The Jane Austen Handbook (3 page)

Read The Jane Austen Handbook Online

Authors: Margaret C. Sullivan

MODERN MONEY EQUIVALENTS

While Jane Austen is precise as to the amounts of her characters’ personal fortunes, it can be difficult to understand the true value of these fortunes from a distance of two centuries. Some experts suggest simply multiplying the amount by fifty; thus, Mr. Darcy’s ten thousand a year becomes a half million pounds, or close to a million dollars.

Economist J. Bradford DeLong of the University of California, Berkeley, suggests that straight multiplication does not give the whole story, and that one must also take into consideration the relative buying power of the amount at that time and place. In those days, goods were expensive and labor cheap, and while a horse might cost as much as 100 pounds, a maidservant’s wages for an entire year were less than 10 pounds plus her room and board. Dr. DeLong’s calculations place the modern equivalent of Mr. Darcy’s income at $6 million per year.

Despite the popular apprehension, Mr. Darcy was not the richest person in Britain, or even close. For example, the Duke of Devonshire’s yearly income went to six figures. Some claim that the Duke’s house, Chatsworth, was Jane Austen’s inspiration for Pemberley, Mr. Darcy’s estate. But Mr. Darcy’s ten thousand pounds per year could not have supported Chatsworth—though we are certain that Pemberley, however inferior, suited Mr. and Mrs. Darcy perfectly.

HOW TO PROVIDE FOR YOUR DAUGHTERS & YOUNGER SONS

Of a very considerable fortune, his son was, by
marriage settlements, eventually secure; his present income was an income of independence and comfort
. —
N
ORTHANGER
A
BBEY

If you have married prudently, your eldest son is likely going to inherit an estate, or at least a house and funded money. However, unless you want your other children to be constantly pestering him for money, you must ensure that the younger sons have a means of providing for themselves—and for you and any unmarried daughters should you be left a widow.

• 
Use your own fortune
. If a lady brings a fortune into her marriage, it is a good idea to have it written into the marriage settlement that her husband is entitled to the income from this money during her lifetime, but that after her death it will be divided among her children. If you are marrying a very rich man, you might even manage to get the income from your fortune strictly for your own use. It’s only fair, after all—it’s your money! Or your papa’s, at least!

• 
Have your husband settle money upon them
. A lady can insist that her marriage settlement include provisions for her younger children from her husband’s fortune. One would not want an overbearing, controlling husband to disinherit children who behaved in a way that did not suit him. And if
you
were given control of their fortune and had
a little tiff with the younkers, one would not wish to be able to cut them off irrevocably; how embarrassing to have to go back on your word later! Clearly, it is better to have these things settled from the beginning.

• 
If your estate is under entailment, persuade the heir to break it
. If the heir is a grasping sort, there is little chance of succeeding in this endeavor, but it is worth a try. A loving son would, of course, take care of his mama and sisters. (For more on
entailments, see

Who Died & Made Mr. Collins the Heir of Longbourn?
”.)

• 
Provide a means for the child to make a living
. If a son is inclined toward the church, send him to one of the universities and set him up in a family living. If he is inclined to the armed services, buy him a commission or find him a naval mentor. If he wants to be a barrister or a physician, arrange for his professional training. If the child is an ingratiating sort and there are rich, childless relatives about, introduce the child in the proper quarters and hope for the best.

• 
Educate your daughters
. An elegant, accomplished, educated lady will be more likely to contract a brilliant marriage with a man of fortune and breeding. If the worst happens, she will be able to make a living as a governess or a teacher in a school, though of course one hopes one’s daughters will never be put to such shifts.

• 
Put aside some of your yearly income, or assist your husband in doing so, for the benefit of your daughters
. At the very least, your daughters will have some extra cash that might help an eligible gentleman to make up his mind.

WHO DIED & MADE MR. COLLINS THE HEIR OF LONGBOURN?

Entailments were legal documents created by a family to ensure that an estate would pass down the male line, usually for three generations. The law of primogeniture stated that in the absence of an entailment, the eldest son inherited his father’s estate; if he predeceased his father, then the next son would inherit. If there were no sons to inherit the estate, it would be divided among the widow and daughters. Many families used entailments to avoid dividing an estate among several children, partly out of family vanity and partly because partitioning an estate into smaller properties would not provide sufficient income for anyone. An entailment gave residents of the estate only a life interest in its income instead of freehold ownership. If the last generation affected agreed to break the entailment, then the second generation could dispose of pieces of the estate to provide ready cash to defray debt or make dowries for the daughters of the family.

