In
honor of the bicentennial of Emma,
which is now in full swing around the world, here is a special quiz about Emma which I was inspired to devise,
after researching and writing the second half of my previous post about “disposing
of poor Mr. Woodhouse”. The quiz question
is very simple----What is the single extrinsic allusive source that connects all of the following excerpts (mostly
pertaining in some way to Mr. Woodhouse and/or Frank Churchill) which I copied from
18 different chapters in Emma?
I’ll
give you one hint – this is an allusive source which has previously been
connected to Emma by a few other
Austen scholars in a general way, as well as by myself in a more specific way
several years ago—but writing my previous post made me see that connection in much
sharper focus, and to connect it directly to the shadow story of Emma.
I believe
there’s a good chance that the answer will be deduced by at least a few of you
reading this post, from carefully reading
these 18 different excerpts and giving your imagination a chance to work on my
little “riddle”! Just notice the patterns that emerge in your mind, and think
about how they might fit together.
I
plan to disclose the answer on Thursday evening PST, so I ask anyone who
figures out the answer before then to email me at arnieperlstein@gmail.com so as not to spoil the quiz for others before
Thursday evening. In my followup post, I will include any correct answers I
receive.
So,
as Colin Firth aka Mr. Darcy says to Bingley at the end of P&P2, “Go to it!”
9: [Mr.
Woodhouse to Emma] "Ah! it is no difficulty to see who you take after!
Your dear mother was so clever at all those things! If I had but her memory!
But I can remember nothing;—not even that particular riddle which you have
heard me mention; I can only recollect the first stanza; and there are several….”
11: [Isabella re Frank] "I have no
doubt of his being a most amiable young man. But how sad it is that he should
not live at home with his father! There is something so shocking in a child's
being taken away from his parents and natural home! I never could comprehend
how Mr. Weston could part with him. To give up one's child! I really never
could think well of any body who proposed such a thing to any body else."
15: [John
to Mr. Woodhouse] “…Another hour or two's snow can hardly make the road
impassable; and we are two carriages; if one is blown over in the bleak part of
the common field there will be the other at hand. I dare say we shall be all
safe at Hartfield before midnight."
18: [Knightley to Emma re Frank] "I suspect they do not
satisfy Mrs. Weston. They hardly can satisfy a woman of her good sense and
quick feelings: standing in a mother's place, but without a mother's affection
to blind her […] If Frank Churchill had wanted to see his father, he
would have contrived it between September and January. A man at his age—what is
he?—three or four-and-twenty—cannot be without the means of doing as much as
that. It is impossible…It is not to be conceived that a man of three or
four-and-twenty should not have liberty of mind or limb to that amount. He
cannot want money—he cannot want leisure. We know, on the contrary, that he has
so much of both, that he is glad to get rid of them at the idlest haunts in the
kingdom. We hear of him for ever at some watering-place or other. A little
while ago, he was at Weymouth. This proves that he can leave the Churchills…There
is one thing, Emma, which a man can always do, if he chuses, and that is, his
duty; not by manoeuvring and finessing, but by vigour and resolution. It is
Frank Churchill's duty to pay this attention to his father. He knows it to be
so, by his promises and messages; but if he wished to do it, it might be done.
A man who felt rightly would say at once, simply and resolutely, to Mrs.
Churchill—'Every sacrifice of mere pleasure you will always find me ready to
make to your convenience; but I must go and see my father immediately…Depend
upon it, Emma, a sensible man would find no difficulty in it. He would feel
himself in the right; and the declaration—made, of course, as a man of sense
would make it, in a proper manner—would do him more good, raise him higher, fix
his interest stronger with the people he depended on, than all that a line of
shifts and expedients can ever do. Respect would be added to affection. They
would feel that they could trust him; that the nephew who had done rightly by
his father, would do rightly by them; for they know, as well as he does, as
well as all the world must know, that he ought to pay this visit to his father;
and while meanly exerting their power to delay it, are in their hearts not
thinking the better of him for submitting to their whims. Respect for right
conduct is felt by every body. If he would act in this sort of manner, on
principle, consistently, regularly, their little minds would bend to his."
[Emma]
"I rather doubt that. You are very fond of bending little minds; but where
little minds belong to rich people in
authority, I think they have a knack of swelling out, till they are quite as
unmanageable as great ones…He ought to have opposed
the first attempt on their side to make him slight his father. Had he begun as
he ought, there would have been no difficulty now."
