Persuasions
Occasional Papers No. 1, 1984
Pages 1-8
JANE AUSTEN’S
TWO INCHES OF IVORY
by Tad Mosel
At the end of her life Jane Austen’s theme was constancy: loving longest when hope
is gone. She wrote one of two great
works on that subject, conceived within a decade of each other. Hers is called Persuasion;
the other Fidelio.
Fidelio deals in passions, Persuasions in feelings, a condition of all Jane Austen’s
novels that annoyed Charlotte Brontë, who wrote to a friend:
“She
does her business of delineating the surface of the lives of genteel English
people curiously well, there is a Chinese fidelity, a miniature delicacy in the
painting: she ruffles her reader by nothing vehement,…. the Passions are
perfectly unknown to her; she rejects even a speaking acquaintance with
[them]…. what sees keenly, speaks aptly, moves flexibly, it suits her to
study, but what throbs fast and full, though hidden, what the blood rushes
through, what is the unseen seat of Life and the sentient target of death – this
Miss Austen ignores...
”1
To
all of that Jane Austen would have cheerfully agreed.
“Let other pens dwell on guilt and misery,” she wrote in the
last chapter of Mansfield Park.
“I quit such odious subjects as soon as I can, impatient to restore
everybody, not greatly in fault themselves, to tolerable comfort, and to have
done with all the rest.” 2
The
English novelist Margaret Kennedy writes that whether Charlotte Brontë knew it
or not, she was not so much attacking Jane Austen as she was disparaging the art
of comedy, in which feelings are more important than passions.3
In Jane
Austen’s world passions destroy feelings – absorption in a single idea limits
the variety of emotional response essential to a balance in life.
Leonora
in Fidelio renounces everything – her
name, her sex, her clothes – until there is nothing left but the passion of her
constancy. And when the time comes, she is willing to give her life.
When
Anne Elliot in Persuasion loses hope,
she feels the loss not one whit the less, but she diverts the stream of her
constancy into other devotions – to family and friends
- to the continuation of life – and lets “concealment, like a worm i’ the bud feed on her damask
cheek” – to quote another writer on the subject of constancy, a writer to whom Jane
Austen has been favorably compared.
Since
constancy is one of her themes, it follows that those of us who love Jane Austen
are steadfast in our devotion to her.
But heeding her caution, we contain our passion in reasonable feeling.
In
an age that throbs fast and full with vehement passions undreamed of by
Charlotte Brontë and her stormy sisterhood, the civilized name of Jane Austen is
often met with polite contempt, or jocular tolerance, or embarrassed smiles.
So we keep a low profile. We
venture forth to busy cocktail parties where we stand shoulder to shoulder with
our fellow human beings, discussing the latest blue movie or the most recent
pornographic novel – and then we stumble home at last to climb into bed, and under the covers with a
flashlight to read Pride and Prejudice.
Therefore,
I am grateful to the National Arts Club for daring to invite me here tonight -
to stand up before you and my conscience and fling open yet another closet door.
I
notice the flier for this occasion says, “Jane Austen could well embody the
spirit of 1980, the spirit that says less is more.”
Who knows, perhaps we are all of us sitting here tonight right smack in
the middle of a trend. In 1979 when
the newly formed Jane Austen Society of North America held its first dinner
meeting across the way at the Gramercy Park Hotel, over a hundred souls showed
up from all parts of the continent, and all the local newspapers and magazines
sent reporters to verify the madness. And
in November, it has been announced, Pride
and Prejudice will be seen in five installments on public television’s
Masterpiece Theatre. As exciting as
that is to anticipate, in a way it’s too bad, because where can she go from
there? But for almost 175 years
Jane Austen has survived everyone else’s trend, and I am sure she can survive
her own.
I
am not an authority on Jane Austen. I
am not a scholar or a critic. I do
not wish to proselytize. For me
this evening is simply a continuation of a previous evening spent pleasurably within these walls with a small congenial group of new friends, when I found
myself talking about Jane Austen – for no discernible reason except that they
let me. And that is all I am doing now: thank you for letting me.
I
have reached the age when I realize there isn’t enough time left to read all the
books I want to read. From now on,
I tell myself sternly, I must be selective.
