Read Royal Romances: Sex, Scandal, and Monarchy Online
Authors: Kristin Flieger Samuelian
Tags: #Europe, #Modern (16th-21st Centuries), #England, #0230616305, #18th Century, #2010, #Palgrave Macmillan, #History
unquestionably my sister’s fortune, which is thirty thousand pounds;
but I cannot help supposing that the hope of revenging himself on
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me, was a strong inducement. His revenge would have been complete
indeed.” (221–22)
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Darcy’s version of Georgiana’s story is Lydia’s, reframed in narratively
comprehensible terms. Fifteen-year-old girl goes to a watering place
under dubious chaperonage, where she is pursued by a designing
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rake, whose motives comprehend both avarice and sexual revenge,
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and who, with the help of an accomplice, persuades her to temporar-
ily abandon her allegiances and values—a lapse for which she pays
by remaining nearly silent throughout the remainder of the novel.
In contrast to Lydia’s story, Darcy’s rendition gives cogent reasons
and ample evidence to account for Georgiana’s temporary folly: she
is more than ten years younger than her brother/guardian; she has
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an “affectionate heart” that retains “strong impressions” and that is,
neatly, the instrument of her reclamation, when she is “unable to sup-
port the idea of grieving and offending a brother whom she almost
looked up to as a father.” Wickham is much more the conventional
villain in this narrative, the Lovelace who, “undoubtedly by design,”
engineered the entire plot, with the help of at least one accomplice (in
contrast, in his elopement with Lydia, he is fleeing old acquaintances
rather than seeking co-conspirators; his friend Denny will attest to
nothing more than a conviction that he never intended to marry, and
Mrs. Younge, rather than acting as procuress, merely hides the lov-
ers after their flight). Darcy’s recitation contains all the elements of
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conventional narrative: motive, suspense, crisis, even exposition and
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explanation of apparent gaps: “undoubtedly by design,” “in whose
character we were most unhappily deceived.”
Darcy, and through him Elizabeth, attempt to impose this narra-
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tive on Lydia’s story. The letters, as pieces of evidence, give a com-
prehensive picture of the events, but as narrative they are garbled,
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incomplete, in conflict with one another—an incoherent polyglot
rather than a sustained story. In contrast, Darcy and Elizabeth con-
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struct Lydia’s story as a kind of poor man’s version of Georgiana’s:
Wickham’s motive is no longer 30,000 pounds and revenge on an
ancient enemy but ignominious avoidance of debt and easy sex. But
he is still the unscrupulous villain who preys on an innocent young
girl. Lydia’s folly is compounded by the conspicuous absence of a
controlling male, but she is no less a victim, no less, in Elizabeth’s
despairing assessment, “ lost”: “ She has no money, no connections,
nothing that can tempt him to—she is lost for ever” (287). Elizabeth
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has abandoned her picture of Lydia as a prostitute in the making and
replaced it with one in which she and Darcy, as substitutes for Lydia’s
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inadequate father, assume responsibility for her fall:
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“When I consider,” she added, in a yet more agitated voice, “that
I
might have prevented it!—
I
who knew what he was . . . Had his char-
acter been known, this could not have happened. But it is all, all too
late now!” (287)
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The temptation that becomes the focus now is Wickham’s, not Lydia’s;
his is the character that needed more attention paid to it. As with the
story of Georgiana’s near-ruin, emphasis here is on information that,
if known, might have prevented the calamity, and that, now known,
makes it narratively comprehensible. This is no longer the story of
the inevitable fate of a determined flirt, in which gaps in information
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signal, largely, lack of interest rather than mystery or hidden motive.
It has become the story of a wolf in the fold, of an unscrupulous
charmer, in whose character the citizens of Meryton and Brighton,
synecdochically concentrated in the Longbourn family, were “most
unhappily deceived.” In this way, both Darcy and Elizabeth exercise
the same logical negotiations Austen displayed in her letter to Martha
Lloyd, in their efforts to reclaim Lydia’s story, if not Lydia herself:
Without knowing what else to do about it, they resolve to think that
she would have been respectable if the men in her life had behaved
tolerably by her at first.
The mass of depositions that make up the bulk of the commission
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report, like the set of letters that contain the information on Lydia’s
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elopement, are inconclusive, full of conjecture and contradiction—
incoherent in their very comprehensiveness. The rumors and gos-
sip that constitute another part of public discourse about the royal
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marriage—of Caroline’s friendship with the notorious Lady Oxford,
for instance—are equally inconclusive in their very interestedness, as
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Austen’s rhetoric demonstrates. Does the friendship itself corrupt?
