I was a
teenager when I first read Jane Austen. But how much funnier the books are when
seen from an adult perspective, and how different they all are.Born in 1775,
Austen is a product of her times although not blind to the inequalities in
society. Although from a relatively modest background, Jane’s own brother was
adopted by a wealthy childless family, which made her an acute observer of the
advantages conferred by money and breeding. In those days, heroines were
traditionally faultless wimps without wit; in Pride and Prejudice
Elizabeth Bennet breaks the mould and is the most modern in outlook. One of
five daughters, the family home will be inherited by a male cousin, leaving the
girls in a difficult position. Jane Austen was very objective about the
position of women, and how important it was to marry well or, in fact, at all.
So, taking a cursory look at the books one by one and focusing on the central
female characters we get a good idea of a fairly wide section of society at the
time. Unless you were from the lower classes, of course, when the options were ghastly.
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Me presenting flowers to Lady Gammons, our MP. My mother took period hairstyles very seriously.
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Anne Elliot in Persuasion
comes from a family which values presentation over content. Although she is
pretty, she is not as pretty as her sisters, and we are led to believe that her
appearance has deteriorated from the way she looked at nineteen –twenty-seven
is not the bloom of youth in Austen’s day, so she is frequently excluded from
social events and taken for granted. She is one of three sisters, so the family
home will be inherited (surprise surprise) by a distant male cousin, once again
too many daughters and no sons. At 19, Anne was persuaded to end a relationship
with a sailor her family thought not refined or wealthy enough. The sailor is
deemed okay seven years later, after he has made a lot of money overseas. “How quick come the reasons for
approving what we like,” Anne says. She might just have easily said, how quick
come the excuses when disapproval is a social requirement.
Fanny Price in Mansfield
Park is the eldest daughter of a woman who married beneath her, and
with too many children and little income, her adoption by her far wealthier aunt
would not be unusual. However, Fanny is made to feel very inferior to her
cousins, and denied their advantages. She is consequently shy and inhibited and
expects very little of anyone. The one exception is cousin Edmund. He is
destined to be a clergyman as his elder brother is the heir. Henry, the brother
of the local minister’s wife, decides to woo Fanny for a lark and then actually
falls in love with her, as she is unpretentious and kind. Fanny, though, is in
love with Edward, so when Henry proposes she turns him down. The family is
furious that she has thrown away the chance of a good marriage, as she will
remain a drain on their resources, and they send her back to her incompetent
mother and alcoholic father. Fortunately all turns out well, and Edmund finally
realises what a nice person Fanny is and marries her. Fanny is too nice;
even Austen’s mother described Fanny as ‘insipid’.
Sense and
Sensibility focuses on what happens to the
Dashwood sisters after their father dies and leaves the house to a male
relative and they are – relatively speaking – destitute. Elinor is the
personification of commonsense, so in a difficult situation she is consequently
thoroughly boring and a bit of a prude. Her younger sister Marianne personifies
sensibility by being rash and emotional and extrovert, and falling love with
someone unsuitable. Buttoned-up Elinor is just the opposite, and when Marianne
is trying to find out the contents of a letter Elinor has received and getting
nowhere she says “…we have neither of us anything to tell; you, because you
communicate nothing, and I, because I conceal nothing.” Eventually they both overcome
their personalities and marry well, thereby avoiding the poorhouse.
Northanger
Abbey is Austen’s parody of a gothic novel, a very popular form
of horror story amongst women. Men, of course, read them secretly. Catherine Moreland,
the heroine, is necessarily young, gullible, naïve, and unduly influenced by what
she reads. She cannot tell when people are lying to her, sometimes quite
outrageously, although the reader can. She is the victim of what, today, we would call gaslighting – her
so-called friends convincing
her she said or did something she didn’t, because her memory is at fault. When
she is invited to General Tilney’s Northanger Abbey Henry, the general’s
son and the love interest, teases her all the way there with gruesome stories about
their destination. “…you will proceed
into a small vaulted room, and through this into several others, without
perceiving anything very remarkable in either. In one perhaps there may be a
dagger, in another a few drops of blood, and in a third the remains of some
instrument of torture; but there being nothing in all this out of the common
way, and your lamp being nearly exhausted, you will return towards your own
apartment…” Disappointingly, the general has modernised the place a great deal
– nevertheless, Catherine’s overactive imagination causes her to entertain all
sorts of increasingly preposterous ideas about the place, and she becomes sure
that the general has either imprisoned or murdered his wife. Her investigations
are discovered by Henry, and, contrite, he puts her straight. After a few more
misunderstandings she does get to marry Henry, and will end up better off than
she would have otherwise, coming from a modest though not impoverished family.
Emma is unusual in that she doesn’t have any money worries and
has had a good education. Consequently, she is a snob, blind to her own faults.
