While
trying unsuccessfully to figure out the deeper answer to the second charade in Emma that Anielka Briggs claims to have discovered, I did come across a passage in
a book published in English in 1748 which seemed to me to possibly be echoed by
JA in that charade in several ways. While it is probably coincidental, I
decided to bring it forward anyway, hoping that perhaps it will lead to
additional connections to JA's second charade.
The
book is The Life of Petrarch collected by S. Dobson, and here is the relevant
passage, which describes events which occurred during a trip to Avignon by
Petrarch. I've capitalized the words “power”, ”united”, "behold",
"pomp", "prince", "Leviathan", "vicar"
and "kingdom", as well as the reference to the delivery of an
anonymous letter by dropping it, all of which resonate to the charade:
"The
next affair in debate at Avignon, was the enterprise of John Viscomti, the
brother and successor of Luchin. He was archbishop, as well as governor of
Milan, and he aimed at being master of all Italy. The Pope on this sent a
nuncio, to re-demand the city of Bologna, which he had purchased; and to choose
whether he would possess the spiritual or the temporal POWER, for both could
not be UNITED. The Archbishop, after hearing the message with respect, said he
would answer it the following Sunday at the cathedral. The day came; and after
celebrating mass in his pontifical robes, he advanced towards the Legate,
requiring him to repeat the orders of the Pope on the choice of the spiritual
or the temporal: then
taking the cross in one hand, and drawing forth a naked sword with the other,
he said, "BEHOLD my spiritual and my temporal: and tell the holy father
from me, that with the one I will defend the other."
There
is another anecdote related of this PRINCE: and they all serve to shew his
artful character, and with what apparent modesty and submission he covered his
pride and resolution. The Cardinal de Ceccano, going on his legateship to Rome,
passed by Milan. The Archbishop went out to meet him, with so numerous and
splendid a train, and so many led horses richly harnessed; that in surprise he
said to him, "Mr. Archbishop, why all this POMP?" "It is,"
replied he, affecting an humble air and a soft tone of voice,
"to convince the holy father that he has under him a little priest who can
do something."
There
was AN ANONYMOUS LETTER that was also attributed to this prince; but it appears
more likely to have been written by Petrarch, from the style of IRONY that runs
through it. One day, when the Pope was in full consistory, a Cardinal who is
not named, LET THIS LETTER FALL in so cunning a manner, that
it was brought to the Pope, who ordered it to be read in the presence of all the
court. The inscription was in these terms:
"LEVIATHAN,
PRINCE of darkness, to Pope Clement his VICAR, and to the Cardinals his
counsellors and good friends."
After
an enumeration of very dreadful crimes which LEVIATHAN ascribes to this corrupt
court, and on which he makes them great compliments, exhorting them to continue
in this noble course that they may more and more merit his protection; he inveighs
against the doctrine of the Apostles, and turns their plain and sober life into
the highest ridicule. "I know, says he, that so far from imitating, you
have their piety and humility in horror and derision. I have no reproach to
make you on this account, but that your words do not always correspond with
your actions. Correct this fault if you wish to be advanced in my
KINGDOM." He concludes thus: "Pride, your superb mother, salutes you;
with your sisters Avarice, Lewdness,
and the rest of your family; who make every day new progress under your
encouragement and protection. Given from our centre of hell, in the presence of
all the devils." The Pope and the Cardinals took little notice of this
letter, and continued the same course of life." END QUOTE
I
know little of Petrarch's poetry, but, upon reflection, it occurred to me that
one of the heroines of JA's juvenilia Love and Freindship (in Volume the Second) is named "Laura", which was
not a typical English name in JA's day---and of course it is the same name as
Petrarch's famous unrequited lover immortalized in his poetry. And I also
recalled that Lesley Castle, which comes later in Volume the Second and
therefore was written by JA not long after she wrote Love and Freindship, has
several
passages
describing travel in Italy.
But
perhaps the most intriguing possible connection between Petrarch and the second
charade in Emma is that Petrarch was
so influential a figure in the history of Western poetry, in particular in shaping
the form of the sonnet. I remembered that Anielka had written something earlier
this year about the structure of the second charade and sonnets, and I quickly tracked
it down, here is what she wrote:
"Sonnet
experts amongst you will know that the Shakespearean sonnet is just one form of
sonnet and is based on the original fourteen-line format by Petrarch. Here's
where Austen is clever. In a Petrarchian sonnet the meaning falls in two parts.
The first two quatrains form an eight line octave that sort of "poses a
question that needs resolution". The third quatrain and the couplet form a
six-line sestet and "resolve" the question posed by the octave. This
is the ONLY aspect of a sonnet that can be considered "a charade'."
Hmm....might
all of this smoke indicate that in a variety of ways, Petrarch was on JA's
radar screen as she wrote Emma?
Cheers,
ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode
on Twitter
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