"Autobiographies of great nations are written in three manuscripts – a book of deeds, a book of words, and a book of art. Of the three, I would choose the latter as truest testimony." - Sir Kenneth Smith, Great Civilisations

"I must write each day without fail, not so much for the success of the work, as in order not to get out of my routine." - Leo Tolstoy

I have never believed that one should wait until one is inspired because I think the pleasures of not writing are so great that if you ever start indulging them you will never write again. - John Updike

"The life of every man is a diary in which he means to write one story, and writes another; and his humblest hour is when he compares the volume as it is with what he vowed to make it." - J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan

Poetry is the shadow cast by our streetlight imaginations." - Lawrence Ferlinghetti


[Note - If any article requires updating or correction please notate this in the comment section. Thank you. - res]


Friday, March 14, 2014

John le Carre - Biography


'The writer with the double life': John le Carré near his Cornwall home. Photograph: Adrian Sherratt /Rex Features


John le Carré: Behind the Smiley face, a man of mystery
http://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2014/mar/09/john-le-carre-smiley-face-man-of-mystery-profile

The Observer,
At 82, the great spy novelist still exerts a grip on our imagination,
with a film and biography both on the way. But are we any nearer to
really  knowing the confused son of a confidence trickster?

There's something about the English that loves a spy. Last week, like a dormant virus, there was a renewed outbreak of Smiley fever. Several broadsheets devoted many column inches to the career of a deceased MI5 man, John Bingham, 7th Baron Clanmorris.

An MI5 leak played its part, of course, but this was chiefly because, in the words of the Daily Telegraph, Bingham was "the man who inspired George Smiley". As an extra spike in the temperature chart, it was also alleged that Smiley's creator John le Carré "was in love with wife of spy hero" (the Times).

All of which goes to demonstrate that, with the possible exception of JK Rowling, no living writer exerts quite the same grip on the British imagination as John le Carré and his Smiley novels. Once again, fans and critics, writers and readers, have been asking themselves: how does he do it?

The enigma of le Carré is an old story, and almost as sprightly as the 82-year-old author himself. He was born David John Moore Cornwell in 1931 to Olive and Ronnie Cornwell in Poole, Dorset. Until Adam Sisman's biography is published later this year, the story so far is that it's the father who holds the key to the man – a view richly endorsed by A Perfect Spy (1986).

Ronnie Cornwell was a confidence trickster who made and lost a number of fortunes and was, at least once, imprisoned for fraud. "Thanks to his father," says a friend, "David doesn't really know who he is. Actually, he never did know who he was, or where he fitted. One minute, there was a mock Tudor mansion in Maidenhead; the next, his father was in jail."

From an early age, Cornwell was making up stories to cover his tracks and explain things away, a gift that became essential when, as a teenager, he was sent to board at Sherborne school. Cornwell did not fit in and left early to make his way in the world. Later, he wrote: "People who have had unhappy childhoods are pretty good at inventing themselves."

Being untruthful became a habit of being. After studying abroad, he attended Oxford, joined MI5, later transferring to MI6, adopted his nom de plume and began writing fiction. Le Carré's work has always been more autobiographical than most readers realise. His first novel, Call for the Dead (1961), featured George Smiley. Soon, he found his subject and his voice when he put his MI6 experience to work in The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, an international hit hailed by Graham Greene as "the best spy story I ever read".

With Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, (1974), originally titled "The Eternal Autumn of George Smiley", le Carré became the storyteller of the national myth and the master of moral complexity in the looking-glass world of secret conflict. Smiley, who is partly based on Bingham but also on the Sherborne chaplain and le Carré's Oxford tutor Vivian HH Green, joined the immortals of English fiction such as Sherlock Holmes and Bertie Wooster. Le Carré, who cherishes the work of PG Wodehouse, takes an almost Victorian satisfaction from watching his characters become braided into the imagination of the ordinary British reader.

Smiley and "the Circus" of MI6 have a threefold appeal. First, by an extraordinary sleight of hand, le Carré contrived to make a fictive world seem tangible and real, what he has called "a spook world better suited to my needs". So potent was his art that former colleagues in MI5 and MI6 began to adopt his invented lingo of "lamplighters", "moles", "ferrets", "pavement artists", and the rest. Unconsciously, no doubt, his devoted readers became complicit with his fabrications. In his 2008 essay The Madness of Spies, he wrote of doing "a sort of Tolkien job" on his experience. Thus, he said, it was his fantasy to dream "the Great Spy's Dream" [of being] "at the Spies' Big table, playing the world's game". Needless to add, he has occasionally asserted the exact opposite.

Second, mixed with his lifelong fascination with a class to which he knows he can never belong, there's le Carré's abiding love for the adulterers, depressives, alcoholics and con men who people his plots. At heart, he is a romantic who is charmed by the seedy, the marginal and the betrayed, but from the inside. Accordingly, he bestows a weird humanity on the flotsam and jetsam of the secret state. This is the le Carré whom some, exasperated by the etiolated condition of British "literary fiction", celebrate as our greatest postwar novelist. Such praise is not just insular sentiment. Philip Roth has described A Perfect Spy as "the best English novel since the war."

Above all, as an inside-outsider, the writer with the double life, he has used the reflecting mirrors of the secret service to explore the nature of English society at the end of empire, especially as it affected the "poor loves" denied their global inheritance. In The Secret Pilgrim (1990), he gave George Smiley a speech that is almost a summary of le Carré's visceral intuition about Britain's post-imperial upper class:

"The privately educated Englishman is the greatest dissembler on earth… Was, is now, and ever shall be, for as long as our disgraceful school system remains intact. Nobody will charm you so glibly, disguise his feelings from you better, cover his tracks more skilfully, or find it harder to confess to you that he's been a damn fool. Nobody acts braver when he's frightened stiff, or happier when he's miserable; nobody can flatter you better when he hates you than your extrovert Englishman or woman..."

In conclusion, le Carré (Smiley) might be speaking about the Philbys, Burgesses and Macleans who so comprehensively betrayed the covert society he joined in the late 1950s: "He can have a Force 12 nervous breakdown while he stands next to you in the bus queue and you may be his best friend but you'll never be the wiser. Which is why some of our best officers turn out to be our worst. And our worst, our best. And why the most difficult agent you will ever have to run is yourself. "

In his prime, as Smiley's Boswell, David Cornwell conducted himself, Greene-like, as the invisible man, rarely giving interviews, sequestered in his clifftop Cornish retreat, secure in the company of his second wife, Jane. But then history caught up with him, the Wall came down, the cold war ended, and he had to leave Smiley, who had become another kind of father figure, behind.

These were difficult years. He continued to write obsessively, as he has always done, but his imagination was misfiring. The naysayers, who class him as merely a popular genre writer, jeered that, with the fall of the USSR, his day was over. Far from it: he simply reinvented himself, reconnected with the world, and came up with The Constant Gardener (2001) and A Most Wanted Man (2008), mature novels of savage indignation. For a writer who first became a bestseller when Harold Macmillan was prime minister, it was a remarkable late flowering.

There have been some health scares but now, as he approaches his 83rd birthday, he's running in the posterity stakes, as painfully sensitive to his reputation and record as ever. Like Prospero, he manipulates from afar. An interview here; a démarche there (often focusing, in the last decade on the war in Iraq and its consequences); anon, a letter to the newspapers. Unlike Shakespeare's magician, he has not yet "drowned" his book, however, and continues to write himself out of trouble from day to day. To his friends and admirers, he remains the best company in the world – sharp, witty and well informed, a wicked mimic and a brilliant raconteur.

