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CMP#193   Ellen and Julia, the sister heroines

6/27/2024

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    This blog explores social attitudes in Jane Austen's time, discusses her novels, reviews forgotten 18th century novels, and throws some occasional shade at the modern academy. ​The introductory post is here.  My "six simple questions for academics" post is here. ​

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CMP#193    The "novel-reading miss": Ellen and Julia (1793)  
​   The next few books, I think, all mention novel-reading, if only in passing. In her famous defense of the novel in Northanger Abbey, Austen wrote of the novelists who disparage novels in the pages of their own novels, "joining with their greatest enemies in bestowing the harshest epithets on such works, and scarcely ever permitting them to be read by their own heroine, who, if she accidentally take up a novel, is sure to turn over its insipid pages with disgust."
    Here is a prime example: Sensible Julia “selected such books only as could improve, and admired no characters, but such as placed virtue in its most amiable light, and was equally free from the absurdities of romance, or the pernicious follies delineated in modern Novels." Her sister Ellen grows up reading novels and wants to be a romantic heroine.
    That's a big reason why I am reading and sharing information about these forgotten books--the fun of connecting them to Austen and placing Austen's works in the context of the time they were written. Scholar Susan Allen Ford, speaking on the Jane Austen Society podcast, speaks of the pleasure of finding relevant items in other novels: "I was always making little discoveries... They certainly give you an insight into Austen's playful mind... You can read Austen forever without knowing any of this, but once you do, it just adds these extra layers of complexity but also extra layers of pleasure."

    Ellen and Julia is a novel full of unrealistic coincidences and several incredibly fortunate inheritances, but the message of the novel is supposedly: beware of the insidious effects of novel-reading, or you’ll end up like Ellen!
      The novel is typical in that a slender narrative is stretched out with unconnected and lengthy backstories--in this case, the backstories of fairly minor characters. (This technique is known as the "inset narrative, more about that below).   
​     These backstories have a moral purpose because they illustrate some fault or vice and the miserable consequences thereof...


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CMP#192  Gertrude, who elopes and repents

6/18/2024

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“Oh, these faintings, so often, and then again directly, will soon do her business, I warrant, poor honey!” said Mrs. O’Flarty; but “but hould, hould a bit, now she is coming to herself, and now she sighs…”   
                                                                                               -- the Irish landlady in Black Rock House

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CMP#192  Black Rock House: a psychological thriller from 1808
by Mrs. E.G. Bayfield: Synopsis with Spoilers
   
Pop quiz: which events in Black Rock House cause our heroine, Gertrude Wallace, to faint dead away?
  1. When the man she loves pressures her to elope with him.
  2. When her husband leaves the ballroom with a beautiful woman, leaving her behind, seven months' pregnant.
  3. When she realizes that her husband is having an affair.
  4. When her husband threatens to blacken her name so he can divorce her.
  5. When she hears her husband has killed a man in a duel.
  6. When she’s reunited with her father who had cast her off.
    If you answered: “all of the above,” you’re right! Poor Gertrude suffers a great many travails in these three volumes—the book is punctuated with the thud of Gertrude hitting the carpet. Yet, she is a plucky girl--she does stay upright and conscious when she’s abandoned by her soldier husband and left behind, first in Bath and then in Ireland, when she’s in two storms at sea, when she’s caught in a flood, and when she's kneeling beside her husband’s “mangled corpse” after he kills himself. Many tears are shed of course... 


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CMP#191  Foundling Plots & Seduction Plots

6/12/2024

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     This blog explores social attitudes in Jane Austen's time, discusses her novels, reviews forgotten 18th century novels, and throws some occasional shade at the modern academy. ​The introductory post is here.  My "six simple questions for academics" post is here. ​

CMP#191          Two minor novels--the foundling plot and the seduction plot
    ​    Here are quick samples of two popular genres of the long eighteenth century. Both novels rely on improbable coincidence for their resolutions: ​
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Miriam (1800) by Mrs. E.M. Foster
   “Oh, for mercy’s sake turn back! You know not on what a precipice you stand—a terrible gulph yawns beneath it, and you will be swallowed up for ever!”
     The young man standing on the edge of a cliff, about to jump, must be impressed at our heroine’s eloquence, because even during such a dramatic moment, she is speaking metaphorically, not literally, as she warns him of the damnation awaiting the person who commits suicide.
    “Think of your merciful Creator; --for what did he send you into this world? Oh blessed, thrice blessed are those whom he chasteneth! Turn back, I conjure you turn back…”
   The persuasions of this beautiful girl who has appeared out of nowhere do the trick, and our unknown young man steps back from the edge, totally smitten. But he soon disappears and Miriam only knows that his name is Henry....


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CMP#190: Eliza Kirkham Mathews and posterity

6/5/2024

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This blog explores social attitudes in Jane Austen's time, discusses her novels, reviews forgotten 18th century novels, and throws some occasional shade at the modern academy. ​The introductory post is here.  My "six simple questions for academics" post is here. ​

CMP#190:  Down the rabbit hole with Eliza Kirkham Mathews
    I often get caught up on researching whatever I can find about the authoresses I write about. Here are some miscellaneous bits of information about Eliza Kirkham Mathews, nee Strong, whose novel, What Has Been (1801), I discuss here. Eliza's tragic personal story is reflected in her novel. We know her story from the memoir of her husband, the 19th century celebrity actor Charles Mathews, written by his second wife.
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Revisions on the fly?
  After helping Eliza get What Has Been ready for the press, Eliza’s husband's brother wrote: “I hope to hear of her success as an author; but she must allow me to suggest, that if she wishes to be eminent, she must not write quite in such as hurry as she has been accustomed to do… let me recommend her to write every one of her productions over at least twice, and very carefully to correct the little inaccuracies which will escape even the most experienced eye... there are not more than one or two [successful writers] who ever have sent any of their productions into the world without a revisal at the least, and that not by barely reading them over, but by re-writing them." 
   I spotted evidence of some revisions on the fly which were not tidied up in What Has Been. While the heroine Emily is staying with the St. Ives family, Mrs. St. Ives asks some visitors if they have “observed a tall and rather handsome woman, who appears extremely melancholy, is always dressed in black, and walks frequently beneath the western cliffs?” One of the visitors declares that she is “the wife of my valued friend, Wilford Stanley,” and he offers to introduce her. It’s clear there is a backstory coming: “she is separated, perhaps for ever, from a husband whom she loves almost to adoration.” But we never hear again of Mrs. Stanley or her backstory. When we meet the woman haunting the cliffs, she is a madwoman, the discarded mistress of a Jamaican planter. Therefore, Agatha is not someone you'd introduce to respectable ladies. It looks like Mathews started a storyline, changed it, and never went back and revised this introduction of the woman on the cliff.


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    About the author:

    Greetings! I blog about my research into Jane Austen and her world, plus a few other interests. My earlier posts (prior to June 2017) are about my time as a teacher of ESL in China (just click on "China" in the menu below). More about me here. 


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