK through the persona of a catholic Spaniard and sympathetic to the Spanish, is he’s not clear in his mind about it. He says how in Spain the libraries are very generous and lend out their books to all who come; in Oxford you have to be let in and then the books are chained. It could also just be this anthropological thrust of the book.

But when all is said of the serious content what is striking is Southey’s poetic prose at times and his sudden turn to depth of passion and compassion, an appreciation of the strangenesses and cruelties of life. There’s a long description of Oxford seen during a lightning storm that I’ll scan in for my blog, here’s a bit:

The tower, the bridge, the trees, and the long street, were made as distinct as at noon-day, only without the colours of the day, and with darker shadows — the shadows, indeed, being utterly black. The lightning came not in flashes, but in sheets of flame, quivering and hanging in the sky with visible duration. At times it seemed as if the heaven had opened to the right and left, and permitted a momentary sight of the throne of fire” (pp. 179-80).

I was very moved by a tale of a young mentally retarded or disturbed young man taken care of all his life by his mother who Southey says probably did love having him with her as he so loved her. When she died, he could not understand or appreciate what was happening when she was buried. He went and dug her up, and took her corpse home and attempted to feed her, and Southey gives us this gothic poignant scene complete with dialogue of the poor young man hovering over this dead hand and face says “why d’ye look so pale, mother? why be you so cold?” (p. 191)

We are left to wonder what happen to him as the carriage and narrative moves on to the next day and place.

For the rest of the book, see comments.


Southey when younger

Ellen