This promises to be a big year. The film of A Most Wanted Man, starring the late Philip Seymour Hoffman, will excite widespread interest. In the autumn, there's Sisman's John le Carré: The Biography, published by Bloomsbury.

Not even Cornwell knows exactly what skeletons his biographer has turned up, and there have been some jumpy moments, notably a wild rumour that the old wizard was going to upstage himself and release a competing memoir.

Sisman, who says it is hard not to be seduced by le Carré, insists he has preserved his splinter of ice. Speaking to the Observer last week, he said: "Far from slowing down as he enters his ninth decade, [David] seems to be speeding up. He's infuriatingly difficult to pin down, and half a century after The Spy who Came in from the Cold, John le Carré remains an enigma. At the top of his genre, I'd rate him as one of the most important writers of our times."


THE LE CARRE FILE

Born David John Cornwell, 19 October 1931, in Poole, Dorset. Married twice. Has four children. Lives with his second wife in Cornwall.

Best of times Perhaps leaving the Foreign Office in 1964 because he was then able to write full time; in the same year, he won the Somerset Maugham prize. By his own reckoning, his best work includes The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, The Tailor of Panama and The Constant Gardener.

Worst of times Several contenders from his childhood and early adulthood – including his runaway mother, who abandoned the family when he was five, and his conman father.

What he says "Coming home from very lonely places, all of us go a little mad: whether from great personal success, or just an all-night drive, we are the sole survivors of a world no one else has ever seen.

What others say "The enemy in le Carré's universe, both fictional and not [is] the virus of shortsightedness, hypocrisy, lies and unfettered greed that plagues the 'post-imperial, post-cold-war world'." Critic Olen Steinhauer on A Delicate Truth, le Carre's most recent novel.


* * * * * * * * * * *



Bloomsbury To Publish Adam Sisman's
Biography Of John Le Carré
http://www.johnlecarre.com/news/2011/03/22/bloomsbury-to-publish-adam-sisman-s-biography-of-john-le-carre

Announcement

Sisman states that John le Carré ‘will eventually be acknowledged
as one of the finest British post-War novelists’.

www.Booktradeinfo.com reports that:

‘Bloomsbury plan to publish in 2014, half a century after the worldwide success of The Spy who came in from the Cold, which Graham Greene dubbed ‘the best spy story I have ever read.’

Le Carré will provide Sisman with information and introductions, as well as access to his hitherto unseen private archive but he will have no control over the biography. Sisman will have a free hand, which is at the wish of both the biographer and his subject.

Sisman approached le Carré, whose real name is David Cornwell, last summer. Sisman says: ‘David Cornwell is a rich subject for a biographer. His writing is intensely personal, and permeated by strongly-held values. From the moment when his identity became public, readers around the world have speculated about the degree to which he has drawn on his own experiences in his fiction, in particular on his career with the intelligence services. His semi-autobiographical novel A Perfect Spy provided tantalising clues to his extraordinary childhood.’ […]

‘I have admired and enjoyed David’s work since I discovered him in my teens,’ Sisman continues, ‘and believe that his enormous commercial success has hindered recognition that he is writer of the highest quality, who will eventually be acknowledged as one of the finest British post-War novelists. Philip Roth rated le Carré’s A Perfect Spy as ‘the best English novel since the war’.’




Friday, February 28, 2014

John Keats - Song of the Indian Maid (from Endymion)


Poet John Keats

Arthur Quiller-Couch, ed. 1919. The Oxford Book of English Verse: 1250–1900.
  
John Keats. 1795–1821
  
623. Song of the Indian Maid
FROM 'ENDYMION'
  
          O SORROW!
          Why dost borrow
  The natural hue of health, from vermeil lips?—
          To give maiden blushes
          To the white rose bushes?         5
  Or is it thy dewy hand the daisy tips?

          O Sorrow!
          Why dost borrow
  The lustrous passion from a falcon-eye?—
          To give the glow-worm light?  10
          Or, on a moonless night,
  To tinge, on siren shores, the salt *sea-spry?

          O Sorrow!
          Why dost borrow
  The mellow ditties from a mourning tongue?—  15
          To give at evening pale
          Unto the nightingale,
  That thou mayst listen the cold dews among?

          O Sorrow!
          Why dost borrow  20
  Heart's lightness from the merriment of May?—
          A lover would not tread
          A cowslip on the head,
  Though he should dance from eve till peep of day—
          Nor any drooping flower  25
          Held sacred for thy bower,
  Wherever he may sport himself and play.

          To Sorrow
          I bade good morrow,
  And thought to leave her far away behind;  30
          But cheerly, cheerly,
          She loves me dearly;
  She is so constant to me, and so kind:

          I would deceive her
          And so leave her,  35
  But ah! she is so constant and so kind.
Beneath my palm-trees, by the river side,
I sat a-weeping: in the whole world wide
There was no one to ask me why I wept,—
        And so I kept  40
Brimming the water-lily cups with tears
        Cold as my fears.

Beneath my palm-trees, by the river side,
I sat a-weeping: what enamour'd bride,
Cheated by shadowy wooer from the clouds,  45
        But hides and shrouds
Beneath dark palm-trees by a river side?

And as I sat, over the light blue hills
There came a noise of revellers: the rills
Into the wide stream came of purple hue—  50
        'Twas Bacchus and his crew!
The earnest trumpet spake, and silver thrills
From kissing cymbals made a merry din—
        'Twas Bacchus and his kin!
Like to a moving vintage down they came,  55
Crown'd with green leaves, and faces all on flame;
All madly dancing through the pleasant valley,
        To scare thee, Melancholy!
O then, O then, thou wast a simple name!
And I forgot thee, as the berried holly  60
By shepherds is forgotten, when in June
Tall chestnuts keep away the sun and moon:—
        I rush'd into the folly!

Within his car, aloft, young Bacchus stood,
Trifling his ivy-dart, in dancing mood,  65
        With sidelong laughing;
And little rills of crimson wine imbrued
His plump white arms and shoulders, enough white
        For Venus' pearly bite;
And near him rode Silenus on his ass,  70
Pelted with flowers as he on did pass
        Tipsily quaffing.

'Whence came ye, merry Damsels! whence came ye,
So many, and so many, and such glee?
Why have ye left your bowers desolate,  75
        Your lutes, and gentler fate?'—
'We follow Bacchus! Bacchus on the wing,
        A-conquering!
Bacchus, young Bacchus! good or ill betide,
We dance before him thorough kingdoms wide:—  80
Come hither, lady fair, and joinèd be
        To our wild minstrelsy!'

'Whence came ye, jolly Satyrs! whence came ye,
So many, and so many, and such glee?
Why have ye left your forest haunts, why left  85
        Your nuts in oak-tree cleft?'—
'For wine, for wine we left our kernel tree;
For wine we left our heath, and yellow brooms,
        And cold mushrooms;
For wine we follow Bacchus through the earth;  90
Great god of breathless cups and chirping mirth!
Come hither, lady fair, and joinèd be
        To our mad minstrelsy!'

Over wide streams and mountains great we went,
And, save when Bacchus kept his ivy tent,  95
Onward the tiger and the leopard pants,
        With Asian elephants:
Onward these myriads—with song and dance,
With zebras striped, and sleek Arabians' prance,
Web-footed alligators, crocodiles, 100
Bearing upon their scaly backs, in files,
Plump infant laughers mimicking the coil
Of seamen, and stout galley-rowers' toil:
With toying oars and silken sails they glide,
        Nor care for wind and tide.