And with that deadline, in the literal and ultimate sense of the word, I
find myself reading and re-reading again and again the six novels written by
this shy, energetic young Englishwoman, sitting at a crossroads down in
Hampshire.
It
was Tennyson and Macauley who likened her to Shakespeare.
And
Sir Walter Scott wrote: “That
young lady had a talent for describing ….
ordinary life which is to me the most wonderful I ever met with. The big Bow-Wow
strain I can do myself like any now going; but the exquisite touch which renders
ordinary commonplace things and characters interesting from the truth of the
description and the sentiment, is denied to me.”4
To
be fair, it must be told that Mark Twain once said of a ship’s library:
“Jane Austen’s books are …. absent …. Just that one omission alone would make a fairly good library
out of a library that hadn’t a book in it.”5
Which makes it clear (to paraphrase Margaret Kennedy)6
that Mark Twain would not have chosen to go steamboating with Jane
Austen. But he was the only
dissenting voice among men in the nineteenth century.
Leading
women of the Victorian age, Charlotte Brontë and George Eliot, were occupied
with their struggle for liberation and found less to appreciate in her.
In
the twentieth century she has been called a Marxist, before Marx; and the
Freudians have pointed out the reverse Oedipus complex running through all her
work; and Rudyard Kipling coined the word “Janeite,” for which the
Lord has not made us truly grateful since it perpetuates the whimsical aura that
hovers over her head.
In
one of the most famous twentieth-century essays on Jane Austen, Lord David Cecil
wrote: “If I were in doubt as
to the wisdom of one of my actions I should not consult Flaubert or Dostoievsky.
The opinion of Balzac or Dickens would carry little weight with me: were
Stendhal to rebuke me, it would only convince me I had done right: even in the
judgment of Tolstoy I should not put complete confidence.
But I should be seriously upset, I should worry for weeks and weeks, if I
incurred the disapproval of Jane Austen. ”7
I
know a man who read that and quit drinking.
Someone
(was it Virginia Woolf?) said that of all great writers, Jane Austen is the most
difficult to catch in the act of greatness.
But
she is one great writer whose life is not difficult to summarize.
She
was born in 1775, the seventh of eight children at Steventon Parsonage in
Hampshire. Some of her native fun
must have come from her mother, who went off on her honeymoon in a scarlet
riding habit and later arrived at her new home riding on a feather bed on top of
the wagon carrying her household possessions.
She wore the scarlet riding habit for the first few years of her
marriage, even during pregnancies, sitting just inside the front door of the
parsonage doing the family mending, not to miss anything.
After all the children were born, the scarlet riding habit was cut down
to fit her seven-year-old son Frank, who invested in a pony to go with it.
Jane
Austen’s oldest brother, James, became a clergyman; her second brother, George,
was subject to fits and was never referred to in the family chronicles; Edward
was adopted by the rich Knight family and grew up to take their name and become
a respected landowner.
Jane
Austen’s favorite brother Henry was the charming drifter, the inveterate
idea-man, and the incurable optimist who became, among other things, a banker, a
soldier, and his sister’s sometime public relations man – against her wishes
- and ended up a bankrupt, and finally, in optimistic desperation, a clergyman.
Francis
and Charles, who bracketed Jane, one born just before, one just after, both
became admirals and through the years have been lumped together as “Jane
Austen’s sailor brothers.”
Her
sister Cassandra, two years her senior, was closer to her than any other human
being. They shared a room until the
day Jane Austen died, and their mother used to say that “if Cassandra were
going to have her head cut off, Jane would insist on sharing her fate.”8
They
were a versatile, vigorous, affectionate family able to give themselves with
equal fervor and delight to God and to games.
When Jane Austen was twenty-five, her father retired and moved the family to Bath.
When Jane Austen was thirty her father died and with her sister and her
mother she went to live with her brother, Frank, and his wife in Southampton.
When she was thirty-three, the three women moved to their last home,
Chawton Cottage, on the grounds of her brother’s (Edward Knight) estate near
Apton in Hampshire.
In 1811, when she was thirty-five, her first novel was published.
It was called Sense and Sensibility
and it was a serious comedy – feelings versus passions embodied in the Dashwood sisters, Elinor and Marianne.
