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
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Her long-sleeved night-dress closes with a ruffle just below her chin.
Part Desdemona, part Othello, she appears to be the dupe of the two
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men, who grin conspiratorially.15
Travelling Tête à Tête
, like the
Knight Companion
, combines this
emphasis on nearly pornographic display with a multiplicity and inde-
terminacy of signification. In this print, an ogling horseman, like the
servants in the previous print, licenses voyeuristic pleasure framed
as prudish condemnation and includes the audience in both. The
text registers xenophobia linguistically, while calling attention to the
theatricality of a scene that simultaneously displays and confounds
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interpretation. The original testimony was from an equerry to the
Princess who, in the course of one journey , claimed to have pulled
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aside the curtains to her carriage to reveal her inside, asleep, with
her hand resting on Pergami’s genitals. Brougham refuted this testi-
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mony before the Lords: the accusing equerry turned out not to have
been accompanying the Princess on this particular journey and the
carriage had blinds, not curtains (
Hansard
2.2, October 3, 1820).
But Lane obviates these contradictions by presenting Caroline and
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Pergami unrealistically framed in the carriage window, and repre-
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senting the outrider as taken aback, his attention arrested by what he
sees. His response, in broken and impossibly inflected English, once
again calls attention to his—and the viewer’s—voyeuristic pleasure in
the scene, while at the same time making it impossible to determine
its significance: “Ha Ha, by Gar, vat dat I see yonder/Dat look so
tempting red and vite?”
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R o y a l R o m a n c e s
The lines are a corruption of lyrics from Theodosius Forrest’s 1759
“The Roast Beef of Old England: A Cantata,” itself a reworking of
Fielding’s “The Roast Beef of Old England,” which was written for
his 1731
Grub Street Opera
and subsequently used by Hogarth as
a subtitle for his 1748 engraving
The Gate of Calais
. The lines in
Forrest run:
Ah ! sacre Dieu! vat do I see yonder,
Dat looks so tempting red and vite?
Begar I see it is de
Roast Beef
from Londre;
Oh, grant to me von letel bite!16
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In these sources the object of the xenophobic ridicule is a starving
Frenchman, reinforced in Lane by the insertion of “by Gar” for “sacre
Dieu,” possibly a reference to the buffoonish Frenchman Doctor Caius
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from Shakespeare’s
The Merry Wives of Windsor
, whose speeches are
peppered with “by gars.” But the outrider’s speech is also reminiscent
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of the patter accompany ing a peep show, an association reinforced
by the framing of the window. His gaze is directed downward and
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toward the Princess, suggesting that “dat,” which arrests his vision
is a feature of her sexuality, not Pergami’s—she, after all, and not
he, is meant to be connected to the roast beef from London. But
what tempts him? Her breasts, which are displayed above the frame
of the window? Her own genitalia, accidentally display ed below it?
The overdetermined quality of both the framed scene and his desire
testifies not so much to the Princess’s guilt as to the multiplicity of
signification that images of her body enable in the discussion sur-
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rounding the dissolution of her marriage. Sometimes, as here, display
substitutes for testimony in ways that simultaneously exploit and call
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attention to a similar exchange in the debates themselves.
The attorneys for the Crown had established a pattern of falling
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back on immodest behavior whenever more damning evidence was
either unreliable or refuted by her counsel. Display was a favorite reg-
ister of immodesty, and many of the discussions focused on Caroline’s
breasts: just how low-cut was a particular dress? How much of her
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bosom did a portrait reveal? How unfastened were her upper clothes
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when Pergami entered her dressing room? The answers to these ques-
tions were not always explicit enough for the prosecution’s purposes,
but, in the companion pieces
Dignity!
and
Modesty!
Lane provides
enough fleshliness for both condemnation and titillation.
Dignity!
depicts a décolleté Caroline sitting at a dining table with
Pergami. Both look startled and affronted. Caroline’s Grecian-style
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B o d y D o u b l e s i n t h e N e w M o n a r c h y
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dress falls off the shoulder and clings to her breasts, only partially
covering them. Standing facing the couple is an officer, who addresses
Caroline, although he gestures toward Pergami, saying, “I can rec-
ognize no power in you to enoble anyone—and I shall not degrade
myself and the service by sitting at table with such a fellow as that.”
The accompanying motto is Milton’s description of Eve, slightly
misquoted, from Book VIII of
Paradise Lost
: “Grace was in all her
steps, Heaven in her eyes/In all her actions dignity.” The two lines
in Milton read, “Grace was in all her steps, Heav’n in her eye/In
every gesture dignity and love” (488–89).