 105
Mounted on panthers' furs and lions' manes,
From rear to van they scour about the plains;
A three days' journey in a moment done;
And always, at the rising of the sun,
About the wilds they hunt with spear and horn, 110
        On spleenful unicorn.

I saw Osirian Egypt kneel adown
        Before the vine-wreath crown!
I saw parch'd Abyssinia rouse and sing
        To the silver cymbals' ring! 115
I saw the whelming vintage hotly pierce
        Old Tartary the fierce!
The kings of Ind their jewel-sceptres vail,
And from their treasures scatter pearlèd hail;
Great Brahma from his mystic heaven groans, 120
        And all his priesthood moans,
Before young Bacchus' eye-wink turning pale.
Into these regions came I, following him,
Sick-hearted, weary—so I took a whim
To stray away into these forests drear, 125
        Alone, without a peer:
And I have told thee all thou mayest hear.

        Young Stranger!
        I've been a ranger
In search of pleasure throughout every clime; 130
        Alas! 'tis not for me!
        Bewitch'd I sure must be,
To lose in grieving all my maiden prime.

        Come then, Sorrow,
        Sweetest Sorrow! 135
Like an own babe I nurse thee on my breast:
        I thought to leave thee,
        And deceive thee,
But now of all the world I love thee best.

        There is not one, 140
        No, no, not one
But thee to comfort a poor lonely maid;
        Thou art her mother,
        And her brother,
Her playmate, and her wooer in the shade.

 145

*GLOSS:  [sea-spry] sea-spray.



- Source Credit: Bartleby.com - http://www.bartleby.com/101/623.html



John Keats - Ode to a Nightingale


Poet John Keats


Arthur Quiller-Couch, ed. 1919. The Oxford Book of English Verse: 1250–1900.
  
John Keats. 1795–1821
  
624. Ode to a Nightingale
  
MY heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains
  My sense, as though of hemlock I had drunk,
Or emptied some dull opiate to the drains
  One minute past, and Lethe-wards had sunk:
'Tis not through envy of thy happy lot,         5
  But being too happy in thine happiness,
    That thou, light-wingèd Dryad of the trees,
          In some melodious plot
  Of beechen green, and shadows numberless,
    Singest of summer in full-throated ease.

  10
O for a draught of vintage! that hath been
  Cool'd a long age in the deep-delvèd earth,
Tasting of Flora and the country-green,
  Dance, and Provençal song, and sunburnt mirth!
O for a beaker full of the warm South!  15
  Full of the true, the blushful Hippocrene,
    With beaded bubbles winking at the brim,
          And purple-stainèd mouth;
  That I might drink, and leave the world unseen,
    And with thee fade away into the forest dim:

  20
Fade far away, dissolve, and quite forget
  What thou among the leaves hast never known,
The weariness, the fever, and the fret
  Here, where men sit and hear each other groan;
Where palsy shakes a few, sad, last grey hairs,  25
  Where youth grows pale, and spectre-thin, and dies;
    Where but to think is to be full of sorrow
          And leaden-eyed despairs;
  Where beauty cannot keep her lustrous eyes,
    Or new Love pine at them beyond to-morrow.

  30
Away! away! for I will fly to thee,
  Not charioted by Bacchus and his pards,
But on the viewless wings of Poesy,
  Though the dull brain perplexes and retards:
Already with thee! tender is the night,  35
  And haply the Queen-Moon is on her throne,
    Cluster'd around by all her starry Fays
          But here there is no light,
  Save what from heaven is with the breezes blown
    Through verdurous glooms and winding mossy ways.

  40
I cannot see what flowers are at my feet,
  Nor what soft incense hangs upon the boughs,
But, in embalmèd darkness, guess each sweet
  Wherewith the seasonable month endows
The grass, the thicket, and the fruit-tree wild;  45
  White hawthorn, and the pastoral eglantine;
    Fast-fading violets cover'd up in leaves;
          And mid-May's eldest child,
  The coming musk-rose, full of dewy wine,
    The murmurous haunt of flies on summer eves.

  50
Darkling I listen; and, for many a time
  I have been half in love with easeful Death,
Call'd him soft names in many a musèd rhyme,
  To take into the air my quiet breath;
Now more than ever seems it rich to die,  55
  To cease upon the midnight with no pain,
    While thou art pouring forth thy soul abroad
          In such an ecstasy!
  Still wouldst thou sing, and I have ears in vain—
    To thy high requiem become a sod.

  60
Thou wast not born for death, immortal Bird!
  No hungry generations tread thee down;
The voice I hear this passing night was heard
  In ancient days by emperor and clown:
Perhaps the self-same song that found a path  65
  Through the sad heart of Ruth, when, sick for home,
    She stood in tears amid the alien corn;
          The same that ofttimes hath
  Charm'd magic casements, opening on the foam
    Of perilous seas, in faery lands forlorn.

  70
Forlorn! the very word is like a bell
  To toll me back from thee to my sole self!
Adieu! the fancy cannot cheat so well
  As she is famed to do, deceiving elf.
Adieu! adieu! thy plaintive anthem fades  75
  Past the near meadows, over the still stream,
    Up the hill-side; and now 'tis buried deep
          In the next valley-glades:
  Was it a vision, or a waking dream?
    Fled is that music:—do I wake or sleep?  80



Source: Bartleby.com - http://www.bartleby.com/101/624.html





John Keats, 1795-1821
Ode to a Nightingale: Written May 1819, Publ January 1829

Biography
http://www.bbc.co.uk/poetryseason/poets/john_keats.shtml

To some he is the king of the Romantic poets. John Keats only lived for 25 years, but in that time managed to produce an array of sensual poems that have reverberated across literature and popular culture.

Born in 1795, Keats came from a modest background and had lost both his parents by the time he was 15. From a young age he wanted to be a poet, but studied medicine at Guy's Hospital. There he began communicating with Leigh Hunt, an established poet who praised Keats' work and encouraged him to give up his studies and concentrate on literature full-time. Keats developed the notion of "negative capability" - the idea that the poet must be able to lose himself in an imaginative experience to create great poetry.

The struggle of the poet to achieve this ideal state is explored in poems such as Ode to a Nightingale and Ode on a Grecian Urn . Around 1818 Keats contracted tuberculosis. The following year he met the unrequited love of his life Fanny Brawne, and it is this period which gave rise to the beguilingly beautiful odes for which he is best remembered. In summer 1820 Keats travelled to Italy to recuperate. However he fell ill during the journey and died in 1821. He is buried in Rome, under the epitaph: 'Here lies One Whose Name was writ in Water.'

Keats' impact is hard to overestimate. Keats didn't just stir fellow poets, such as Alfred, Lord Tennyson, his influence can still be found in books as wildly diverse as Neil Gaiman's graphic novels and science fiction writer Dan Simmons. 



The Romantics - Liberty (BBC documentary)

The Romantics - Eternity (BBC documentary) BBC History Essentials

Byron, Keats and Shelley lived short lives, but the radical
way in which they lived them would change the world.




