In Jane Austen's late 1815 letters to John Murray, who would very shortly be publishing her magnum opus, Emma, JA wrote the following to Murray:
First, in Letter 130:
'...The title-page must be "Emma, dedicated by
permission to H.R.H. the Prince Regent." And it is my particular wish that
one set should be completed and sent to H.R.H. two or three days before the
work is generally public. It should be sent under cover to the Rev. J. S.
Clarke, Librarian, Carlton House..."
and then second, in Letter 131 shortly thereafter:
"As to
my direction about the title-page, it was arising from my ignorance only, and
from my having never noticed the proper place for a dedication. I thank you for
putting me right. Any deviation from what is usually done in such cases is the
last thing I should wish for. I feel happy in having a friend to save me from
the ill effect of my own blunder."
Today, in Janeites & Austen-L, Ellen Moody commented as follows re the above passages:
"Then fretting over that
dedication again. What words she wants
on this title page. She thinks it will appear on the title page. Jumping to the
next later in the day, very short and embarrassed and grateful: he has told her
the dedication goes on another page. She says this “blunder” of her arises from
her “ignorance only, and from my never having noticed the proper place for a
dedication.” This is most revealing
bit: “any deviation from what is usually
done in such cases is the last thing I should wish for.” She is doing this only
because it’s the done thing. She wants no more attention paid to it by a reader
than can be helped. Again that he’s won her over: “I feel happy in having a
friend to save me from the ill effects of my own blunder.” She is emotional
here and shows that she does not realize quite his power.
She
was in no danger; he would never have put the dedication in a wrong place.
....I’ve
read ironic statements by reviewers in the know in some books the most lively
revealing nay significant matter are these acknowledgements. You learn who
connects to who."
Ellen,
as I’ve written in the past many times, Jane Austen is being supremely ironic
when she writes ““any deviation from what is usually done in such cases is the
last thing I should wish for.” We know
this with 100% certainty, because, thanks in large part to Colleen Sheehan….
…we
have conclusive, irrefutable evidence that Emma
is, in every way possible, a devastating, savage satire of HRH the Prince
Regent! So, could there possibly be a
larger deviation from “what is usually done in such cases” than the Dedication
to the PR of a novel which covertly savagely satirizes him? It is the
quintessence of deviation!
And
so I think it gave JA an extra frisson of
ironic pleasure to play dumb about the format of novel dedications to royalty,
and to seem to be grateful to Murray (who clearly was not in on the satire of the PR) for correcting JA’s rustic
ignorance of literary custom vis a vis the London literati,
most of all the self-styled connoisseur the Prince of Whales. JA is playing
dumb, a la Miss Bates and Harriet Smith, those expert flatterers of powerful
narcissists, knowing she has the last laugh, even if it must be a private laugh
shared only with the most trusted confidantes.
Apropos
satirical dedications to the Prince Regent, Google led me this morning to another
Dedication of a literary work by another literary titan of the age, which I
feel confident was also directed at
the Prince Regent. Here it is:
[Title
page]
POEMS
written
by
SOMEBODY;
Most
respectfully dedicated (by permission)
to
NOBODY;
and
intended for
EVERYBODY
who can
read!!!
LONDON:
Published
at the request of several persons of distinction,
By Baldwin
And Co. 1818.
[2nd
page]
DEDICATION
TO NOBODY
[3rd
page]
DEDICATION.
Most
unsubstantial and invisible Sir,
Though
you and I are generally at variance, and I verily believe there is no love lost
between us, I shall nevertheless for once condescend to address you in a few
civil words.
I do
then most reverentially dedicate to you the poetical trifles contained in this
slender volume,
which
I beseech you not to read, but to criticise and abuse with all the arrogance of
a self-constituted
Censor,
and all the rancour of atrabilarious malevolence. And yet I would have you
know, that notwithstanding the apparent humility of the foregoing Dedication, I
do most heartily despise your critical powers, and accordingly set them at
utter defiance.
Believe
me to be.
Most
unsubstantial and invisible Sir,
very
cordially
your
old opponent,
SOMEBODY.
As
some of you will already have guessed,
the author of this 1818 book of poems was Lord Byron, and I can’t imagine who else the “most unsubstantial and
invisible Sir” could have been, other than the Prince Regent himself.
The most
interesting question, to me, is whether Byron was inspired to pen this overtly
satirical Dedication by his having
deciphered the “Prince of Whales”
hidden answer to Emma’s second charade, which would have alerted him that JA’s
Dedication to the PR was therefore also totally satirical.
Cheers,
ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode
on Twitter
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