In 2010,
the ever fertile mind of Diana Birchall
(whose playlet about JA meeting Lord Byron I look forward to reading soon)
produced a witty little poem in honor/satire (25%/75%?) of the kinds of dark, often sexually-tinged, radical
feminist, shadow story interpretations of Jane Austen’s novels that I’ve been
generating since 2002.
Diana called
her poem “The Little Man Who
Wasn’t There”, and one of the stanzas read as follows:
Persuasion's
surely nightmare free
Autumnal, full of elegy.
Except the veneries of Nurse Rooke.
I hastily shut up the book.
Autumnal, full of elegy.
Except the veneries of Nurse Rooke.
I hastily shut up the book.
Of course, Diana’s
clever conceit was that some of the interpretations I make about “veneries” (sexual
activities) are “not there” in the texts of Jane Austen’s novels, but exist
only in MY imagination.
Well….apropos
Nurse Rooke’s “veneries”, I’ve got something to tell you all, that is,
ironically, neither venereal nor nightmarish, so much as it is fantastical---and,
I think, also pretty fantastic. Something extraordinary became very clear to me
just two days ago:
THERE ARE IMAGINARY
FRIENDS IN JANE AUSTEN’S NOVELS!
By ‘imaginary
friends’ of course I refer to characters who are imaginary within the fictional
“reality” of the novels. And my Subject Line tells you that Nurse Rooke and Mr.
Perry are the “figments” I am talking about.
Yes, I know
this one is WAY outside-the-box, even for me…and yet, paradoxically, I claim
that it’s also pretty obvious, IF (a giant “ if”) you allow yourself to take a
very specific but offcenter point of view (as with Holbein’s famous anamorphic
painting The Ambassadors). That’s when
the “imaginariness” of these two characters comes into crystal clear focus, and
you realize that this alternative perspective is in place from the moment these
characters are first mentioned in their respective novels.
The tale of
my literary epiphany does not start with Nurse Rooke--it starts in Highbury
with the mysterious Mr. Perry. I had actually first glimpsed this possibility in
May 2008, when I suspected that Mr. Perry might be Mr. Woodhouse’s imaginary friend.
MR. PERRY
I tried
different angles of attack, but my preliminary sleuthing was inconclusive, so I
put it aside, then just forgot about it, and moved on to other sleuthing leads.
But when I rediscovered it on Sunday,
this time I was able to land the plane, because I realized one crucially
significant new fact. I could not recall Mr. Perry ever actually speaking in
real time in the novel! Nor, similarly, did I recall the narrator (when not
reporting Emma’s subjective thoughts and perceptions) ever speaking about Mr.
Perry at all!
Was my
memory accurate? Did he really only exist in the novel through the indirect
reports of characters other than Emma? Did he really never speak to Emma, or appear
in person to Emma?
When I searched
the entire novel later that day, moving
through each of the many scenes in which Mr. Perry is mentioned, I confirmed my
hunch—indeed the reader never “hears” Mr. Perry speaking--instead, we hear tons
of his speech being quoted by other characters—mostly Mr. Woodhouse, but also
Miss Bates and Frank. There’s only one single scene in the entire novel,
actually, where there’s even a question on this crucial point—in Chapter 45,
when the narrator reports that Mr. Perry visits Hartfield, and that Mr. Perry
talks about Jane’s condition---and we hear that Emma listens to what Mr. Perry
has said—but the key question Jane
Austen (deliberately and diabolically) leaves uncertain, is the identity of the
speaker to whom Emma listens—is it Mr. Perry who speaks to Emma about Jane, or
is it Emma’s father (who after all, has been the reporter of almost every other
word spoken by Mr. Perry) to whom she listens? It’s totally ambiguous.
I have
since then gathered a variety of additional textual evidence to support this
interpretation, but it would take several more pages to lay it out properly,
so, for now, I will leave the presentation of same for the future. Except I do want to mention in passing that
one of the tales told by Scheherazade (whom Anne Elliot thinks about) is about
a spirit or fairy, the Persian word for which is “PERI”!
But now I
want to move on to….
Nurse
Rooke, the other Austenian imaginary friend!
It was when
I tried to think of another important Austen character besides Mr. Perry who never
speaks, and is never seen by the heroine, that I thought immediately of Nurse
Rooke—and imagine my excitement that another novel-wide search revealed her to also
be a character who is referred to glowingly by a sick (or hypochondriac)
character whom the heroine is very close to.
But here it
is completely different. Mrs. Smith is no Mr. Woodhouse-she’s no demented
hypochondriac who hallucinates an imaginary medical advisor who confirms all of
his worst fears about his health. Instead, Mrs. Smith is a calculating
manipulator who invents Nurse Rooke deliberately, so as to be able to present
to the gullible Anne Elliot a “reliable” source for false information that assassinates
the character of Cousin Elliot, with the successful goal of inducing Anne
Elliot into not considering him as a suitor.