It is her cleverest novel, and perhaps for that reason her most facile,
and, I confess, it is my favorite. It
earned for her £140.
In
the remaining six years of her life, Jane Austen published three more novels:
The original title of Pride and Prejudice
was First Impressions, which indicates
its theme, the trouble snap judgments can cause even among sensible, feeling
people. In a letter she worried
that it was “too light, and bright, and sparkling”9
and wondered if she shouldn’t alleviate the nonsense by inserting into the story
a discussion, say, of Sir Walter Scott. But
on the whole, she said, she was vain enough to be satisfied with it and called
it her “darling child.” Since
then Pride and Prejudice has been
everybody’s favorite, even mine, now that I stop to think of it.
Mansfield Park is her most stately and elegant work.
She said she was writing about ordination, but it seems to deal more with
the difficulty of maintaining simplicity in life when faced with overwhelming
worldly charm. With its upright,
sober-minded heroine, Fanny Price, Mansfield
Park is not claimed by many as their favorite Jane Austen novel, which is
why I am always vehement in asserting categorically that it is mine.
“Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever, and rich, with a comfortable home and happy
disposition, seemed to unite some of the best blessings of existence; and had
lived nearly twenty-one years in the world with very little to distress or vex
her” (Emma, p. 5). Thus begins Jane Austen’s masterpiece, a character study of a
spoiled young woman whom she was afraid no one but herself would like.
Emma is her most mature work,
her most complicated, her wittiest, and most penetrating.
As a writer who respects his craft, I could not hold my head up before
you if I weren’t able to say, with a straight face, that Emma
is my favorite Jane Austen novel.
But secretly, off the record, my two favorites are the posthumous novels: Persuasion, so
aptly and beautifully titled by Henry after her death, the most reflective,
touching and autumnal of the novels, and Northanger
Abbey, which was actually written first, although published last, and is the
youngest and funniest novel, a spoof of the gothic novels of Mrs. Radcliffe that
Jane Austen loved to read as a girl.
She died in 1817 at the age of forty-one. And
it was only in the 1960s that the cause of her death was established from the
symptoms as she described them in her letters during the last year of her life.
In the British Medical Journal for July, 1964, the doctor who made
the diagnosis wrote: “Jane Austen did something more than write excellent
novels -
she also described the first recorded case of Addison’s disease of the adrenal
bodies.”10
Jane
Austen never married, although she is said to have been in love once with a
gentleman she met at the seashore when she was twenty-five.
Unfortunately he died immediately thereafter without even leaving his
name, and there are those who claim that the constancy she wrote of in Persuasion
was her own.
On
the eve of her twenty-seventh birthday, a young man named Harris Bigg-Wither,
who was six years her junior, proposed marriage and she accepted him; only to
change her mind overnight and break the engagement the next morning.
Selfishly, we can only regard that episode as a close call, because if
she had married Harris Bigg-Wither, the world might have been denied the six
novels, although, of course, it would have been richer in Bigg-Withers.
As
it is, with five eligible brothers and a final count of nine sisters-in-law and
twenty-two nephews and nieces, she was what might be called a professional aunt,
and we marvel that she found time to write.
On
the other hand, the driving compulsion of an artist is to practice his or her
art; it is the nature of a writer to write – against all odds – even
surreptiously on small bits of paper between dutues, as Jane Austen did.
Those
who smile tolerantly or contemptuously at the mention of Jane Austen undoubtedly
think of her as quaint and soft. But
to me she seems to feel there are only two subjects worth writing about: love
and money. Such a writer is not
quaint, and we should not be soft in estimating her powers.
We
can marvel at the novels, but not at the fact that she wrote them.
I think it was no whim that made her turn down Harris Bigg-Wither, but
even if she had married him and produced twenty-two children of her own, I think
she would still have found time to write; she would have made time, because she
was an artist, and that is what an artist does.
Whatever definition from the world of comedy she would have used, Jane
Austen had a passion, and duty was no match for it.
She
was not an autobiographical writer, but she wrote about her own world, for her
own world to read, since for thirty-five of her forty-one years, or four-fifths
of her life, her family was her only audience.
And
families in country villages were her specialty;
“3 or four Families in a Country Village is the very thing to work
on,” she said.11 And
the families were invariably occupied in marrying off their daughters and sons,
sisters and brothers, the principal social business of her class.