For additional notes, summary, and analysis link here to Keats' Kingdom

or 




Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Discovering Jane Austen: Of Pride and Prejudice



http://www.jasna.org/persuasions/on-line/

“What are men to rocks and mountains?”
Romanticism in Joe Wright’s Pride & Prejudice
http://www.jasna.org/persuasions/on-line/vol27no2/ailwood.htm

Persuasions OnlineV.27, No.2 (Summer 2007)

by Sarah Ailwood

Sarah Ailwood (email: sla396@uow.edu.au) is completing her Ph.D., titled “‘What men ought to be’: Masculinities in Jane Austen’s Novels,” at the University of Wollongong.  She is also an active member of the Canberra chapter of the Jane Austen Society of Australia.

The 2005 Focus Features adaptation of Pride and Prejudice, directed by Joe Wright, is an insightfully Romantic interpretation of Austen’s novel.  Wright’s Pride & Prejudice takes as its central focus Austen’s concern with exploring the nature of the Romantic self and the possibilities for women and men to achieve individual self-fulfillment within an oppressive patriarchal social and economic order.  Pride & Prejudice foregrounds this aspect of Austen’s novel in its narrative and thematic concerns and in its representation of Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy as Romantic figures, presenting Austen’s novel as a Romantic text.  Pride & Prejudice selectively identifies and highlights the Romantic qualities of Elizabeth and Darcy’s respective personalities and functions within the novel, particularly in terms of their relationships as individuals to the social worlds in which they operate.  Wright also uses the capabilities of film in visualizing Elizabeth’s character, and in the extensive use of natural settings and landscapes, to present Austen’s treatment of the conflict between individual desire and the social order in terms of Romanticism.

Jane Austen’s relationship to Romanticism—in terms of her treatment of elements of Romantic ideology in her novels and her connection to the six male poets who were until recently considered to constitute the entire literary movement in England—is an issue which has challenged and often troubled scholars of Austen’s work.  Austen’s novels have predominantly been read in isolation from the works of her Romantic contemporaries, and her novels have been interpreted as critiquing, resisting or rejecting elements of Romantic ideology rather than as participating in or endorsing it.  Recent studies of Austen in relation to Romanticism and her contemporaries have established more connections between Austen and Romanticism than have hitherto been acknowledged.1   This essay considers Austen’s exploration of the Romantic conception of the self in Pride and Prejudice, particularly as it is articulated through the characterization of Elizabeth and Darcy, and how Joe Wright emphasizes this aspect of the novel in his film adaptation.

In Pride & Prejudice, Wright characterizes Elizabeth and Darcy as Romantic figures by presenting them in terms of the Romantic conception of the self.  Traditionally, Romanticism has been considered as reflecting and endorsing a conceptualization of the individual self as autonomous, all-consuming and socially detached or isolated.  This approach to the self is reflected in both the personalities of the male Romantic poets and in the representation of individual characters within their poetry.  Marlon Ross, for example, has commented that “Romantic poets are driven to a quest for self-creation, for self-comprehension, for self-positioning that is unprecedented in literature” (26).  Peter Thorslev has related the Romantic poets’ concern with self-understanding to the role and function of the artist:  “one article of faith in every Romantic’s creed was that the artist was solitary and superior, a hero and a leader above the common herd” (18).  This conception of a socially detached self was also represented in the characters, usually men, who feature in Romantic poetry.  Garber has summarized constructions of the self, particularly in the figure of the Romantic hero, in the following terms:  “self-awareness, a recognition of the demands and complexities of his own private being, is, as we know, basic to the position assumed by the romantic hero” (321).  Thorslev has similarly explored the poetic representation of Romantic heroes, and argued that they “stand firmly as individuals outside of society.  Thoroughgoing rebels, they invariably appeal to the reader’s sympathies against the unjust restrictions of the social, moral, or even religious codes of the worlds in which they find themselves” (22).  Particularly focusing on the poetry and personality of Lord Byron, Thorslev argues that Romantic heroes “are solitaries . . . by birth, by nature, or by breeding; because of the acuteness of their minds and sensibilities—but most of them are solitaries also because of conscious moral choice” (66).  Frequently, the characters of Romantic poetry turn from the social world to seek self-fulfillment in nature.

Lady in Waiting, Of Pride and Prejudice
In recent years, Anne Mellor and other literary critics have persuasively argued that the traditional Romantic conception of the self as individualistic, socially detached and autonomous is a specifically masculine approach, and they have worked towards creating an understanding of Romanticism which incorporates representations of the self from women’s texts and constructions of femininity.  Mellor has argued that rather than viewing the self in terms of autonomy and social detachment, women writers of the Romantic period instead embraced a “relational self,” which “has no firm ego boundaries, and experiences its place in the world as an entanglement in shifting relationships, with family members, friends, lovers” (186).  This relational self not only was more ideologically available to women writers but also was a more accurate reflection of their lived experience than the autonomous self endorsed by male Romantics.  Throughout her novels, Austen works to valorize a relational over a detached conception of the self and demonstrates that both women and men benefit from developing a relational rather than an isolated self.  Pride and Prejudice, however, is exceptional in this regard:  rather than endorsing a relational model of the self, Austen is instead concerned with exploring the traditional Romantic conception of the self as solitary and socially detached, and the effect of gender difference on the power of individuals to realize and fulfill the self through the autonomous pursuit of individual desire.

Austen’s treatment of the traditional conception of the Romantic self and its gender complexities is the central narrative and thematic focus of Joe Wright’s Pride & Prejudice.  Wright’s film focuses on Elizabeth and Darcy’s mutual struggles to achieve self-fulfillment through the pursuit of individual desire within an oppressive patriarchal social order.  Dramatized using Romantic natural settings and landscapes, the journey of Elizabeth and Darcy is presented in Wright’s film as the struggle of two Romantic heroes to achieve self-realization independent of the social world they inhabit.  Wright’s interpretation is, I argue, firmly grounded in Austen’s novel, particularly with regard to the representation of the two protagonists and their functions within Austen’s broader commentary on the nature of the Romantic self; however, the film’s concern with promoting a Romantic interpretation of Austen’s novel overshadows other available readings.  Additionally, Wright’s use of the visual capabilities of film attributes to Austen a greater investment in Romantic imagery than can be supported by the novel itself (which does not, for example, celebrate Elizabeth’s desire for individualism by positioning her atop a windswept cliff face in the Derbyshire landscape).  Although the film does at times depart from Pride and Prejudice in its use of Romantic imagery to reinforce its interpretation, Pride & Prejudice remains true to Austen’s novel in its treatment of the conflict between individual self-realization and the demands of society.  Further, its characterization of Elizabeth and Darcy accurately reflects the novel’s concern with the complicating factor of gender in the pursuit of Romantic individualism.

Mr. Darcy, Of Pride and Prejudice
“‘What are men to rocks and mountains?’” asks Elizabeth Bennet, anticipating with delight her tour of the “‘[l]akes, mountains, and rivers’” of the Lake District with her aunt and uncle Gardiner, and expressing her intention to absorb the landscape authentically and unlike “‘the generality of travellers’” (154).  Elizabeth’s inquiry into the comparative value of men, rocks and mountains can be interpreted in two different ways which turn on her use of the word “men.”  If we read Elizabeth’s use of “men” as relating to humankind generally, her question engages with the contemporary Romantic inquiry into the value of the social and natural worlds and their respective capacities to enable the realization of the individual self.  The fact that her question occurs during a discussion of a tour to the symbolically Romantic landscape of the Lake District lends support to this interpretation.  As it proceeds from her conversation with Mrs. Gardiner regarding the recent deficient behavior of Mr. Bingley and Mr. Darcy, however, Elizabeth’s use of the word “men” can also be read as specifically applying to the male sex, an interpretation which reflects her disillusionment with these representatives of contemporary masculinity.