[Knightley] "Yes; all the advantages of sitting still when he
ought to move, and of leading a life of mere idle pleasure, and fancying
himself extremely expert in finding excuses for it. He can sit down and write a
fine flourishing letter, full of professions and falsehoods, and persuade
himself that he has hit upon the very best method in the world of preserving
peace at home and preventing his father's having any right to complain. His
letters disgust me."
23: And
at last, as if resolved to qualify his opinion completely for travelling round
to its object, [Frank] wound it all up with astonishment at the youth and beauty
of [Mrs. Weston’s] person.
"Elegant,
agreeable manners, I was prepared for," said he; "but I confess that,
considering every thing, I had not expected more than a very tolerably
well-looking woman of a certain age; I did not know that I was to find a pretty
young woman in Mrs. Weston."
"You
cannot see too much perfection in Mrs. Weston for my feelings," said Emma;
"were you to guess her to be eighteen, I should listen with
pleasure; but she would be ready to quarrel with you for using
such words. Don't let her imagine that you have spoken of her as a pretty young
woman."
"I
hope I should know better," he replied; "no, depend upon it, (with a
gallant bow,) that in addressing Mrs. Weston I should understand whom I might
praise without any danger of being thought extravagant in my terms."
[…..]
[Emma’s]
own father's perfect exemption from any thought of the kind, the entire
deficiency in him of all such sort of penetration or suspicion, was a most
comfortable circumstance. Happily he was not farther from approving matrimony
than from foreseeing it.—Though always objecting to every marriage that was
arranged, he never suffered beforehand from the apprehension of any; it seemed
as if he could not think so ill of any two persons' understanding as to suppose
they meant to marry till it were proved against them. She blessed the favouring
blindness. He could now, without the drawback of a single unpleasant surmise,
without a glance forward at any possible treachery in his guest, give way to
all his natural kind-hearted civility in solicitous inquiries after Mr. Frank
Churchill's accommodation on his journey, through the sad evils of sleeping two
nights on the road, and express very genuine unmixed anxiety to know that he
had certainly escaped catching cold—which, however, he could not allow him to
feel quite assured of himself till after another night.
24: Some of the objects of [Frank’s] curiosity spoke very amiable
feelings. He begged to be shewn the house which his father had lived in so
long, and which had been the home of his father's father; and on recollecting
that an old woman who had nursed him was still living, walked in quest of her
cottage from one end of the street to the other; and though in some points of
pursuit or observation there was no positive merit, they shewed, altogether, a
good-will towards Highbury in general, which must be very like a merit to those
he was with.
"But
I beg your pardon, Miss Woodhouse, you were speaking to me, you were saying
something at the very moment of this burst of my amor patriae. Do not let me lose it. I
assure you the utmost stretch of public fame would not make me amends for the
loss of any happiness in private life."
28: [Frank] "I have been assisting Miss Fairfax in trying
to make her instrument stand steadily, it was not quite firm; an unevenness in
the floor, I believe. You see we have been wedging one leg with paper…”
29: [Mr.
Woodhouse] “….That young man (speaking lower) is very thoughtless. Do not tell
his father, but that young man is not quite the thing. He has been opening the
doors very often this evening, and keeping them open very inconsiderately. He
does not think of the draught. I do not mean to set you against him, but indeed
he is not quite the thing!"
39: Harriet
was soon assailed by half a dozen children, headed by a stout woman and a great
boy, all clamorous, and impertinent in look, though not absolutely in
word.—More and more frightened, she immediately promised them money, and taking
out her purse, gave them a shilling, and begged them not to want more, or to
use her ill.—She was then able to walk, though but slowly, and was moving
away—but her terror and her purse were too tempting, and she was followed, or
rather surrounded, by the whole gang, demanding more. In this state Frank
Churchill had found her, she trembling and conditioning, they loud and
insolent. By a most fortunate chance his leaving Highbury had been delayed so
as to bring him to her assistance at this critical moment.
41: Disingenuousness
and double dealing seemed to meet [Knightley] at every turn. These letters were
but the vehicle for gallantry and trick. It was a child's play, chosen to
conceal a deeper game on Frank Churchill's part. With great indignation did he
continue to observe him; with great alarm and distrust, to observe also his two
blinded companions. He saw a short word prepared for Emma, and given to her
with a look sly and demure.
43: [Frank]
“…Here are seven of you, besides myself, (who, she is pleased to say, am very
entertaining already,) and she only demands from each of you either one thing
very clever, be it prose or verse, original or repeated—or two things
moderately clever—or three things very dull indeed, and she engages to laugh
heartily at them all."