And
in a society in which marriage was the only possible goal for a woman, I think
it is part of the substance of Jane Austen’s novels that her heroines only
achieve marriage when they have come to accept life without it.
If marriage for its own sake was all that mattered, if a happy ending was
all that was needed or wanted, then Pride
and Prejudice could have ended with Book II, Chapter 11, when Darcy, the
hero, proposes to Elizabeth Bennet, the heroine, exactly halfway through the
novel. Instead she refuses him,
because no matter what society dictates to Jane Austen’s heroines, there are
larger considerations. Charlotte
Lucas in Pride and Prejudice is the
only major sympathetic character in the novels who marries for the sake of
marrying, and she is an object of pity.
Sometimes
her characters venture as far afield as London, Bath, Lyme Regis, Portsmouth and
Box Hill, but for the most part they remain in their country villages.
As she wrote to a niece who was attempting her first novel:
“Let the Portmans go to Ireland, but as you know nothing of the
Manners there, you had better not go with them.”12
She never wrote a scene involving men alone; there is always a woman
present because she said she did not know how men acted by themselves.
She wrote in the language of her time, but avoided the Johnsonesque
rotundities, although she admired them as much as any of her contemporaries,
preferring for her own work colloquial English and making the same grammatical
blunders that come easily to us still.
Death
rarely intrudes; the Napoleonic wars, never.
And
always, behind every sentence, the laughter.
Asked
by the Prince Regent’s librarian to stretch herself and write an historical
romance based on the Cobourg royal family, she replied: “I could not sit seriously down to write a serious
romance under any other motive than to save my life; and if it were
indispensable for me to keep it up and never relax into laughing at myself or
other people, I am sure I should be hung before I had finished the first
chapter.”13
On
no account could she be persuaded to deviate from what she called “the
little bit (two Inches wide) of Ivory on which I work with so fine a Brush, as
produces little effect after much labour.”14
Which
is self-mockery rather than modesty and is often used against her by her
humourless detractors.
“Poor Jane Austen!” they say. “With
her talent think what she might have written if she had had more experience in
the world and known some interesting people; if she had traveled instead of
being forced to live that narrow life in that repressed society.”
If
worldly experience is the magic ingredient, then Jane Austen’s ubiquitous
contemporary, Fanny Burney, would have been the greatest genius of that
repressed society, and all the others. She
was born twenty-three years before Jane Austen and lived twenty-three years
beyond her, and in between she was present on every occasion of any political,
cultural, or military significance. And
she wasn’t always simply present, she participated; at Waterloo she was in the
direct line of fire. The only event
she missed in the eighty-eight years she was on earth was the American
Revolution. And what is created out
of such experience is a life, and Fanny Burney’s, as set down in her diaries, is
a masterpiece. But as an artist she
is hardly readable today. She was
gifted and hard-working, and virtually supported herself and her husband and her
son, and sometimes her father, solely on the proceeds from her writing. But as a
novelist she is no more than a link between Samuel Richardson and Jane Austen,
who chose to remain at her crossroads in Hampshire, scribbling her novels on
small bits of paper between duties. The
quantity of experience, even the quality, is not decisive in the
flowering of great talent.
Virginia
Woolf said that if Jane Austen had lived longer, the inevitable
worldliness that comes from inescapable
fame would have broadened her view and she would have become the
forerunner of Proust and James. Be
that as it may, in her lifetime she neither needed nor sought, nor missed, Fanny
Burney’s sort of experience, the kind that comes to a published author.
Not that she wasn’t conscious of it; and not that it was denied her;
Henry would have exulted in arranging for his sister to mingle with important
people at significant places in critical moments.
But when Mme. de Staël, for instance, insisted on meeting the author of Pride
and Prejudice, the author refused. And
when one of her best friends, Harris Bigg-Wither’s sister, as a matter of fact,
married an uncle of Robert Southey, the poet, who was an avowed Jane Austen fan,
she showed no interest in even meeting him, let alone his friends Wordsworth and
Coleridge.
A
lesser writer might say she didn’t even make the most of the experience at hand,
the dramatic material already available in life as she knew it.