Elizabeth’s inquiry “‘[w]hat are men to rocks and mountains?’” recurs in Wright’s Pride & Prejudice (once spoken by Mary Bennet, and once by Mr. Gardiner), and the dual interpretations of the question inform this adaptation of the novel.  Pride & Prejudice is deeply concerned with Austen’s treatment of the tension between the pursuit of individual happiness and fulfillment, celebrated by her Romantic contemporaries, and its potential to rupture the social order.  This conflict is evident from the film’s selective foregrounding of this issue within the narrative; its use of the visual capabilities of film to construct Elizabeth and Darcy as social outsiders; and its extensive use of natural settings, which are presented as fundamentally in opposition to the social world in which Elizabeth and Darcy operate.  On another level, however, Wright’s Pride & Prejudice responds to Elizabeth’s disillusionment with the male sex by constructing Darcy in the image of masculinity embodied or endorsed by male Romantic poets and their poetic heroes, one aspect of a public debate on the nature of ideal or appropriate English masculinity which dominated the Regency period.

Wright’s characterization of Darcy particularly draws on the image of masculinity associated with Lord Byron, in both his personality and his poetry, which not only stressed the autonomous and socially alienated conception of the self but also developed a particular masculine type which has become known as the “Byronic hero” or “Byronic masculinity” (Lutz 7, MacCarthy 558, Thorslev 10-12).  The Byronic hero, as Atara Stein has argued, is characterized by “ambition, aspiration and aggressive individualism” (1); he is arrogant, contemptuous of others and bad-tempered, and “lacks social skills and an ability to relate to other people” (10).  According to both Stein and Lutz, however, the Byronic hero achieves redemption through the strength and fidelity of his love, often a love “for one who is perpetually inaccessible to him” (Stein 10).  As Lutz has commented, “in the Regency, true Byronism lies in the man who, although failed and deeply wounded, can be redeemed by love” (Lutz 19-20).

Several critics have recently noted these Byronic aspects of Darcy’s personality.  Lutz has commented that Darcy “influenced the creation of many later dangerous lover figures in his powerfully aloof stance as the rich misanthrope who stands apart, sneering at the vanity and silly folly of those around him” (43) and argues that his redemption lies in “love overpowering considerations of class” (44).  Sarah Wootton has extensively examined Darcy as well as Captain Wentworth ofPersuasion in terms of Byronic masculinity, arguing that Darcy’s pride, demeanor, and “Romantic need for self-expression” reflect distinct aspects of the Byronic hero (35-36).  In Pride & Prejudice, Wright similarly foregrounds the Byronic features of Darcy’s personality, as he is constructed in Austen’s novel, to present him as a Byronic hero who is driven solely by his love for Elizabeth and whose love can enable Elizabeth to achieve the independent selfhood she so desperately seeks.

Mr. Darcy and Lizzie, Of Pride and Prejudice

Austen’s treatment of the tension between the desire for self-realization and the difficulties of achieving it within a social order is central to Pride and Prejudice and recurs throughout her work.  Scholarly readings of Pride and Prejudicefrequently focus on Elizabeth, an intellectually independent heroine who needs to find a path for herself within the restrictive social and economic order that confronts her, and tend to conclude that Elizabeth’s marriage to Darcy signals Austen’s endorsement of the establishment over the potentially disruptive individualism associated with Romanticism, Jacobinism, and the culture of sensibility.2   Such readings, however, simplify Austen’s treatment of Romantic individualism, which is much more complex with respect to Elizabeth and which also strongly influences her characterization of Darcy.  Throughout Pride and Prejudice, Elizabeth faces the real possibility of social isolation, and while Austen frames such an outcome as disastrous for a woman in Elizabeth’s socio-economic position, she clearly privileges Elizabeth’s individualist stance over the contrary approach adopted, for example, by Charlotte Lucas.  With regard to Elizabeth, Austen leaves this tension unresolved:  while Elizabeth’s assertions about marriage for love and not for financial security are authentic, her pursuit of her own individual happiness eventually leads her to the most eligible man in the novel.  Elizabeth is ultimately not forced to pursue individual desire despite social and economic obstacles, so her assertions regarding the rights of the individual at the expense of social cohesion go untested.

Unable to wholly endorse the pursuit of Romantic individualism by women such as Elizabeth, who are so vulnerable to the vagaries of patriarchal society, Austen instead uses her heroine to highlight the difficulties for women in realizing the autonomous and socially detached self celebrated by traditional Romanticism.  Rather than endorsing a relational approach to the self for her heroine, however, Austen constructs the relationship between Elizabeth and Darcy as in fact enabling Elizabeth’s individuality and self-fulfillment.  With regard to her heroine, Austen can effectively have her cake and eat it too, and Wright’s Pride & Prejudice effectively and convincingly captures this complexity in Elizabeth’s character.

While Austen leaves the tension between individualism and social harmony unresolved in Elizabeth’s character, however, through Darcy she decisively endorses the pursuit of individual desire and the realization of an autonomous self, even at the expense of social rupture.  Unlike Elizabeth, Darcy does have to choose between individual happiness—fulfillment of his sexual and emotional love for Elizabeth through marriage—and maintaining the social and familial order.  Darcy’s choice to privilege his individual happiness despite this disruption embodies Austen’s endorsement of Romantic individualism, and the pursuit of personal desire even where it causes social rupture, and reflects the Byronic nature of his personality.  In contrast, Claudia Johnson argues that Darcy reflects the essential conservatism of the novel and its privileging of the social order over the individual:

Pride and Prejudice corroborates conservative myths which had argued that established forms cherished rather than prohibited true liberty, sustained rather than disrupted real happiness, and safe-guarded rather than repressed individual merit.  Its hero accordingly is a sober-minded exemplar of the great gentry, a dutiful son and affectionate brother.  (74)

Johnson states that “Darcy may conform to conservative requirements for one of his rank and sex, but Elizabeth emphatically does not” (75) and suggests that the reader’s pleasure in the story lies in the fact that it is this “sober-minded exemplar of the great gentry” who “secures the happiness the novel celebrates” (73).  According to Johnson, then, the world of Pride and Prejudice allows men simultaneously to support the establishment and pursue their individual happiness. 

Johnson’s analysis of Darcy’s role in the novel’s exploration of this issue, however, rests on two assumptions:  first, that because Darcy is a man within a patriarchal social order, external pressures such as social and family expectations do not affect him; and second, that his choice to pursue individual happiness instead of bowing to such pressures cannot by definition be disruptive of the social order because, as a man, he embodies it.  These assumptions are unsustainable either within Austen’s novel or the broader context of early nineteenth-century gentry masculinity.  Of all Austen’s protagonists, Darcy is the only one whose marital choice is allegedly bespoken and whose marriage causes a social and familial rift.  Rather than advocating the maintenance of the social order, Austen uses Darcy to assert the individual’s right to pursue happiness according to his or her own free will.  Clearly, the fact that Darcy is male (and is therefore endowed with the power of choice) and wealthy (and therefore can afford his choice) makes possible his marriage to Elizabeth:  a poor woman of lower social rank (Elizabeth Bennet, in fact) would certainly face considerably more obstacles to pursuing this kind of individualism.  But the patriarchal economic and social structures of Austen’s world not only affected women:  they also had a profound impact on the lives of men, and to suggest otherwise is to ignore a fundamental aspect of gender relations that historians of masculinities are gradually bringing to light as well as one of Austen’s central concerns in Pride and Prejudice.

