“In 1795, as Jane Austen was writing Elinor and Marianne, to
be revised in 1797 and 1798 as Sense and Sensibility, Britons were experiencing
the first financial crisis of Austen’s lifetime, the economic results of a
harvest failure of biblical proportions.” Dr. Sheryl Craig in "The Economics of
Sense and Sensibility"
This is the opening paragraph of one of the most interesting
articles I have ever read about the economics of Jane Austen’s novels. The crop failure mentioned above affected everyone in England, but most especially the poor who were already struggling to get by. A population existing on the edge of starvation looked to benefactors and the government for assistance: “John Dashwood and the
Members of Parliament initially promised to provide for those entrusted to
their care, and surely it is no coincidence that Austen’s characters and her
contemporaries were destined to be disappointed.”
What I did not realize when reading Sense and Sensibility
was the importance of “place.” Norland, the Dashwood ancestral home, is located
in Sussex. At the time S&S was written, “one in four people living in
Sussex were classified as paupers. Another problem was that the taxes collected
to aid the poor were being diverted…” and did not reach the poor.
The book's bad boy, John Willoughby, lives in Somerset, “a
difficult county for the poor… The wages were low…, and the poor taxes were
also low… Perversely, Willoughby is not only a wastrel, he is fully aware of
the fact and yet unwilling to curb his excess.”
But there is an entirely different attitude toward the poor
in Devon. The recently widowed Mrs. Dashwood and her three daughters are
rescued by Sir John Middleton. “The reader’s first clue that Mrs. Dashwood’s
relative is a very different kind of man [from her stepson John Dashwood] is the
placement of Sir John in Devon. The poor rates of Devon were progressive and
above the national average." An example given of the benefits of this
progressive attitude toward the poor is that milk, considered a luxury in most
of England, was a part of the daily diet of the people of Devonshire.
The people of Jane Austen’s time would have understood that
by leaving the stingy John Dashwood and Sussex behind, the fortunes of the
Dashwood women would improve in the more generous Devon. The placement of John
Willoughby in Somerset was a hint that this man was going to be trouble for
Marianne Dashwood.
S&S is all about "place" and possibly "name" as all three men whose lives interact with the Dashwood women are named "John."
I would recommend that you read Dr. Craig's entire essay which is available here.
Very interesting! Thank you for the tip!
ReplyDeleteThis info adds another layer of enjoyment to her books--I research time & place with my genealogy, had never thought about with Miss Austen's works! Thanks Mary!!
ReplyDeleteThings don't really change much. Yesterday, my dad bought a bred guilt for 4-H hogs from a guy in Illinois for us. The gentleman was selling out because there was no corn in Illinois this fall because of the drought. It was 62 in Ohio yesterday. This country will have a lot more 'paupers' if we have another drought like this next summer. It scares me more than school shootings, really.
ReplyDelete