Her first cousin, Eliza Hancock, was born in India, goddaughter of Warren
Hastings. Fanny Burney, on the
strength of being a published author, was a much valued observer and adviser at
Warren Hastings’ sensational trial for corruption; yet Jane Austen did not
pursue a family interest that amounted
to a connection.
Further,
Eliza Hancock married a French aristocrat who was guillotined; and for long
periods of time Eliza lived with the Austens at Steventon Parsonage, initiating
the family theatricals that Jane Austen used so tellingly in Mansfield Park. But she
used nothing else of Eliza’s vast and exciting history, which was not alien to
her but rather a part of the intimate Austen family circle.
Eliza is supposedly the model for Mary Crawford in Mansfield
Park, with all the dramatic trappings – which would have been grist to Fanny Burney’s mill
- thrown away.
The
society in which Jane Austen lived was certainly no help; but neither was it a
hindrance, because it didn’t stop her. She
made her choices, as any artist does, according to the dimensions of her gift,
for she knew exactly what she wanted to inscribe on her two inches of ivory.
I think it would be disrespecful to apologize for her limitations; it
would be patronizing to love her in spite of them; and it would be fatuous to
love her because of them. I simply
wouldn’t have her any other way.
And
as a dramatist I hope if I am ever asked to dramatize a Jane Austen novel that I
will have the stamina to refuse. She
is not like Dickens. Reproduce his
settings, dress good actors in his characters’ clothes, give them the right
crotchets and twangs, and Dickens blazes to life on the stage or screen.
Not
so Jane Austen. Reproduce her
settings and characters, no matter how faithfully, and there is always an
element missing, something you can’t put your finger on, and that element is
Jane Austen herself, an invisible presence between every word on the printed
page; and when the characters are lifted off the page, she is left behind and
they suffer from a kind of anemia. I
have done many adaptions in my career, and she is what I call a
“voice” writer – like John Cheever, if you are looking for a perfectly wonderful odd couple. As marvelous and distinctive as he is, when we see a Cheever
story on the screen we’re inclined to wonder what all the fuss is about, because
the story itself may have been captured masterfully, but he
has eluded everybody.
Don’t
think me ungrateful. I intend to
relish every moment of Masterpiece Theatre’s Pride
and Prejudice, which I am sure will be as wonderful as all their other
productions. Two or three times a
year I even stay up until four o’clock in the morning to see Greer Garson and
Laurence Olivier in the old movie version of the same story.
But what usually emerges on the screen is similar to what is emerging for
you now:
it is not Jane Austen, but somebody’s idea
of Jane Austen. And that can vary
markedly from person to person and from time to time.
I
don’t identify with Jane Austen, or with her characters or her stories, just as
I don’t identify with Charles Dickens. Reading
either is like looking out a window, as opposed to looking in a mirror.
There has never been any doubt in my mind as to which writer is more
interesting – and edifying. When I look out the
window at Dickens, when I re-read his novels, he is always exactly the same as
the last time I looked, and so are his characters; and I love them for their
durability.
But
when I re-read Jane Austen, she has changed, and her characters are subtly
different, for the simple reason that I have changed.
When I was young, her books were romantic and funny and read very fast.
When I reached the age of disillusionment and became ironic and scornful,
she was ironic and scornful and I savored her wicked wit.
Now, when I look for serenity and wisdom, she is wise and serene. And I don’t know how she did that, sitting at her crossroads
down in Hampshire.
Jane
Austen is a constant that is ever changing, a prism in the sun.
It is too bad that George Eliot did not find her interesting, because she
might have been writing about Jane Austen when she suggested in Middlemarch
that “woman was a problem which … could be hardly less complicated than
the revolutions of an irregular solid.”15
On
a wall in Winchester Cathedral, hard by Jane Austen’s tomb in the eighth bay of
the north aisle of the nave, a mural tablet says everything in quotation from
the Book of Proverbs:
“She openeth her mouth with wisdom; and in her tongue is the law of kindness.”
And
I know as surely as I know I am standing here that Jane Austen would be
seriously displeased if I closed in this reverent tone of voice.
So
I will do what she did, I will tell a story – a story I think she would enjoy.