And here’s
where two Persuasion shadow story
streams unite—you may recall that five months ago, I wrote a series of posts in
which I claimed that Anne Elliot had very poor vision, and one of the ways this
was taken advantage of, was when sister
Mary Musgrove convinces Anne that it is Cousin Elliot down in the street
outside the White Hart Inn, even though it is not.
Well, I
realized on Monday that Nurse Rooke pulls the same trick on Anne, but even more
audaciously. She convinces Anne, based on nothing at all, that the woman who
let Anne into Mrs. Smith’s lodgings at Westgate Building was Nurse Rooke!
And
actually, there is a parallel in Emma to
this sort of deceit as to Mr. Perry. While Mr. Woodhouse actually believes Mr.
Perry is real, Miss Bates, Frank and the rest of the Highbury folk who mention
Mr. Perry are not similarly hallucinatory—no, they simply refer to Mr. Perry as
a kind of shared joke, the way adults speak about Santa Claus in front of small
children—but in this case, the roles of gullible small child are played by the
demented Mr. Woodhouse and the cluelessly naïve Emma!
And…Nurse
Rooke as an imaginary friend also fits uncannily well with a third shadow motif
in Persuasion. Five months ago,
Anielka pointed out the name of the devil hidden in the following passage
describing Nurse Rooke:
"It was my friend Mrs
Rooke; Nurse Rooke; who, by-the-bye, had a great curiosity to see you, and was
delighted to be in the way to let you in. She came away from Marlborough
Buildings only on Sunday; and she it was who told me you were to marry Mr
Elliot. She had had it from Mrs Wallis herself, which did not seem bad
authority. She SAT AN hour with me on Monday evening, and gave me the whole
history." "The whole history," repeated Anne, laughing.
"She could not make a very long history, I think, of one such little
article of unfounded news."
MRS. SMITH SAID NOTHING.”
For the answer to Anielka’s
question about why Jane Austen might hide the devil’s name in this passage, just
think about Mr. Perry the Peri (spirit), and then consider what Hamlet says
after he (thinks he) sees the ghost of his dead father:
“The spirit that I have
seen May be a devil; and The Devil hath power
t’assume a pleasing shape!”
So….here we have Jane
Austen with a “sat an”-ic wink at Nurse Rooke as a spirit to whom Mrs. Smith
has given a pleasing shape, and has convinced poor Anne that Nurse Rooke is a
real person!
And now we
come finally to… Mrs. Bennet’s Nerves!
As I was
sussing out all the textual references to Mr. Perry and Nurse Rooke as
imaginary friends, another imaginary character in Jane Austen was tickling my
memory—but who was it? It was something about old friends in one of the novels
I was remembering, but as I ran through characters in my mind, I just could not
think of which one it was. What other character associated with disease and
medicine was there? And then it hit me! - JA had in 1813 made her first foray
into this realm, and had laid a textual template for the verbiage she would later
use to establish the mirages known as Mr. Perry and Nurse Rooke, when she wrote
the following passages in P&P:
Ch. 1: "Mr. Bennet, how can you abuse your own children in such a way? You take delight
in vexing me. You have no compassion for MY POOR NERVES."
"You mistake me, my
dear. I have a high respect for your nerves. THEY ARE MY OLD FRIENDS. I have
heard you mention them with consideration these last twenty years at
least."
Ch. 2: "Don't keep coughing so, Kitty, for Heaven's
sake! Have a little compassion on MY NERVES. You tear them to pieces."
Ch. 20: "Pray do, my dear Miss Lucas," she added in
a melancholy tone, "for NOBODY is on my side, NOBODY takes part with me. I
am cruelly used, NOBODY feels for MY POOR NERVES."
Now you can see the
progression of this motif through three novels. JA, via Mr. Bennet’s immortal
witticism, makes explicit what is later left implicit re Mr. Perry and Nurse
Rooke. Mrs. Bennet’s nerves are imaginary “friends” of Mr. Bennet, they are
feelings personified. But in her final two completed novels, JA took a giant
leap, and managed to hide in plain sight the actual personification of her
characters’s feelings!
Cheers, ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode on Twitter
P.S.: If you
want to read some firstrate litcrit by an Austen scholar who does well to pick
up on the strong similarities between Mr. Perry and Nurse Rooke, but who is not
quite able to get outside the box far enough to make that similarity meaningful,
read Jane Austen and the Body: 'The Picture
of Health by John Wiltshire at ppg. 110 et seq. Wiltshire was so close, and so sharp in his intuition,
that his entire discussion about Mr. Perry and Nurse Rooke functions as an
excellent gloss on my claim of their being phantoms closely related to each
other!
P.P.S: Look
at how Jane Austen uses the word “nobody” in her novels, and think about how
that might fit with my claims.
P.P.S.: And
finally, of course, there’s also Shakespeare looming in the background in all
of this, as I will one day soon explain.
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