The first section of Joe Wright’s Pride & Prejudice establishes Elizabeth and Darcy as Romantic figures through their individual isolation in an uncongenial social world.  Elizabeth is presented as socially isolated through her repeated associations with the natural world and her depiction alone within social settings, and Darcy through his inept social performance.  The film opens with the sun rising over a glistening landscape and cuts to the viewer’s first image of Elizabeth.  She is reading a book, a solitary task that symbolizes both her intellectualism and her desire for self-sufficiency, and she is walking through a rural landscape, immediately signaling her connection with the natural world.  Elizabeth’s position as a Romantic figure is particularly strongly emphasized by her walk from Longbourn to Netherfield when Jane is ill.  Wright uses a distant shot to silhouette Elizabeth against a white sky:  she and a solitary tree are the only two figures in a rural landscape.  The fundamental opposition between the natural and the social worlds, and Elizabeth’s association with the natural world, become starkly clear when she arrives at Netherfield:  the highly formal and ornate interior of the Netherfield breakfast room visually clashes with the natural world outside, and Elizabeth, with her muddy boots and hemline, her unfashionable brown coat and her long hair blown about, is plainly incongruous within this social space.  Miss Bingley’s comment that “she looked positively medieval” highlights Elizabeth’s disregard for modern social forms and practices, emphasizing her association with Romantic individualism.

Keira Knightly, Of Pride and Prejudice
Elizabeth’s incongruity within the social world is presented not only through her association with the natural world but also through the film’s visualization of her within social settings.  After she verbally disarms Darcy at the Meryton assembly, she walks alone down the center of the assembly hall and out the door:  the camera focuses exclusively on Elizabeth and blurs the other figures in the shot, visualizing her separation from the society in which she lives.  Wright also uses the camera to this effect at the Netherfield ball, using long camera shots which move between rooms, focusing on different characters, to privilege Elizabeth’s visual perspective and present her as an external social observer rather than a social participant.  The image at the end of this sequence of Elizabeth alone, leaning against a wall in a darkened room, having apparently escaped the party and especially her family, strongly and sensitively conveys to the viewer her incompatibility within this social world and the complexity of her position, particularly in relation to the possibility of her long-term social exclusion.

In contrast to Elizabeth’s association with the natural world and her visual separation within social settings, the first part of the film establishes Darcy’s position as a social outsider through his social performance.  Initially, Wright’s representation of Darcy departs from Austen’s method of constructing his character in the novel, as the viewer learns about Darcy only as Elizabeth’s knowledge and experience of him increases.  Jennifer Preston Wilson has identified this process of verisimilitude as operating in the novel; I argue, by contrast, that the process of verisimilitude does not operate in the novel (the reader’s access to Darcy’s interiority provides the reader with information about him that is unknown to Elizabeth, particularly regarding his attraction to her), but that it does operate within the opening scenes of Wright’s film.  Wright’s use of verisimilitude—through which the viewer learns about Darcy through Elizabeth’s increasing knowledge of him—is a result of the film’s almost exclusive focus on Elizabeth’s subjectivity and its privileging of her visual perspective.  The process of learning about Darcy through Elizabeth’s subjectivity proves particularly effective later in the film when the viewer comes to understand Darcy’s characterization in terms of Byronic masculinity.

Wright’s introduction of Darcy to both the Meryton neighborhood and the viewer cleverly reflects Austen’s concern with the commodification of men in the early nineteenth-century marriage market.  Following the “truth universally acknowledged” of her famous first sentence, Austen states that “[h]owever little known the feelings or views of such a man may be on his first entering a neighbourhood, this truth is so well fixed in the minds of the surrounding families, that he is considered as the rightful property of some one or other of their daughters” (3), clearly establishing that men, as well as women, are vulnerable to the power of the socio-economic order in the world of Pride and Prejudice.  When Mr. Darcy, Mr. Bingley and Miss Bingley arrive at the Meryton assembly in Wright’s film, the dancing and music stop immediately and the company turns to stare at the newcomers; the assembly parts as they walk to the other end of the hall; and they continued to be observed in silence by the neighborhood gentry until the music begins, and the dancing recommences.  The scene strikingly dramatizes the Meryton neighborhood’s response to the arrival of these two eligible men, emphasizing the social perception of men as marriage commodities and highlighting the fact that men, as well as women, are subject to social and family expectations and pressures in their marital choices.

It immediately becomes clear that Darcy, like Elizabeth, is not a social performer and only a reluctant social participant.  Whereas the novel attributes Darcy’s social reluctance—particularly to make conversation and to dance—to his snobbery, the film presents it as a result of his dislike of social forms and practices.  This aspect of his personality is present but not prioritized within the novel, and Wright’s decision to foreground it reflects his desire to construct Darcy in terms of Byronic masculinity.  During the Meryton assembly, Elizabeth comments that “he looks miserable, poor soul,” and his body language and facial expressions suggest discomfort and unhappiness rather than hauteur or disdain.  Miss Bingley, rather than Darcy, takes on the role of elitist snob at the Meryton assembly, in her attempts to embarrass Elizabeth at Netherfield, and at the Netherfield ball:  on each of these occasions, Darcy pointedly refuses to participate in her criticism of Elizabeth, her family and her neighborhood (indeed, his reluctance to criticize the Bennets also reflects his isolation even within his own social class).  It is not that Darcy does not hold these proud and prejudicial views—his conduct in separating Bingley and Jane, and his insulting behavior toward Elizabeth during his first proposal, both remain essential parts of the narrative.  Rather, the film does not foreground these aspects of his personality because it is more concerned with presenting him as a socially alienated Romantic figure.  Darcy’s unhappiness throughout his time in Hertfordshire indicates that, like the Romantic hero, he finds the forms and practices of social interaction offered by his society unfulfilling, laying the foundation for his later characterization as a Byronic hero.

Darcy and Elizabeth’s dance at the Netherfield ball visually encapsulates both their respective determination to maintain the integrity of their individuality, even from each other, and their mutual positions as social outsiders.  At the climax of their heated discussion about Mr. Wickham, they stop in the middle of the dance and closely face each other.  The camera focuses exclusively on them, and the other couples disappear from the shot.  This moment visualizes Darcy and Elizabeth’s isolation from their social world, both as individuals and as a couple, and forecasts the film’s resolution by suggesting that it is this social isolation that will ultimately unite them.  The fact that they recommence the dance alone indicates that they genuinely are just going through the motions of social performance.  The film’s narrative becomes a question of how these two Romantic figures will maintain their individual integrity and also achieve personal happiness and fulfillment within a fundamentally incompatible and highly regulated social world.

Elizabeth and Darcy’s next meeting at Rosings provides greater insight to the viewer, if not to Elizabeth, of the difficulty of Darcy’s social position.  His love for Elizabeth becomes obvious in his conversation with her at dinner when he is drawn to her playing the piano and in his awkward and apparently pointless visit to her at Hunsford.  Lady Catherine de Bourgh, her daughter, and the interior of Rosings represent the social expectation of marriage for wealth and status, and the pressure on men’s marital choices within a patriarchal social order, which Darcy himself has internalized and will need to overcome to achieve personal happiness.  When we first see Darcy at Rosings, he is framed by a window and standing adjacent to a caged bird, signifying his enclosure within a social order which seeks to control not only women but also men.  The potential of this social order to subjugate men is reflected in the murals on the wall behind Lady Catherine.  These scenes were shot in Burghley House, and while in their totality the murals may assume a different meaning, the paintings that form the backdrop to these scenes feature men laboring under tyrannical conditions, symbolizing the oppression of the social order that Lady Catherine represents as well as its capacity to repress individual men as well as women.  By depicting Darcy within this interior, Pride & Prejudice represents the conflict between the pursuit of men’s individual desires, particularly in terms of their sexual and emotional feelings, and the roles and responsibilities which are imposed upon them by a patriarchal social order.