Is it proof of a corruption already existing? Austen’s slippery termi-
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nology entertains both possibilities. Either the friendship, like the
unhappy marriage itself, is “ bad” for Caroline, or it is a manifesta-
tion, the mark and result of a badness whose source is still to be
determined.51 In this way Austen’s epistolary response to Caroline’s
letter recapitulates the trajectory of her novel: first, like Mr. Bennet,
she effectively throws up her hands: “I do not know what to do about
it.”52 Then she recasts the story as a narrative of patriarchal responsi-
bility gone bad. It now becomes a coherent, if incomplete, tale, with a
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known and familiar cause and a series of foreseeable effects. The novel
endorses and replicates this change of both heart and focus, in its rev-
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olution in presenting not only Lydia’s narrative but also Mr. Bennet’s
culpability.
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In her despairing speech to Darcy, Elizabeth suggests the fictive
and ideological meaning behind Lydia’s elopement. The elision in
her accounting of her sister’s unfortunate position is psychologi-
cally telling: Lydia has “no money, no connections, nothing that can
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tempt [Wickham] to—.” To what? Propriety does not prevent her
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from completing either that sentence or the thought it springs from.
Unlike the ellipses in the commission report, which hide a number
of unmentionable possibilities, Elizabeth trails off when she’s about
to speculate on the one possible respectable outcome to the story—
marriage—replacing it instead with the melodramatic statement,
“she is lost for ever,” echoed a few lines later in “it is all, all too
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late now!” Both statements turn out to be incorrect, and their inac-
curacy—and narrative unreliability—is underscored when they are
endorsed by the prosy Mary Bennet, “ ‘Unhappy as the event must be
for Lydia, we may draw from it this useful lesson; that loss of virtue
in a female is irretrievable—that one false step involves her in endless
ruin’. . . . Elizabeth lifted up her eyes in amazement, but was too much
oppressed to make any reply” (298).
Elizabeth’s self-editing reveals not her foolishness but the erotic
content of her conversation with Darcy, the extent to which the sexu-
ality in both Georgiana’s and Lydia’s stories has been transferred to
the one authorized romance of the three. Elizabeth trails off before
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introducing the subject of marriage because the subject has been rein-
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troduced into her consciousness and her fantasies—and she hopes in
Darcy’s as well—by the visit to Pemberley. Both her increased mod-
esty and her increased desire make it an impossible word to voice. At
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the same time, her use of “tempt,” precisely because it is followed
by no specific temptation, reinserts the language of desire into the
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conversation, reminding Darcy that his original desire for Elizabeth
most often manifested itself as a temptation—a “danger” (88, 93)—
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against which he “ struggled” (210) but was ultimately unable to
resist. Elizabeth thus positions herself as tempting—the only woman
of the three who is legitimately erotically desirable per se—just at the
moment when the conversation hovers over the point of transition
between desire and its legitimate culmination in marriage.
Darcy’s relating of the Georgiana/Wickham story marks the first
step in this renegotiation of the novel’s sexual content. In his let-
ter to Elizabeth, he begins his explanation with an acknowledgment
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of Wickham’s erotic hold over her imagination, “Here again I shall
give you pain—to what degree you only can tell. But whatever may
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be the sentiments which Mr. Wickham has created, a suspicion of
their nature shall not prevent me from unfolding his real character. It
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adds even another motive” (220). In the narrative that follows Darcy
begins by recasting Wickham, who hitherto has been simply an attrac-
tive, “agreeable” (110) young man, as the dashing and unscrupulous
rake who seduces young girls. In the course of this transaction, he
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also makes Wickham over into the usurping brother, the Edmund to
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Darcy’s Edgar (old Mr. Darcy died, significantly, just when both men
reached their majority), who must be excised from the family and
replaced by the equally agreeable Colonel Fitzwilliam.53 The simili-
tude, and consequently the rivalry, between Darcy and Wickham is
underscored by Georgiana’s transfer of innocent trust from the one to
the other, a transfer that also inserts a suggestion of incestuous desire
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Th e N o v e l , R e g e n c y, D o m e s t i c a t i o n o f R o y a l t y 129
into the story. Darcy then converts similitude into appropriation, first
by demonstrating, in his assurances to Elizabeth about Wickham’s
motives, that he has access to his rival’s thoughts, and then by effec-
tively replacing him as brother/lover. At the same time he establishes
his position as head of the household, manager of the estate, and
putative father.
The story of feminine bad behavior disrupts existing narrative expec-
tations that are fundamentally class based. Its recasting, in Austen’s
letter and the plot of her novel, as a story of “natural” weakness insuf-
ficiently corrected is crucial to the project of bourgeois achievement
and consolidation, appropriation, and assimilation of aristocratic pre-
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rogative, in which both the novel and the culture are engaged. The
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use of the two seduction stories—the overlaying of the sentiment of
one onto the incoherent farce of the other, as well as the arrogation
of the erotic potential in both to serve the legitimate romance—illus-
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trates that transaction whereby the energies of what is illicit are trans-