"Oh!
very well," exclaimed Miss Bates, "then I need not be uneasy. 'Three
things very dull indeed.' That will just do for me, you know. I shall be sure
to say three dull things as soon as ever I open my mouth, shan't I? (looking
round with the most good-humoured dependence on every body's assent)—Do not you
all think I shall?"
Emma
could not resist.
"Ah!
ma'am, but there may be a difficulty. Pardon me—but you will be limited as to
number—only three at once."
44: [Miss
Bates to Jane] 'My dear,' said I, 'you will blind yourself'—for tears were in
her eyes perpetually. One cannot wonder, one cannot wonder. It is a great
change; and though she is amazingly fortunate—such a situation,
45: A
sudden seizure of a different nature from any thing foreboded by her general
state, had carried her off after a short struggle. The great Mrs. Churchill was
no more. It was felt as such things must be felt. Every body had a degree of
gravity and sorrow; tenderness towards the departed, solicitude for the
surviving friends; and, in a reasonable time, curiosity to know where she would
be buried.
47: How
inconsiderate, how indelicate, how irrational, how unfeeling had been [Emma’s]
conduct! What blindness, what madness, had led her on! It struck her with
dreadful force, and she was ready to give it every bad name in the world….She
was bewildered amidst the confusion of all that had rushed on her within the
last few hours. Every moment had brought a fresh surprize; and every surprize
must be matter of humiliation to her.—How to understand it all! How to
understand the deceptions she had been thus practising on herself, and living
under!—The blunders, the blindness of her own head and heart!—
49: [Emma
to Knightley re Frank & Jane] “My blindness to what was going on, led me to
act by them in a way that I must always be ashamed of, and I was very foolishly
tempted to say and do many things which may well lay me open to unpleasant
conjectures, but I have no other reason to regret that I was not in the secret
earlier…. He was the son of Mr. Weston—he was continually here—I always found
him very pleasant—and, in short, for (with a sigh) let me swell out the causes
ever so ingeniously, they all centre in this at last—my vanity was flattered,
and I allowed his attentions. Latterly, however—for some time, indeed—I have
had no idea of their meaning any thing.—I thought them a habit, a trick,
nothing that called for seriousness on my side. He has imposed on me, but he
has not injured me. I have never been attached to him. And now I can tolerably
comprehend his behaviour. He never wished to attach me. It
was merely a blind to conceal his real situation with another.—It was his
object to blind all about him; and no one, I am sure, could be more effectually
blinded than myself—except that I was not blinded—that it was my good
fortune—that, in short, I was somehow or other safe from him."
51: [Knightley]
had been thinking it over most deeply, most intently; he had at first hoped to
induce Mr. Woodhouse to remove with her to Donwell; he had wanted to believe it
feasible, but his knowledge of Mr. Woodhouse would not suffer him to deceive
himself long; and now he confessed his persuasion, that such a transplantation
would be a risk of her father's comfort, perhaps even of his life, which must
not be hazarded. Mr. Woodhouse taken from Hartfield!—No, he felt that it ought
not to be attempted. But the plan which had arisen on the sacrifice of this, he
trusted his dearest Emma would not find in any respect objectionable; it was,
that he should be received at Hartfield; that so long as her father's
happiness—in other words, his life—required Hartfield to continue her home, it
should be his likewise.
Of
their all removing to Donwell, Emma had already had her own passing thoughts.
Like him, she had tried the scheme and rejected it; but such an alternative as
this had not occurred to her. She was sensible of all the affection it evinced.
She felt that, in quitting Donwell, he must be sacrificing a great deal of
independence of hours and habits; that in living constantly with her father,
and in no house of his own, there would be much, very much, to be borne with.
She promised to think of it, and advised him to think of it more; but he was
fully convinced, that no reflection could alter his wishes or his opinion on
the subject. He had given it, he could assure her, very long and calm
consideration; he had been walking away from William Larkins the whole morning,
to have his thoughts to himself.
53: The
difficulty of disposing of poor Mr. Woodhouse had been always felt in [Mrs.
Weston’s] husband's plans and her own, for a marriage between Frank and Emma.
How to settle the claims of Enscombe and Hartfield had been a continual
impediment—less acknowledged by Mr. Weston than by herself—but even he had
never been able to finish the subject better than by saying—"Those matters
will take care of themselves; the young people will find a way." But here
there was nothing to be shifted off in a wild speculation on the future. It was
all right, all open, all equal. No sacrifice on any side worth the name. It was
a union of the highest promise of felicity in itself, and without one real,
rational difficulty to oppose or delay it.
And
there you have it all, good luck!
Cheers,
ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode
on Twitter
No comments:
Post a Comment