The episode at Rosings continues the film’s earlier use of contrasting interior and outdoor settings, emphasizing that not only Elizabeth but also Darcy finds self-realization in the natural world.  In contrast to the beginning, and the end, of the film, virtually all of the scenes at Rosings and Hunsford are shot indoors, reflecting the uncomfortable social confinement of Darcy and Elizabeth.  The notable exception to this pattern is Elizabeth’s use of the natural world as a means of escape and emotional release after she learns of Darcy’s role in separating Jane and Bingley:  she runs alone through the park in the soaking rain, indicating the strength of her emotions and the impossibility of physically containing them within a social setting.  This outdoor scene culminates in Darcy’s first proposal, suggesting that the natural world similarly provides him with escape and freedom from the oppressive Rosings interior. 

Darcy’s first proposal strongly reflects his own personal torment resulting from the tension between marrying in accordance with the social and economic pressures that have colored his view of the world and acting on his sexual and emotional love for Elizabeth.  While he insultingly elaborates on the social and economic barriers between them, his passion for her is clear when he says, “I came to Rosings for the single object of seeing you.  I had to see you.”  This statement from Darcy—that he traveled to Rosings for the sole purpose of seeing Elizabeth—is an important departure from Austen’s novel, which presents Darcy’s visit to Rosings as a routine family event.  Wright uses this change to present Darcy in pursuit of Elizabeth, and driven specifically by his love for her, which reinforces his characterization as a Byronic hero.  Darcy’s passion for Elizabeth is further dramatized by their physical intimacy even after she has rejected him.  For the first time in the film, Darcy’s physical appearance during the first proposal scene suggests that he is more than a stiff upright gentleman:  he is soaking wet and disheveled, reflecting the strength of his love for Elizabeth and his (albeit reluctant) willingness to shirk social forms to fulfill it.  This scene allows the viewer to see Darcy as a man driven by passionate love who is fundamentally alienated from his social world, an embodiment of the Byronic hero, in fact.  This new understanding of Darcy as a man of flesh and blood and, above all, passionate feeling is reinforced when he later delivers his letter to Elizabeth and swiftly rides out the gates and through the forest, escape into the natural world similarly providing him with an emotional release. 

While it effectively utilizes contrasts between interior and outdoor settings, Wright’s film also draws distinctions between different landscape and gardening styles, which are sensitive to aesthetic developments throughout the eighteenth-century and Romantic periods.  The first proposal scene was shot at the Temple of Apollo in the garden at Stourhead, now considered a masterpiece of eighteenth-century English garden design, the taste and aesthetic principles of which the Romantics sought to debunk in preference for wilder, more natural and rugged landscapes.  It is appropriate that Darcy’s unsuccessful marriage proposal should occur in a setting that symbolizes the social and aesthetic order that both characters clearly find so oppressive.  The fundamental incongruity between Darcy and Elizabeth, and the interior and grounds at Rosings, is particularly striking in comparison with their later meeting in Derbyshire.  Wright’s extensive use of landscape throughout this section of the film highlights an aspect of Austen’s novel that is frequently overlooked by scholarship:  her decision to locate Pemberley in Derbyshire not only indicates its parity with estates such as Chatsworth, but also characterizes Darcy in terms of the symbolically Romantic landscape of the Peak district.  Wright uses a long camera shot to depict Elizabeth standing atop a cliff, placing her as part of this wild and rugged landscape; the film then cuts to a close-up of her face to allow the viewer to see her emotional response.  Later she sits on the gnarled and moss-coated roots of a tree, an image which could have been drawn directly from a Romantic landscape painting.  As she approaches Pemberley, deer run through the open spaces of the Derbyshire countryside, reminiscent of her own physical freedom in nature.  Darcy’s connection with this Romantic landscape, and his characterization as a Romantic hero, is consolidated through Elizabeth’s visit to Pemberley. 

The Bennett Family, Of Pride and Prejudice
As in Austen’s novel, in Pride & Prejudice Elizabeth’s visit to Pemberley is central to her understanding of Darcy’s character.  Throughout this section of the film, Wright represents Elizabeth’s changed view by privileging her visual perspective and by specifically focusing on her eyes.  As she travels into Derbyshire, the camera presents Elizabeth’s gaze into the sun through her closed eyelids.  It later follows her visual perspective around the murals of the Pemberley interior, which contrast with the murals at Rosings by depicting men and women in pastoral, almost utopian settings.  Elizabeth’s tour of the gallery, so significant to her understanding of Darcy in the novel, is reconfigured in the film as a walk through a sculpture gallery, which features works of classical Greek sculpture, reflecting the interest of several Romantic poets, including Byron, in ancient and modern Greek culture and mythology (Graver 42-43).  Elizabeth’s gaze falls first on a sculpture of Achilles, another figure of flawed yet heroic masculinity, before reaching Darcy’s portrait, here presented as a Grecian-style sculpture rather than a painting.  This substitution specifically associates Darcy with the image of the Romantic hero developed by the Romantic poets, and particularly with Byronic masculinity.  The camera again takes Elizabeth’s visual perspective as she looks out the window at the Pemberley gardens:  the change in focus from translucent to clear glass reflects her new clarity of understanding of Darcy’s character.  In its extensive use of Elizabeth’s visual perspective, Wright’s film reflects the visual nature of Elizabeth’s visit to Pemberley in Austen’s novel, and, like Elizabeth, the viewer increasingly comes to see Darcy as a Byronic hero.  The Pemberley estate, within the Derbyshire landscape, is presented in the film as a Romantic oasis from an alienating social world, which can provide these two social outsiders with a means of coexisting while also retaining their individual integrity.

Such a resolution seems impossible, of course, after the absconsion and then marriage of Wickham and Lydia.  Darcy’s psychological development throughout the narrative—which enables him to mend this situation—and his changed views about the importance of class, wealth, status and the pressure of social expectations are clear from the encouragement and assistance he provides to Bingley in proposing to Jane.  After their engagement, Elizabeth sits alone under a tree, and Darcy walks across a field by himself:  both the characters, and the viewer, wonder whether such an outcome will be possible for these solitary individuals.  Elizabeth’s social alienation, even at Longbourn, is heightened toward the end of the film:  after her confrontation with Lady Catherine, she yells, “for once can you just leave me alone,” as she runs upstairs to escape her ever-present family.  As viewers, we realize that only Darcy and Pemberley can safely resolve the conflict between Elizabeth’s desire to maintain her individual integrity and the demands of her social world:  as a woman deprived of economic and political power, she cannot achieve it on her own.

Darcy’s second proposal, appropriately, occurs where the film begins:  in the countryside around Longbourn at dawn.  That proposal, particularly his statement that “you have bewitched me body and soul,” affirms Darcy’s characterization as a Byronic hero:  he is a man driven by passionate feeling, whose love is eternal and who pursues his desire for Elizabeth despite its disruption of the social and familial order.  That neither Darcy nor Elizabeth is properly dressed and that this meeting would be socially considered as clandestine reinforce the fact that their relationship has been negotiated exclusively on their terms, largely in separation from social forms and practices.  Wright presents the union of Darcy and Elizabeth as enabling these two Romantic figures to co-exist as individuals in a society with which they are both fundamentally incompatible.

