5
(p. 42)
who lived cheerfully and reminiscently among family portraits and Chippendale:
Thomas Chippendale (1718-1779) was an English furniture designer. Wharton’s use of decor and architecture of the era figures in her depiction of character. She was particularly attentive to architecture in her descriptions of old New York—to the brownstone rows, to the extravagance of the Beauforts’ mansion and Mrs. Mingott’s stone house uptown. With Ogden Codman, Jr., a Boston architect, she wrote
The Decoration of Houses
(1897), considered a classic book on interior design. Newland’s fears that May will adopt her mother’s fussy furnishings reflect Wharton’s own dislike of her mother’s overdressed rooms. Ellen Olenska’s house in the wrong part of town is casual and inviting, the van der Luyden’s colonial cottage spare and enchanting. All details of paintings and statues in the novel reveal character as well as class and are never mere decor.
6
(p. 71)
She glanced at the writing-table ... opened a volume of the “Contes Drolatiques”:
Newland is up-to-date as he reads the poetic drama of Algernon Swinburne (1837-1909).
Contes Drolatigue
is a collection of racy tales by the French writer Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850). Both works would be inappropriate reading for the innocent May.
7
(p. 85)
Others had made the same attempt ... and some of the magazine editors and musical and literary critics:
This paragraph and the one following mention celebrated performers and writers of the day. Edwin Booth (1833-1893) was the most famous tragic actor of the age. Washington Irving (1783-1859) would be the best-known American author.
8
(pp. 85-86)
Newland Archer had been aware of these things ... to reach a stage of manners where they would naturally merge:
This passage lists nineteenth-century writers of interest to Newland, including the French novelist Prosper Mérimée (1803-1870) and the English poets Robert Browning (1812-1889) and William Morris (1834-1896), who was also a designer and painter.
9
(p. 103)
“You’re like the pictures on the walls of a deserted house: ‘The Portrait of a Gentleman. ’”:
This is a reference to Henry James’s novel The Portrait
of a
Lady (1881). Literary critic R. W. B. Lewis points out that the portrait of Newland Archer in
The Age of Innocence
might be read as a tribute and reply to that novel.
10
(p. 112)
“If only this new dodge for talking along a wire ... and the question of the telephone carried them safely back to the big house:
Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in 1876. Throughout the novel Wharton mentions inventions and technological advances: an early typewriter, a stylographic pen, the telephone (as here), and long distance—all as ways of tracking the passing years in the novel. Her characters’ attitude toward innovation reflects their closed- or open-mindedness. Their allusions to Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849), the American poet who wrote tales of mystery, and to Jules Verne (1828-1905), the French writer of futuristic fantasy, are appropriate for their conversation on the new invention of the telephone.
11
(p. 114)
That evening he unpacked his books ... as far outside the pale ofprobability as the visions of the night:
This paragraph opens with reference to Newland’s reading of recently published works, among them a volume by Herbert Spencer (1820-1903), the English scientist and interpreter of Darwin, and the great novel
Middlemarch,
by George Eliot (1819-1880), as well as tales of the French writer Alphonse Daudet (1840-1897).
The House of Life
is a series of love poems by the English poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882).
12
(p. 210)
a text from Jeremiah (chap.
ii., verse 25) for his
Thanksgiving
sermon: The Bible text (Revised Standard Version) is: ”Keep your feet from going unshod / and your throat from thirst. / But you said, It is hopeless, / for I have loved strangers, / and after them I will go.“ Wharton is weaving in a verse on outsiders, foreigners or newly arrived people, which is misconstrued by Newland’s mother to mean fashionable trends.
13
(p. 219)
Wall Street, the next day, had more reassuring reports of Beaufort’s situation:
The panic of 1873 was, to put it simply, caused by the overextension of railroad bonds and a shrinking national economy. The failure of Jay Cooke, the financial expert who kept the Union afloat during the Civil War, begot other failures that would have an impact on the holdings of the privileged families of old New York. Beaufort brings to mind Jay Gould, the extravagant investor; unlike Gould, Beaufort did not buy devalued stocks to sustain the market. Taking up the insurance business was a comedown for Beaufort, who appears at the end of the novel to have been a survivor.
14
(p. 251)
the queer wilderness of cast-iron and encaustic tiles known as the Metropolitan Museum:
The current Metropolitan Museum ”in the Park“ was not built until 1880. Wharton is recalling the old museum at Fifty-third Street in Manhattan. The Wolfe collection is a collection of paintings given to the museum. Luigi Cesnola (1832-1904) was a collector of antiquities and the first director of the Metropolitan Museum.
AN INSPIRATION FOR
THE AGE OF INNOCENCE
Age of Innocence, Sir Joshua Reynolds, 1788
Edith Wharton took the title for her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of old New York from Sir Joshua Reynolds’s 1788 painting
The Age of Innocence.