For example, in
Persuasion
, Sir Walter Elliot’s estate, Kellynch (and the baronetcy that goes with it), will be inherited by a cousin, William Elliot. Similarly, in
Pride and Prejudice
we are told that Mr. Bennet’s estate,
Longbourn, is entailed on the male line; thus, because the Bennets had only daughters, Longbourn will be inherited by a distant cousin, Mr. Collins.

It is unlikely that Mr. Bennet would have voluntarily entered into such an arrangement, so we may assume that he is the second generation of the Longbourn entailment and Mr. Collins is the third. We may further assume that an application to Mr. Collins to break the entailment would not be well received (and imagine what Lady Catherine would have to say about it!). A prudent father would have saved part of his yearly income to provide for his daughters, but Mr. Bennet had depended on having a son to break the entailment and therefore did not save anything.

Most men expected their brides to have a dowry or the expectation of an inheritance, and the five Bennet sisters had only the expectation of dividing their mother’s personal fortune of four thousand pounds after her death. The Bennet ladies enjoyed a comfortable lifestyle while Mr. Bennet lived, but they were placed at a disadvantage in the marriage market by having such small expectations. If they remained unmarried when Mr. Bennet died, they would be left without a home and very little money. One might nurture a Jane Bennet-ish hope that Mr. Collins would provide some assistance to the widow and orphans, though probably in vain.

RELIGION & THE CHURCH

Like their creator, Jane Austen’s characters are members of the
Church of England. Jane received her religious instruction from her clergyman father. According to Austen scholar Irene Collins, the Rev.
George Austen’s opinions on religion were influenced by the theories of the Enlightenment, a philosophic movement that proposed that with proper guidance mankind’s innate sense of reason would lead people to do the right thing—a clear departure from the strict, grim Puritanism of previous generations.

While Jane (and her characters) tied morality to religion, she was not tremendously influenced by the two eighteenth-century movements that rose in opposition to Enlightenment philosophies and challenged the Anglican orthodoxy: the Methodists and the Evangelicals. Both of these groups believed in biblical infallibility—that the text and teachings of the Bible are the perfect realization of God’s will—and the Evangelicals espoused personal conversion as an essential doctrine. Herself deeply religious, Jane distrusted the Evangelicals’ showy display of religion, though later in her life she expressed sympathy for the force of faith behind it.

HOW TO SPEND EACH SEASON

“What are men to rocks and mountains? Oh! what hours of transport we shall spend! And when we do return, it shall not be like other
travellers, without being able to give one accurate idea of any thing. We will know where we have gone—we will recollect what we have seen.”

E
LIZABETH
B
ENNET IN
P
RIDE AND
P
REJUDICE

Who says that Jane Austen’s characters are retired and provincial? They travel from home to Bath to
London to the Lake District to country estates and the seaside. The destinations are not arbitrary; they are dictated by means, health, weather, and the location of charming acquaintances. While it is not unknown to go somewhere in the off-season, it is best to know when a place will be unbearably hot, or the company inhumanly thin, so that one might choose the best time for a visit to all the best areas.

LONDON

London is a convenient place to pass through on the way elsewhere, to have unexpected meetings, to do some shopping, to get a picture framed, or to take advantage of the art and culture that only can be experienced in the capital.

B
EST
T
IME TO
G
O
: January through May; “The Season” swings into high gear after Easter.

T
HINGS TO
D
O IN
L
ONDON

• 
Shop
. You will not only have your own shopping to do but that of friends and relatives left behind in the provinces.
London has the best warehouses, and one can purchase material for clothing as well as commission its making-up in the latest fashion. One can purchase books, dishes, furniture, jewelry, music, home decorations—everything that one might want or need.

• 
Attend
balls and evening parties
. If you are fortunate enough to have acquaintances in London, they will most likely hold evening entertainments with dancing; you may also be invited to the evening parties of their acquaintances. Have a care that you are not seduced by fashionable vices and villains lurking in the big city.

• 
Attend the theater
. The
theaters at Covent Garden and Drury Lane are the premier venues in the country, where Sarah Siddons, John Kemble, Edmund Kean, and all the best actors can be seen. If your taste runs more to equestrian shows, try Astley’s Amphitheatre.

• 
Visit
museums
. Museums are in abundance in the capital: the National Gallery for paintings, the British Museum for the Elgin Marbles and other antiquities from the far-flung corners of the empire, and Bullock’s Museum for natural history.

• 
Take advantage of city masters
. The very best instructors in drawing, music, and dancing live in London.

BATH

The city of Bath may not be as popular as it was in years past, but there is no doubt that for those inclined to enjoy city life, Bath offers a variety of activities—and one never knows whom one might meet there!

B
EST
T
IME TO
G
O
: Late autumn, winter, and early spring.

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