Jane: “I'm interested in the social context. Who gives large
presents of food to whom. Such gifts are mentioned at least three times in Emma
(Emma sends a large cut of pork to the Bates, Mr. Knightly sends them a lot of
apples, Mrs. Martin sends that goose to Mrs. Goddard. Are food gifts mentioned
in any of the other novels? How would readers at the time see these gifts? The
only other mention of a large gift (but not food) that I remember is in S&S
where Willoughby attempts to give a horse to Marianne. Surely someone has
written on "Gifts in Jane Austen's Novels."
Jane, apropos Willoughby’s
gift of a mare (we may safely infer the female gender of the horse by the name,
Queen Mab), as I’ve written before, Austen is broadly hinting to her erudite
readers about Mercutio’s very famous speech in Romeo & Juliet,
and also the Eve of St. Agnes, both about the sexual dreams (or night ‘mares’)
of 'young women of good carriage', in both S&S and Emma, as
I last elaborated in 2016: http://sharpelvessociety.blogspot.com/2016/05/mariannes-galloping-dream-queen-mab-eve.html
Nancy: “The gifts of food to
the Bates are the sort of thing that landlords sent to tenants, richer
people sent to the less fortunate etc. Mr. Bates had been the
clergyman who had the church Mr. Eldon now serves. The church had no retirement
plans, no pensions so each man was responsible for putting aside enough
for his family after he was dead. Jane Austen shows many fathers/ husbands
who fail to do this. Jane's mother and father were supposed to help
out the Grandmother and sister/aunt.
Boxing day was one day such
gifts were often given if not any other time. The goose was probably at
Michaelmas (or Christmas) and was from the family of some students in
appreciation for Mrs. Goddard's position as head of her
school. Jane Austen's original readers would have understood
this as Christian charity and looking out for the less fortunate.
Emma visits many in the
village. Servants were usually given boxes on Boxing day Looking at
gifts in Austen is a good idea. Lucy gave Edward the ring with the lock of
hair. Emma gave Elton a picture. Knightley gave foodstuffs because
the others didn't have gardens. Elinor Tilney gave Catherine the money for
a post chaise to go home. The cross and chain in MP.
Have to think about
others- I think some gift giving is so ordinary we don't necessarily
register it.”
Nancy, you’ve forgotten what
is by far the most significant, high-profile gift in all of Austen’s novels –
the gift of the piano to Jane Fairfax! First Jane and Frank speculate as to the
identity of the donor –is it Colonel Campbell, or the Dixons, or just Mr. Dixon?
Then Mrs. Weston speculates that the donor is Mr. Knightley; and then Mr.
Knightley seems to put the kibosh on that speculation a few paragraphs later:
“This present from the
Campbells,” said she—“this pianoforte is very kindly given.”
“Yes,” he replied, and
without the smallest apparent embarrassment.—“But they would have done better
had they given her notice of it. Surprizes are foolish things. The pleasure is
not enhanced, and the inconvenience is often considerable. I should have
expected better judgment in Colonel Campbell.”
From that moment, Emma could
have taken her oath that Mr. Knightley had had no concern in giving the
instrument.
In the end, we seem to be
told that Frank was the donor, but I’ve long asserted that it is equally
plausible that it is the same “donor” who got Jane pregnant via another
“special delivery” five months earlier –John Knightley!
And now I see for the first
time that JA indulged in a brilliant subtle pun ahead of all the gifts to or
for the benefit of Jane Fairfax in the novel, when Emma and Frank first speak
about Jane:
“I have heard [Jane] speak of
the acquaintance [with the Dixons],” said Emma; “she is a very elegant young
woman.” He agreed to it, but with so quiet a
“Yes,” as inclined her almost to doubt his real concurrence; and yet there must
be a very distinct sort of elegance for the fashionable world, if Jane Fairfax
could be thought only ordinarily gifted with it.”
I love that Emma calls Jane
“only ordinarily gifted”, because Jane is extraordinarily “gifted”, repeatedly so,
during the last 2 volumes of the novel – first, the Hartfield porker; then the
pianoforte; then the apples from Knightley; then the shawl from the Dixons;
then Mrs. Elton’s (rejected) offers of carriage rides, mail pickups, and job placement;
and finally Emma's (also rejected) offer of arrowroot.
That is just another
subliminal hint that connects seemingly unconnected passages; the kind of hint that
goes a long way toward creating the
pervasive aura of mystery that hovers over the novel from one end to the other.
And don’t forget another
“gifted” character in Emma ---Harriet Smith!:
“…Did [Elton] ever give you
any thing?”
“No—I cannot call them gifts;
but they are things that I have valued very much.”
She held the parcel towards
her, and Emma read the words Most precious treasures on
the top. Her curiosity was greatly excited. Harriet unfolded the parcel, and
she looked on with impatience. Within abundance of silver paper was a pretty
little Tunbridge-ware box, which Harriet opened: it was well lined with the
softest cotton; but, excepting the cotton, Emma saw only a small piece of
court-plaister….”
Jane: “Thank you for the
context, Nancy. Sounds reasonable except that the money Miss Tilney gave
Catherine Moreland, though Miss Tilney was probably ready to see it as a gift,
was later returned, so I think that is a different category. And Lucy's hair
ring, going as it does between engaged people, is different still. (BTW, what
are we to make of Edward's not sticking it in the corner of a drawer?) It just
strikes me that we have those three large gifts of food in E (plus the rejected
offer of edible remedies for Jane F) and none in the other novels. Why nothing
from Sir John Middleton to the Dashwoods, for example? Quite possibly once
Austen had used the first to advance her plot she simply thought (consciously
or not) it fitting to continue with the theme (or do I mean motif or something
else?).”
Nancy: “The gifts aren't
enumerated in S & S though we are given to understand that Sir John does
give them game and other gifts. He is most generous and helpful and that is the
sort of thing that many did without thought or comment. Also, Marianne and
Brandon send gifts of game and apples and other such foodstuffs to
the parsonage. Austen's readers would have filled in those blanks.”
Jane: “I find it interesting
how Austen used such gifts in Emma both for the plot and for
characterization.”
Nancy: “I like your idea of
looking at the gifts in her novels. We may differ as to what is a gift but that
often happens before people refine their terms.
There are gifts in MP around
that cross and chains. Mrs. Norris extorts "gifts" and just walks off
with things. Doesn't Edmund give fanny a coin to send under seal to William
when she first arrives?”
Apropos finding any existing
article or chapter about gifts in Jane Austen’s novels, my first stop was
the JASNA website, where I found this recent, lengthy
article, “Small, Trifling Presents”: Giving and Receiving in Emma by Linda
Zionkowski http://www.jasna.org/publications/persuasions-online/vol37no1/zionkowski/ I skimmed through Zionkowski’s article --it’s
not my cup of tea, because it does not go below the surface at all, but perhaps
it will be of interest to you.
However, from further quick
searching online, I cannot find any article or chapter about gifts in Jane
Austen’s novels as a whole – it would be an interesting study, but I do believe
that Emma is the Austen novel most
saliently engaged with the theme of gift-giving.
Cheers, ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode on Twitter
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