In response to my recent
claims about all sorts of veiled allusions in Emma, centered on my claim that Mr. Perry is Mr. Woodhouse’s
imaginary friend, a delusion fostered by everyone in his circle of friends
other than Emma, who is just clueless about this, Diane Reynolds wrote:
Diane: “I have been
thinking more about Arabian Nights as a source for Emma. I wish we could know that Austen read these
stories, though her (miss Bates's) Aladdin's lamp reference indicates that JA
was aware of these or similar
"Orientalist" stories.”
Diane, it’s not just Miss
Bates knowing about Aladdin’s Lamp, or about JA’s striking use of the same
cluster of symbols (lenses, apples, transportation vehicles) as are central in
the tale of Peri Banou, as I laid out in my recent post on this subject. JA’s knowledge of 1,0001 Nights
is even more clearly demonstrated
by the explicit reference to Scheherazde in Persuasion,
as I outlined thoroughly here:
Plus, again, Arabian Nights two centuries ago was
like Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, Star Trek & Star Wars today. It was the definitive European
cultural matrix for fantasy literature. So do you really think that JA, who
read so widely in both the highest and the lowest forms of literature, would
have Miss Bates (her alter ego) and Anne Elliot (whom many also think is her
alter ego)
make explicit references
to that compendium of tales by accident?
I just this morning
realized that JA also winks at Arabian
Nights in Chapter 9 of Emma:
“In this age of
literature, such COLLECTIONS ON A VERY GRAND SCALE are not uncommon. Miss Nash,
head-teacher at Mrs. Goddard's, had written out AT LEAST THREE HUNDRED; and
Harriet, who had taken the first hint of it from her, hoped, with Miss
Woodhouse's help, to get A GREAT MANY MORE. Emma assisted with her invention, memory and
taste; and as Harriet wrote a very pretty hand, it was likely to be an
arrangement of the first order, in form as well as QUANTITY.”
Of course the superficial
reference is to a book of riddles and charades, but the all caps verbiage makes
it clear, to me at least, that JA is winking at the most famous literary collection
on a very grand scale of a great many more than 300 entries. Isn’t it obvious,
once you put it in context?
Diane also wrote: “I have
also, as some know, long puzzled over
Miss Bates's long speeches in chapter 27, so if they are pointing to her specifically as one of Emma's
"fairies," that makes a
certain sense. “
So reread them again and
focus on Miss Bates’s obsessive and otherwise nonsensical focus on those three
symbols from Peri Banou (spectacles for telescope, apples, and carriage for
magic carpet), at the very same moment she refers to Aladdin’s Lamp, and
suddenly it all makes startlingly good sense!
Diane also wrote: “But
what really causes me to pay attention to this motif is how well it meshes with
the fantasia of A Midsummer's Night Dream, an overt source for this novel.”
Yes, of course, but it’s
not just the fantasy of AMND and Arabian
Nights, it’s also, even more strikingly and disturbingly, Pericles, Prince of Tyre….
…with its riddle about sex
with a virgin which is so parallel to Garrick’s Riddle that Mr. Woodhouse tries
to fully recall.
And it’s also The Tempest, as to which I will be
posting an update on my interpretation of that allusion in Emma later today. And….
Diane also wrote: “Another
support is the "as you like it" phrase that Arnie pointed out years
ago--a stretch, but not a stretch once
you start layering allusions. As Rene Girard points out in his essay on As You Like It, the play is
a pastoral fantasy--and Girard contends that the title refers to the
audience: As YOU (audience) like it: I
will give you a complete fantasy along with
happy endings that has
little to do with reality. Girard contends that Shakespeare wrote this play,
perhaps angrily, as a sop to audiences. It's
hardly considered one of his masterworks, and I have seen a production of it that went over the top to
liken it to a Watteau painting with its similarly fantastic universe of satin
clad maidens on swings in trees--Mrs.
Elton's clueless strawberry picking is of a
piece with this in one of the most dreamlike chapters in the novel.”
Diane, you didn’t realize,
I gave a detailed interpretation of the allusion to As You Like It in Emma almost
exactly one year ago:
The wordplay in Mrs. Elton’s
speech is just the tip of the iceberg. And there’s also the allusions to AYLI
in P&P, S&S, the list goes on
endlessly.
And…it’s not just
Shakespeare’s fantasy worlds and Arabian
Nights, it’s dozens of other literary antecedents, from Bluebeard to The Heroine, to The Female Quixote, to Don
Quixote itself, all the way back to Oedipus
Rex, and The Bible, etc etc
etc. Emma
is an encyclopedia of veiled literary allusions with a particular focus on
the universal human problem of cluelessness—how can we know if what we see is
real?
Diane also wrote: “What
Austen does is juxtapose a deeply realistically rendered novel in
terms of time, place
(Highbury can be mapped minutely) and detail with a fantasia, a dream.”
An excellent summing up,
you know I totally agree, indeed, I’ve been saying this for a decade.
Cheers, ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode on Twitter
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