Joe Wright’s Pride & Prejudice is an essentially Romantic interpretation of Austen’s novel.  Pride & Prejudice is narratively and thematically focused on the capacities for men and women to achieve self-realization within a social and economic order and on the demands that order places upon them.  Wright uses the visual capabilities of film as well as natural settings and landscapes to position Elizabeth and Darcy as Romantic figures and present their relationship as a union of individuals that enables mutual self-fulfillment rather than as a social integration.  Although Wright’s use of visual imagery moves beyond Austen’s novel, the basis of his interpretation of Elizabeth and Darcy as Romantic figures—in terms of their defiant individuality, their social isolation, and the nature of their relationship—lies in Pride and Prejudice itself, in Austen’s endorsement of the pursuit of individual desire and happiness despite social rupture.


NOTES

1.  On feminist revisions of the Romantic canon which address Austen’s works, see Anne Mellor Romanticism and Gender (New York: Routledge, 1993) and Elizabeth Fay A Feminist Introduction to Romanticism (Oxford: Blackwell, 1998).  Deresiewicz, Lau, and Tuite have recently established new links between Austen and Romanticism.

2.  See for example Duckworth (115-43), Johnson (73-78), Monaghan (64-92), and Tanner (125-40).

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Thorslev, Peter.  The Byronic Hero: Types and Prototypes.  Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1962.
Tuite, Clara.  Romantic Austen: Sexual Politics and the Literary Canon.  Cambridge: CUP, 2002.
Wilson, Jennifer Preston.  “‘One has got all the goodness, and the other all the appearance of it’: The Development of Darcy in Pride and Prejudice.”  Persuasions On-Line 25.1 (2004).
Wootton, Sarah.  “The Byronic in Jane Austen’s Persuasion and Pride and Prejudice.”  Modern Language Review 102 (2007): 26-39.



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Keira Knightly as Elizabeth in Pride and Prejudice. Photo from Fanpop.

10 GREAT PRIDE AND PREJUDICE RESOURCES
https://www.tweetspeakpoetry.com/2013/01/28/10-great-pride-and-prejudice-resources/


Okay, some are just plain fun. But that’s great too, no?

1. Write Like Jane Austen (the Jane Austen Thesaurus). Well, you might also need to take a writing class, but this is a start.
2. Writers read Austen afresh. Now you can get a fresh look without rereading Austen yourself. ;-)
4. If Lizzie Was a Texter and Darcy Could DM. Comic treatment of the vain and the vituperous
5. Jane Austen: What Books Were on Her Reading List? Reading Jane’s list might be an extra boost if you are trying to write like her.
6. Republic of Pemberley. An exhaustive resource on everything Pride and Prejudice. Full text of all chapters cross referenced to anything you might ever (or never) want to know (Possibly developed by someone with a pathological love for the novel)
7. Seven People Who Hated Pride and Prejudice. Self explanatory, no? Can you guess who might be on the list, before you get there?
8. Pride and Prejudice Text analyzer. Just in case you were wondering if you were in danger of over-Jane-isms.
9. 5 Amusing Pride and Prejudice Quotes and a Wet Shirt. One sick writer, one classic novel, and a wet shirt. You know you want to click through.
10. Infographic: Simpleton’s Guide to Pride and Prejudice. The side comment about naming estates like cats and dogs might be worth the whole infographic
Bonus Link: Happy Birthday, Mr. Darcy. Snarky and loving Pride and Prejudice Playlist
Photo from Fanpop.
Amazon Link
The Bennet Sisters, Of Pride and Prejudice



The Bennet Sisters, Of Pride and Prejudice



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3 relationship lessons I learned from
‘Pride & Prejudice’
http://www.hatkeshaadi.com/blog/3-relationship-lessons-pride-and-prejudice/

December 10, 2013

The timeless Jane Austen novel “Pride & Prejudice” clearly has relevance even in this
day and age. A lady HS member shares the relationship lessons she picked up from reading it.

“It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.”

Thus begins one of the classic romantic novels of the early nineteenth century, “Pride & Prejudice”, written by Jane Austen. I had heard of the book many times, but hadn’t picked it up until after I watched the 2005 movie starring Keira Knightley as Elizabeth Bennett, the female protagonist of the novel. And I was glad that I did. Since then, I’ve read it a couple more times, appreciating it more on each reading.

This particular classic deals with the issues of the social structure, manners, education, and of course, marriage, in the society of early nineteenth century England. Elizabeth Bennett is the second of five daughters of a country gentleman with an overbearing and nagging wife, living near the fictitious town of Meryton near London.

Although I won’t be analyzing the book – I don’t want to ruin it for those who haven’t read it yet – I would like to share some of the interesting things that I took away from the book about relationships. So, here goes.

First impressions aren’t always the best ones: Almost the entire first half of the book is an accrual of misinterpretations on both the protagonists’ parts. Where Elizabeth labels Mr. Darcy as proud, he in turn thinks of her as being no better than her childish younger sisters or her overbearing and silly mother. What she assumes as his pride, is a reserved nature and an inability to make small talk with strangers. And she is as different from her family as she could be. The rest of the book is a slow revelation on both their parts to acknowledge their misreadings about the other, to eventually falling in love with each other.

This could happen to any one of us. We’re usually quick to form assumptions based on a person’s outward appearance. An individual is so much more than his/her appearance and looks. A common misconception that is prevalent in our society is, if you’re handsome or pretty, you’re not likely to do anything wrong. Similarly, a not-so-handsome person must surely be flawed. Judging a person based on his/her looks is the worst kind of insult we can do to a person. One can get to know all the different facets of a person only through continued interactions.

Respecting each other in a relationship: We are acquainted with the laid back attitude of Mr. Bennett fairly early in the novel. He is always in his own world, without a thought as to how his daughters are doing or what ails his wife. That doesn’t mean he’s a bad person, but just that he doesn’t involve himself in the family affairs. He treats his wife like a fool – which she is, and she in turn, uses the only option available to her – nagging. In short, he doesn’t respect her enough to listen to what she says.
My mom always says that mutual respect is the bedrock of any relationship, especially a marital one. Respect for a person usually develops over time, not instantaneously. When we interact with another person, we learn the kind of values they believe in, the kind of principles they follow, and the kind of person he/she is. Since my parents’ marriage was an arranged one, apparently it was mutual respect that developed first, which lead to love.

Nobody is a mind-reader: Elizabeth’s elder sister Jane, and Mr. Bingley take to each other like soul mates (a bit of a romantic exaggeration on my part, but bear with me). Both seem to be on the same page, but the match nearly doesn’t happen, largely because neither of them makes their feelings clearly known to the other. It’s not like it’s a sci-fi or a fantasy novel where one of them is a mind-reader a la Edward Cullen in Twilight. Duh! It’s nineteenth century England, people! I mean, come on. Eventually though, everything works out for the best and they’re married.

Imagine something similar happening to us. You meet a great person, you hit it off with them spectacularly, but you keep quiet and don’t open your mouth to let them know how you feel. It’s natural to be scared of their reaction and fear rejection. But as succinctly put by Alfred Lord Tennyson, it’s better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.


Mr. Darcy and Lizzie, Of Pride and Prejudice