Letter
90 is from JA (visiting Godmersham, as she states explicitly, for the first
time in about 4 years, i.e., for the first time since late 1808 or early 1809,
when sister in law Elizabeth died) to brother Frank (still on duty somewhere in the Baltic region of
northern Europe).
I am
always on the lookout in JA’s letters for veiled allusions to JA’ _fiction_, and
what immediately caught my eye in that regard in Letter 90 was the following
excerpt, in which JA describes her activities during the few days she spent in
London with brother Henry after arriving from Chawton, but prior to making the
second leg of her journey to Godmersham in Kent:
“Of
our three evengs in Town one was spent at the Lyceum & another at Covent
Garden;-the Clandestine Marriage was the most respectable of the performances,
the rest were singsong & trumpery, but did very well for Lizzy &
Marianne, who were indeed delighted;-but I wanted better acting.-There was no
Actor worthy naming.-I beleive the Theatres are thought at a low ebb at
present.-Henry has probably sent you his own account of his visit in Scotland.
I wish he had had more time & could have gone farther north, & deviated
to the Lakes in his way back, but what he was able to do seems to have afforded
him great enjoyment & he met with scenes of higher Beauty in Roxburghshire
than I had supposed the South of Scotland possessed. Our nephew's gratification was less keen than
our Brother's.-Edward is no Enthusiast in the beauties of Nature. His
Enthusiasm is for the sports of the field only.-He is a very promising &
pleasing young Man however upon the whole, behaves with great propriety to his
Father & great kindness to his Brothers & Sisters-& we must forgive
his thinking more of Growse & Partridges than Lakes & Mountains. He
& George are out every morng either shooting or with the Harriers. They are
both good shots.”
The
above passage reminds me, on multiple levels, of the following passage in Chapter 27 of P&P (which of course was
published only eight months _prior_ to
JA’s writing Letter 90), in which we hear about Elizabeth Bennet’s few days in
London, after arriving from Longbourn, prior to _her_ making the second leg of
her journey to Hunsford—like Godmersham, also in Kent:
“The
day passed most pleasantly away; the morning in bustle and shopping, and the
evening at one of the theatres. Elizabeth then contrived to sit by her aunt…..“
During
intermission, Lizzy and Aunt Gardiner famously discuss the thin line between the
prudent and mercenary in marriage, ending with her Aunt’s calling Lizzy on her
sour grapes about Wickham:
“….‘Take
care, Lizzy; that speech savours strongly of disappointment.’
Before
they were separated by the conclusion of the play, she had the unexpected
happiness of an invitation to accompany her uncle and aunt in a tour of
pleasure which they proposed taking in the summer. "We have not determined how far it shall
carry us," said Mrs. Gardiner, "but, perhaps, to the Lakes." No scheme could have been more agreeable to
Elizabeth, and her acceptance of the invitation was most ready and grateful.
"Oh, my dear, dear aunt," she rapturously cried, "what delight!
what felicity! You give me fresh life and vigour. Adieu to disappointment and
spleen. What are young men to rocks and mountains? Oh! what hours of transport
we shall spend! And when we do return, it shall not be like other
travellers, without being able to give one accurate idea of anything. We will
know where we have gone—we will recollect what we have seen. Lakes,
mountains, and rivers shall not be jumbled together in our imaginations; nor
when we attempt to describe any particular scene, will we begin quarreling
about its relative situation. Let our first effusions be less insupportable
than those of the generality of travellers."
There
is nothing remarkable in parallels between these two passages—one factual, the other
fictional-- in describing trips to the theatre (a special treat of which of
course Elizabeth Bennet and Jane Austen would always wish to avail themselves
while in London).
But…
reading these two passages one after the other _also_ makes it obvious that JA
was taking some pleasure (and, if Frank has by this time also read P&P,
giving him pleasure as well) in setting up a drolly ironic contrast between nephew
Edward’s valuing the hunting of birds over the appreciation for picturesque
scenery, on the one hand, and Elizabeth Bennet’s temporary sour grapes in putting
the appreciation of picturesque scenery over the “hunting” of handsome young
men, on the other! And I am immediately reminded
of the image of Lydia Bennet as a determined no holds barred “hunter” of
husbands---an approach to that pastime of which Elizabeth, we all know, famously
disapproves!).
But
thinking about Lydia’s courtship behavior “in the wild” has just made me
realize that there are even more P&P thematic echoes in the above passage
from Letter 90, once we delve a little more deeply.
First,
the hunting of birds is itself a metaphor for the courtship of single women by
single men, a parallel which the odd couple of Mr. and Mrs. Bennet makes clear
in the following two widely separated and at first seemingly disconnected
statements:
Ch.
1: "You are over-scrupulous, surely. I dare say Mr. Bingley will be very
glad to see you; and I will send a few lines by you to assure him of my hearty
consent to his marrying whichever he chooses of the girls; though I must throw
in a good word for my little Lizzy."
Ch.
53: “When you have killed all your own birds, Mr. Bingley," said her
mother, "I beg you will come here, and shoot as many as you please on Mr.
Bennet's manor. I am sure he will be vastly happy to oblige you, and will save
all the best of the covies for you."
JA,
by making both of these statements memorably funny, makes it possible for a
reader (such as myself, in this case) to connect the dots between them and
realize, once you stop laughing, that JA may also be suggesting that courtship
might be just as fatal for many young women as hunting is for the birds hunted!
And
second, the picturesque scenery of Pemberley is inextricably bound up in
Elizabeth’s falling head over heels for Darcy during the final volume of the novel-as a hundred
commentators have pointed out, Mr. Darcy and the Pemberley estate become one in
Elizabeth’s mind and heart.
Put
another way, later in life, the young Edward Knight’s youthful passion for
hunting non-human birds gave way to his siring (the relatively modest total of)
seven children upon his wife, whom he raised (where else?) in the picturesque
environs of Godmersham!
And concluding
with a little more biography, I believe we may also safely infer, that:
JA
shared with Henry Austen a love of the actual picturesque countryside; and
JA
had long, long since found the “grapes” of marriage very sour indeed—unlike her
creature Elizabeth, who, despite her fervent belief in her own self-styled
epiphanies about her own character, shows herself to be extremely receptive to
the renewal of Mr. Darcy’s “hunting” for a wife! Put another way, JA had by
1813 long since realized that she was no more likely to find satisfaction of
her personal needs from hunting for husbands than she was from hunting partridges
or growse!
And I
wonder if Mary Russell Mitford had grasped _any_ of the above metaphorical
nuances, when she quoted her mother ‘s famously malicious bon mot about the young JA:
“Mamma says that she was then the prettiest, silliest, most affected,
husband-hunting butterfly she ever remembers..."
Cheers,
ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode
on Twitter
I just did some quick checking, and I see that Peter Knox-Shaw, at ppg. 70-71 of his excellent book Jane Austen & The Enlightenment, wrote about these two passages (in P&P and in Letter 90, respectively) on consecutive pages, although he did not ascribe to JA any conscious intent to link the two passages thematically, as I have argued, above.
ReplyDeleteAll the same, K-S shows his usual sharp instinct for meaningful connections within the Austenian matrix.