A British portrait painter and aesthetician, Reynolds (1723—1792) founded the Royal Academy and was elected its first president in 1768, and was knighted by King George III the following year. In his
Discourses Delivered at the Royal Academy
(1769—1791), which instantly became the foundation for the art criticism of his time, Reynolds justified the relevance of the Academy: “It is indeed difficult to give any other reason why an empire like that of Britain should so long have wanted an ornament so suitable to its greatness than that slow progression of things which naturally makes elegance and refinement the last effect of opulence and power.”
Wharton admired Reynolds; in fact, in her 1905 novel
The House of Mirth,
her heroine Lily Bart appears in a
tableau vivant
(literally, living picture) of Reynolds’s 1776 painting
Mrs. Lloyd.
But it is Reynolds’s grandiloquence and naivete that Wharton, an unfaltering ironist, invokes by using his title
The Age of Innocence
for a novel, written just after the devastation of World War I, that looks back to an earlier era.
In chapter five of
The Age of Innocence
(p. 30), Wharton writes:
Mrs. and Miss Archer were both great lovers of scenery. It was what they principally sought and admired on their occasional travels abroad, considering architecture and painting as subjects for men, and chiefly for learned persons who read Ruskin. Mrs. Archer had been born a Newland, and mother and daughter, who were as like as sisters, were both, as people said, “true Newlands”; tall, pale, and slightly round-shouldered, with long noses, sweet smiles and a kind of drooping distinction like that in certain faded Reynolds portraits. Their physical resemblance would have been complete if an elderly
embonpoint
had not stretched Mrs. Archer’s black brocade, while Miss Archer’s brown and purple poplins hung, as the years went on, more and more slackly on her virgin frame.
Reynolds’s
The Age of Innocence
depicts a five-year-old girl sitting in profile. She wears a sun-yellow dress that nearly covers her small, bare feet. Her folded hands clasp her heart, and a yellow bow cleaves her tousled hair. The girl’s face is cherubic as she faces away from a listing tree toward an open, celestial sky. The landscape, dotted with distant trees, is dusky, and it looks as if the child’s caretakers have abandoned the day’s picnic, leaving her alone as a cold night descends. The portrait’s luminosity arises from the girl’s sweet, curious face and her yellow dress.
a
Swedish opera singer (1843-1921) known for her role as Marguerite in Gounod’s
Faust.
b
Victor Capoul (1839-1924), singing the role of Faust.
c
A well-known aria in
Faust.
d
An opera by Richard Wagner (1813-1883); the march is often played at weddings.
e
Maria Taglioni (1804-1884), Italian ballerina.
f
William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825-1905), French painter of nudes considered risque. Oddly, Wharton uses the title
Love Victorious,
a painting of a nude cupid by Caravaggio (1573-1610).
g
A romance by popular French writer Octave Feuillet (1821-1890) that deals with adultery and family duty, topics that are appropriate to Wharton’s theme.
h
Novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864) set in Italy.
i
Isle in Greek mythology where sirens lured sailors, as Circe lured Odysseus in the
Odyssey.
j
Works by the English poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809-1892).
k
Presumably a family portrait by English painter Thomas Gains-borough (1727-1788).
l
Daniel Huntington (1816-1906), an American portrait painter.
m
Alexandre Cabanel (1823-1889), a French painter.
n
In the Bible (Esther 8:3), Queen Esther pleads with her husband, King Ahasuerus, to prevent the killing of the Jews, her people.
o
Adelina Patti (1843-1919), Italian soprano, famed for playing Amina in La
Sonnambula,
by Vicenzo Bellini (1801-1835).
p
In Roman mythology, the goddess of the hunt.
q
Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) and Petrarch (1304-1374), Italian poets.
r
Sandro Botticelli (1445-1510) and Fra Angelico (c. 1400-1455), Italian painters.
s
Randolph Rogers (1825-1892), American sculptor whose statuettes were popular household decorations.
t
In Greek mythology, character who predicts the future but is never believed.
u
The prints are of famous paintings.
v
the elegant knife-cases are by Thomas Sheraton (1751-1806), English designer.
w
Boucicault (1820-1890) was a writer of popular melodramas.
x
Character in an etching by English artist William Hogarth (1697-1764).
y
Comedy by Eugène Labiche (1815-1888), often read in French classes.
z
Sonnets from the Portuguese
is a collection of love poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861), wife of the poet Robert Browning (1812-1889), whose “How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Alix” was often memorized by schoolchildren.
aa
Local African Americans, often former slaves, were commonly hired as servants.
ab
Wedding march by German composer George Frideric Handel (1685-1759).
ac
Symphony by German composer Louis Spohr (1784-1859).
ad
Traditional wedding march by German composer Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847). Wharton mentions three famous wedding marches in this novel.
ae
Pioneering English fashion designer Charles Worth (1825-1895) became a founder of haute couture in Paris.
ag
Brothers Edmond (1822-1896) and Jules (1830-1870) de Goncourt were French writers who ran a salon; Guy de Maupassant (1850-1893) was considered France’s greatest short story writer; Prosper Mérimée (1803-1870) was a well-known French author.