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
om www
“I” of this passage is not the same “I” who declared that Bowles was
no poet. Nor is it clear whether the dashes indicate a new speaker or
pauses in the speech of the same person, although it is clearly Mrs.
Elton who offers her own tolerance of her husband’s “eccentricities”
yright material fr
as evidence that “any woman of real sense” would have put up with
Cop
Byron’s. Her tolerance indicates both pragmatic self-interest and her
own sexuality.37 Presumably, the declaration is that any woman of real
sense, that is, any woman who knew what was good for her, would
put up with a certain amount of kinkiness in order to be comfortably
settled. Mrs. Elton is the character who marries manifestly for the
sake of an establishment and is chosen for her 10,000 pounds after
10.1057/9780230117488 - Royal Romances, Kristin Flieger Samuelian
9780230616301_06_ch04.indd 152
9780230616301_06_ch04.indd 152
10/22/2010 6:04:26 PM
10/22/2010 6:04:26 PM
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
153
a perfunctory courtship. Certainly, if she is willing to put up with
“Mr. E’s” eccentricities, how much more ought to be borne by one
married to Lord Byron?
How much indeed? To readers of Byron in 1821, Mrs. Elton’s
phrase “little eccentricities” might have meant anything from incest,
to an interest in Continental boys, to a sophistical justification of
either or both, to the confoundment, to borrow Christensen’s term,
of all of these possibilities in the act of marital sodomy. Christensen
posits that Lady Byron used “confoundment” as a way to evade the
taint of complicity in her allegations against her husband: unable to
produce direct evidence of “brute Byron” she produces instead “the
veConnect - 2011-04-02
direct assertion of confoundment: confoundment in the act, con-
algra
foundment in the telling, confoundment between the telling and
the act” (85). The sexual economy of Mrs. Elton’s speech once again
highlights Lockhart as a reader who knows his Austen, and who can
romso - PT
read her characters out of her fiction. This is the inversion of Lady
Byron’s tactic of confounding her husband and his poems.38 But, by
lioteket i
making Austen’s characters live as naïve readers of Byron, Lockhart
plays out the intertextual implications of commingling “life” and
sitetsbib
“art.” The character in whom he chooses to locate this is Mrs. Elton’s
fictive antithesis, Fanny Price.
The shift from boarding school misses to sexualized women is
registered in the ordering of the speaker’s locatives. The series of
“now tell me’s” is directed first at Mrs. Goddard, headmistress of
the local boarding school for girls, then at Fanny Price and Harriet
Smith, both boarders of a sort, ending with the married Mrs. Elton.
The speaker is relying on his audience’s recognition of Fanny’s fit-
veconnect.com - licensed to Univer
ness for this group—the only heroine on his list. Fanny’s uncertain
status throughout most of
Mansfield Park
and her commitment
.palgra
to a nearly unrealizable standard of feminine modesty would seem
to mark her as belonging to this little community, carefully placed
om www
between the respectable widow and the desirable but homeless
ingénue—and at a safe distance from the dashing married woman.
Earnest and studious as well as virtuous, she is the closest in type to
Annabella Milbanke, which ought to make her a better exemplar of
yright material fr
the biographical reader even than Mrs. Elton. But, as Lady Byron
Cop
knew, reading a text for evidence of an author’s life can implicate
reader as well as author. Fanny’s presence in a review of
John Bull’s
Letter
that was published in the July 1821 number of
Blackwood’s
Magazine
registers this risk. The reviewer facetiously attributes
authorship of the letter to Jeremy Bentham. Strout calls this claim
a “smoke screen” designed to “my stify the public” and protect
10.1057/9780230117488 - Royal Romances, Kristin Flieger Samuelian
9780230616301_06_ch04.indd 153
9780230616301_06_ch04.indd 153
10/22/2010 6:04:26 PM
10/22/2010 6:04:26 PM
154
R o y a l R o m a n c e s
Lockhart, who was genuinely worried about his authorship being
discovered.39 “Bentham’s” inability to comment intelligently on
Byron’s poetry (a claim the reviewer tempers by acknowledging that,
like him, “Bentham” recognizes
Don Juan
as his greatest work) is a
feature of his age, which the reviewer repeatedly genders as female:
“Every where we hear him called an old woman—as if old women
were not a respectable portion of society—a driveller, a dotard, and
other opprobrious expressions, which really is very unfair” (421).