Several
years ago I wrote two segments for the public television series “The Adams
Chronicles,” one of them dealing with John Quincy Adams’s thrilling and
successful defense before the Supreme Court of the Negro mutineers aboard the
slaveship Amistad. Research showed
that among the blessed Justices sitting on the bench was one Joseph Story, whose
name rang a bell, recalling to mind a letter I had read, in another context,
written to Admiral Sir Francis Austen, the older of Jane Austen’s sailor
brothers, thirty-five years after his sister’s death.
The letter was written by a Miss Quincy of Boston, who identified her
father as the Mayor of that city and the President of Harvard University.
The
Amistad trial was in 1841, and in 1852 Miss Quincy wrote to Admiral Sir Francis
Austen: “Since high critical
authority has pronounced the delineations of character in the works of Jane
Austen second only to those of Shakespeare, transatlantic admiration appears
superfluous; yet it may not be uninteresting to her family to receive assurance
that the influence of her genius is extensively recognized in the American
Republic – even by the highest judicial authorities. The
late Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, of the Supreme Court of the United States, and
his associate, Mr. Justice Story, highly esteemed and admired Miss Austen, and
to them we owe our introduction to her society.
For many years her talents have brightened our daily paths, and her name
and those of her characters are familiar to us as ‘household words.’ ”16
The wording of John Quincy Adams’s defense of the
Amistad survivors was, of course, a matter of record. But when it came, to writing the scenes in the Supreme Court,
I took history into my own hands and gave all the responding dialogue from the
bench to Mr. Justice Story; I let him ask all the shrewd, pertinent questions
and hand down the momentous opinions, confident in the belief that a justice who
read Jane Austen would be the toughest and fairest man on the bench.
1Quoted
by John Halperin, “Jane Austen’s Nineteenth-Century Critics: Walter Scott to Henry James,” Jane Austen:
Bicentenary Essays, ed. John Halperin (New York: Cambridge University Press,
1975), p. 8.
2Jane
Austen, Mansfield Park, vol. III of The
Novels of Jane Austen, ed. R.W.
Chapman, 3rd ed. (London: Oxford University Press, 1934), p. 461.
All further quotations from Austen’s works will be from Chapman’s edition
and will be included in the text.
3Margaret
Kennedy, Jane Austen (Denver: Alan
Swallow, 1950), p. 97.
4Quoted
by Elizabeth Jenkins, Jane Austen (New
York: Grosset and Dunlap, 1949), pp. 359-360.
5Quoted
by Halperin, Bicentenary Essays, p. 9.
6Kennedy,
p. 97.
7Lord
David Cecil, Jane Austen (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1935), p. 43.
8J.E.
Austen-Leigh, A Memoir of Jane Austen
(London: Macmillan and Co., 1901), p. 15.
9Jane Austen’s Letters to Her Sister Cassandra and Others,
ed. R.W. Chapman, 2nd ed. (London:
Oxford University Press, 1959), p. 299.
10Zachary
Cope, “Jane Austen’s Last Illness,”
British Medical Journal, July, 1964, pp. 182-183 (reprinted in The Jane Austen Society, Report for the Year, 1964).
11Chapman,
ed., Letters, p. 401.
12Chapman,
ed., Letters, p. 395.
13Chapman,
ed., Letters, pp. 452-453.
14Chapman,
ed., Letters, p. 469.
15George
Eliot, Middlemarch (New York: The New
American Library, 1964), p. 43 (Ch. IV).
16Austen-Leigh,
Memoir, pp. 142-143.
CONTRIBUTOR
Tad
Mosel
Tad
Mosel writes that he has been “stage-struck since the age of fourteen”
when he was taken to see Katharine Cornell in Shaw’s Saint
Joan; forty years later he paid his debt of gratitude by writing Miss
Cornell’s biography, Leading Lady, published in 1978.
He was a dramatist in the Golden Age of Television in the 1950’s.
Since then he has also written for movies, and he won both the Pulitzer
Prize and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for his play All
The Way Home, based on James Agee’s novel A
Death in the Family. He has
taught dramatic writing at half a dozen universities, and in 1975 he celebrated
Jane Austen’s bicentenary by teaching a course, Jane
Austen at 200, at the New School for Social Research in New York City, where
he lives. Jane Austen’s Two Inches of Ivory is a talk he gave at the National
Arts Club in 1980.
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