Dignity!
references the tes-
timony of Captain Pechell of the
Clorinde
, the Royal Navy frigate on
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which Caroline and her entourage traveled on one leg of her journey
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through Sicily into North Africa and Palestine in 1816. Having heard
from another British captain about Caroline’s habit of seating Pergami
with her at dinner, Pechell sent her a message voicing his objections in
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the language used in the engraving. She deliberated for a day but in
the end refused to remove Pergami from her table, choosing instead
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not to dine with the Captain. The Attorney General used the story
as proof not so much of their liaison, per se, as of Caroline’s general
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abandonment. The key to the episode is the implicitly un-English dis-
regard of proper distinctions. Caroline’s depravity has reached such
proportions that she no longer tries to hide it, dining in public with a
former servant, and immune to the honest English seaman’s request
that she “spare a British officer the disgrace and scandal of sitting at
table with a person who had filled that menial situation” (
Hansard
2.2, August 19, 1820). The suggestion that she has lost all sense of
proportion implies her guilt.
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Because Pechell never spoke directly to Caroline on the subject,
the scene in the engraving is imagined. By transferring an epistolary
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exchange to a verbal one, the caricature can emphasize the signifying
force of Caroline’s excessive body as a correlative to her excessive but
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ultimately insubstantial “actions.” Although the second half of his
speech is an almost exact quote from his testimony and the Attorney
General’s summary,17 the first half is a fabrication. The assertion,
“I can recognize no power in you to ennoble anyone,” refers to the
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various honors Pergami acquired in advancing from courier to equerry
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and beyond, most of which happened during this same journey. In
the Sicilian province of Catania he was made a Knight of Malta. In
the town of Augusta Caroline purchased a barony for him, appar-
ently so that she could make him her chamberlain, a position only a
noble could hold. Finally, in Jerusalem she made him a Grand Master
of the order of St. Caroline, an order she instituted herself. Pechell’s
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R o y a l R o m a n c e s
challenge is a recognition of the transparent favoritism behind the
honors and a reinforcement of the King’s claim that Caroline is not
royalty. Yet, it is also anachronistic, because Pergami had none of these
titles at the time Pechell objected to being seated with him. By dis-
torting the timing, the engraving shifts the implications of the scene.
The question is no longer whether a British officer should be obliged
to dine with someone who has stood behind his chair, but whether
Caroline is Queen, a question implicitly answered by Pechell’s blunt
use of the personal pronoun. Caroline’s habit of conferring honors
willy-nilly on undeserving foreigners is de facto evidence of the adul-
tery that un-queens her, making the honors invalid. The alterations
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in Milton’s passage are now clear. Ennobling one’s low-born lover,
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causing him to sit at table with his social superiors, are actions, not
gestures. Pechell’s response makes it evident that the Queen’s behav-
ior must be opposed—even by the semi-passive opposition of refusing
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to dine with her and her paramour. For all its assumed domestic-
ity, Caroline’s cohabitation with Pergami has nothing to do with the
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“nuptial sanctity and marriage rites” that for Milton constitute the
“love” that is omitted from the passage in this print.
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The familiar peering figures in this engraving hover not at a half-
open door, as in the earlier pictures, but behind Pechell. One looks
at Pechell, the other at Pergami; possibly they are waiting to see who
will triumph. They are not in this case witnesses to adultery , and
Caroline’s body is the site of prurient, not evidentiary, interest. If they
are voyeurs, their role is to endorse the audience’s glee at her humili-
ation, in being told off by a morally superior social inferior. The print
establishes a series of glances. In one sequence, the viewer watches a
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servant watching Pergami, who watches Pechell watching Caroline.
Her startled look at being seen corresponds to her disheveled body, as
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if that body registers her centrality in the sequence of the public gaze.
As knowing viewers, the audience can gaze at several levels, from the
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thrice mediated wonder of that servant to a direct gaze at Caroline’s
breasts, aligned with both the soup tureen on the table and Pechell’s
crotch, but visually overpowering both.
By contrast, Caroline’s body
is
the site of evidentiary interest in
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Modesty!
which again makes the Crown’s case, this time by trans-
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lating inference into fact. The engraving depicts a scene described
in Louise Demont’s testimony , in which Caroline, accompanied by
Pergami and Demont, attended the theater St. Carlos in Naples and
was beset by rowdy theatergoers. The Princess had by this time lost
or dismissed all of her English attendants. The salient fact of the tes-
timony is once again her refusal or inability to recognize proper social
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distinctions in trying to pass off servants as attendants, as well as
her inappropriate degree of comfort with foreigners. But the Solicitor
General’s leading questions, and Demont’s eager answers, make dis-