Most of what I want to say is best said by Emma herself, as we are privy to her
thoughts. Emma was one of the first novels – if not the first novel
– to employ sustained free indirect discourse. She has a very high opinion of
herself, and says: Perhaps it was not fair to expect him (Mr Elton) to feel
how very much he was her inferior in talent, and all the elegancies of mind.
The very want of such equality might prevent his perception of it, but he must
know that in fortune and consequence she was greatly his superior. She
interferes in people’s lives, tries to ‘improve’ them so that she can play at
matchmaking and allow them to associate with ‘superior’ people. When she
finally attains some self-knowledge it’s humiliating, but nevertheless she ends
up marrying the only man above her in social standing.Lady
Susan is a very unexpected character, as
she is sexual predator. It’s
an epistolary novel, started when Austen was only eighteen, and the form gives
the author the opportunity for her characters to say things to one another that
they would never say face to face, in case they were overheard. Lady Susan is
described as “the most accomplished coquette in England”, despite being in her
mid-thirties – middle-aged in those days. However, she looks ten years younger,
and is very attractive indeed. Recently widowed, she has been staying at
Langford, the home of Mr and Mrs Mainwaring and has been thrown out because she
has been having an affair with Mr Mainwaring. She is a first class manipulator,
accomplished liar, a terrific actress and very bright. In fact, she is an
excellent example of a woman who should have gone to university and pursued a
challenging and fulfilling career. She was clearly never cut out to be a
parent; her poor daughter Frederica is terrified of her. Her mother says of her:
“She is a stupid girl, and has nothing to recommend her… the greatest simpleton
on earth…” She wants to marry her off as soon as possible, and as Frederica
detests the man she has in mind she sends her to boarding school – “I hope to
see her the wife of Sir James within a twelvemonth… school must be very
humiliating in a girl of Frederica’s age… I wish her to find her situation as
unpleasant as possible…” Although the characters lack the subtlety of later
creations the book, as a consequence, is very very funny.
Pride and Prejudice
is the undisputed favourite of Austen’s novels, even before the emergence from
a lake in a wet shirt of Colin Firth as Mr Darcy. Father of five daughters, Mr Bennet
had long given up trying to rule the household, and took a back seat to his
pushy and domineering wife. Mrs Bennet’s obsession with yearly income is a
recurring theme because, once again, we have a family of daughters who will
never inherit anything as the house will go to the closest male relative. Elizabeth
is lively, clever, witty, can be very sarcastic, like her father, and is consequently
his favourite as the youngest two, Lydia and Kitty, are silly immature flirts
who are disasters waiting to happen. Lizzie doesn’t care about getting muddy or
wearing the latest trimmings and will not entertain the idea of marrying for
anything except love. She has firm opinions and her self-confidence is very unusual.
She turns down two proposals of marriage, despite the fact that they would have
secured her future, and says: “There is a stubbornness about me that never can bear to be frightened at the will of others. My courage always rises at every
attempt to intimidate me.” She even stands up to Lady Catherine de Burgh who is pompous, domineering
and condescending due, in part, to her status.
When Elizabeth finally accepts Mr
Darcy, having refused him once, it is because she has fallen in love with him and
not because his extreme wealth will ensure the futures not just of herself, but
the rest of her family. It looks like a cushy fairytale ending but in reality
it wouldn’t have been. Getting accepted by Darcy’s relatives and acquaintances
won’t have been easy, as we saw from Lady Catherine de Burgh’s reaction – “Upon my word,” said her ladyship, “you give your opinion very
decidedly for so young a person.” And after all, she will have to learn to
manage a large estate and a big house and dozens of servants instead of just
one – the longsuffering Hill, Mrs Bennet’s put-upon housekeeper. Lizzie has
changed her station in life, a very difficult and unusual thing to do in Austen’s
time.
If
you haven’t read any Jane Austen give it a go. Or do what I did, and read the
ones you missed. I laughed out loud, not just once but many times. Austen really
does deserve her exalted reputation.
Comments
I have to put in a word for poor, undervalued Fanny Price though. She is not insipid. She is put in a totally powerless position as the poor relation, a situation Jane probably knew much about from families of her acquaintance. The one power Fanny has is to be morally courageous, and this is the wellspring of her character and what drives the plot of Mansfield Park. She resists the enormous pressure put on her by every other character in the story to take part in an activity she knows to be wrong; when even the cousin she loves, Edmund, reproaches her for her stance it causes her huge pain but she remains firm. It's not that different from standing up to moral pressure on social media nowadays, if you happen to have a view which goes against current Rightthink. It takes a lot of guts.
And that's even before she's gone against the family's wish in refusing a supposedly good marriage proposal (again, because Fanny can see that the man making it is a badun, which no one else can). A genuinely insipid person could not have stood her ground like that.