Attributing to a “defective memory” common to “very old men”
a habit of repeating the same tropes until their effectiveness has
been lost, the reviewer quotes the
Emma/Mansfield Park
dialogue,
veConnect - 2011-04-02
pointing out that “Bentham” is here using the same “silly mode of
algra
iteration of names” (425) he used in an earlier pamphlet:40
He forgot that he had ever used the phraseology before, and the chime
romso - PT
was still singing in his ears. But he is not to be pardoned, however,
for making such a public use of people’s names. Poor Miss Price is so
lioteket i
much annoyed at being put down as a reader of Don Juan, that she has
written us a long and rather ingenious letter on the subject, in which
she complains bitterly of this conduct, and adds, that the other ladies
sitetsbib
are particularly vexed on the occasion. (495)
“Poor Miss Price” had been put down in the original pamphlet as a
reader of
Childe Harold
, not
Don Juan
. Her inability to recognize
the superiority of the later poem is part of what discredits her and
her circle as readers of Byron. The shift from melancholic romance
to racy satire is telling. The reviewer’s suggestion of ill-usage (Fanny
“complains bitterly of this conduct”) underscores the association
veconnect.com - licensed to Univer
with Lady Byron implied in the original and stresses the identifica-
tion of both as naïve biographical readers. Presumably, reading
Don
.palgra
Juan
, like the “public use of people’s names,” is vaguely sexualizing,
threatening the same kind of taint by association that Christensen
om www
argues informed Lady By ron’s accusations. Bentham/Lockhart’s
unpardonable use of her name, like his identification of Byron
and Childe Harold, so commingles public and private identities as
to stress that each is always its opposite. His use of Fanny Price
yright material fr
drags into the limelight a character whose reputation for shy ness
Cop
has already been complicated by her public identity as a fictional
character.
Yet Fanny has at least as much kinship with the moral relativism of
Don Juan
as with the melancholy of
Childe Harold
, given the novel of
which she is heroine.
Mansfield Park
is a novel about the operations
of relativism. Its heroine’s role as a moral bulwark in a community
10.1057/9780230117488 - Royal Romances, Kristin Flieger Samuelian
9780230616301_06_ch04.indd 154
9780230616301_06_ch04.indd 154
10/22/2010 6:04:26 PM
10/22/2010 6:04:26 PM
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
155
otherwise driven—and riven—by self-interest is a relative construc-
tion.41 Fanny ’s judgments are vindicated by being directed toward
the stability that novel aims for,42 but they are only sound within the
hothouse cultivation of Mansfield Park, and they are always framed
by her desires. Austen’s treatment of relativism, of the malleability
of judgment by will, is comprehensive. There is in the end no one,
including the narrator, who does not forego principle for interest.43
Her novel demonstrates the same mechanisms of confoundment that
Lady Byron offered in her defense of the separation. It bewilders by
compromising the authority even of those characters designated as
authoritative.
veConnect - 2011-04-02
Austen plots the development of Fanny’s “moral taste”44 to dem-
algra
onstrate that the synchronicity between her judgment and her feel-
ings is produced in part by chance and in part by careful cultivation.
Her non-participation in the episode of the private theatricals appears
romso - PT
to stress a distinction between her and her environment on which
Austen has been insisting since the novel’s opening:
lioteket i
Fanny looked on and listened, not unamused to observe the selfish-
sitetsbib
ness which, more or less disguised, seemed to govern them all, and
wondering how it would end. For her own gratification she could have
wished that something might be acted, for she had never seen even half
a play, but every thing of higher consequence was against it. (93)
Fanny ’s affinity with the narrator—observant and amused, able to
see through all disguises, if not all the way to the end—suggests an
authority that masks the constructedness of her observations, her
veconnect.com - licensed to Univer
quick stifling of a desire for “gratification” by the priggish (perhaps
guilty ?) reference to “every thing of higher consequence.” Austen
.palgra
ranks characters according to their ability to detach from their
companions and observe, distinguishing both Edmund and Mary
om www
Crawford by
their
ability to distinguish when Fanny is suffering.
But the contrast between those who notice Fanny and the majority
who neglect her does not constitute a moral economy. Sympathy is
contingent, partial, and always circumscribed by personal will. All
yright material fr
superiority is relative; there is no supremacy. Mary and Edmund are
Cop
kinder than the other characters in the matter of the theatricals, but
never to the point of sacrificing their own gratifications, more often
in their service. Edmund looks at Fanny “kindly” when the others
try to pressure her into joining the play, but is “unwilling to exas-
perate his brother” by any effectual intervention (103). In the next
chapter, he manipulates Fanny into endorsing his decision to play
10.1057/9780230117488 - Royal Romances, Kristin Flieger Samuelian
9780230616301_06_ch04.indd 155
9780230616301_06_ch04.indd 155
10/22/2010 6:04:26 PM
10/22/2010 6:04:26 PM
156
R o y a l R o m a n c e s
Anhalt to Mary ’s Amelia, covering with a reference to his father’s
dislike of outsiders his own jealousy of a potential rival.45 Mary goes
beyond looks, ostentatiously moving her chair closer to Fanny and
talking to her in a “kind low whisper” (103), but the narrator quali-
fies her kindness as an expression of “the really good feelings by
which she was almost purely governed.” The first adverb is an inten-
sifier, but the parallel construction pairs it with the “almost” that
dilutes the purity of her motives. “Really” not only loses its inten-
sifying power; it becomes ironic. Because her motives are not pure,
her goodness is not real. And whether kindness shares space with or
masks self-interest in the end makes no difference. Mary hedges her
veConnect - 2011-04-02
bets. Fanny ’s gratitude is a by-product of what she “really ” wants:
algra
Edmund’s notice and approval. “[T]he really good feelings by which
she was almost purely governed, were rapidly restoring her to all
the little she had lost in Edmund’s favour” (104). Powers of obser-
romso - PT
vation and sympathy do not prevent characters from acting out of
self-interest.46
lioteket i
Fanny ’s detachment in the above passage, however, suggests
that she alone is not governed by the self-interest she remarks in