It's my pleasure to welcome Lisa Pliscou to the salon for a tale of Jane Austen's school years!
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Jane
Austen at School: “I Could Have Died of Laughter”
When Jane Austen was seven, she and
her older sister Cassandra were sent to boarding school in the house of a
distant relative. This Mrs. Cawley was said to be cold and stiff — hardly a
warm motherly figure welcoming the arrival of two little girls now far from the
familiarity, the security, the friendly routine of home.
Leaving Home”: This illustration by Massimo Mongiardo in Young Jane Austen shows Jane, age seven, on her way to Oxford, fifty long miles away. |
Some months after their arrival, the girls contracted an illness —
possibly typhus — and by all reports Jane nearly died. She and Cassandra were
whisked back home by Mrs. Austen where, apparently, Jane’s convalescence was a
protracted one.
Two years later, despite the
disastrousness of the first foray, the girls were sent away again, to a
different school. Long after, Mrs. Austen declared that it was Jane’s decision
to join her sister: “if Cassandra’s head had been going to be cut off,” she
wrote with an interestingly vivid turn of phrase, “Jane would have her’s [sic] cut off too.”
Some Austen biographers suggest that the girls’ parents scraped
together the money to send them to this larger, more well-established school
for the express purpose of acquiring genteel “accomplishments” considered desirable
on the marriage market. If so, it may well have been a shrewd initiative, given
that Cassandra and Jane would have no money of their own, sharply limiting
their appeal in a world where such deficiencies mattered.
Off they went to the Abbey School in Reading, twenty miles away,
presided over by one Sarah Hackitt, a cheerful, gossipy woman sporting a
mysterious cork leg, who despite the fact she was neither French nor spoke
French dubbed herself “Madame La Tournelle” — thus lending her little school a
certain fashionable cachet.
What do we know about this interval
in young Jane’s life? How are we to think of it? And what was most urgent to
me, in working with the illustrator of Young
Jane Austen, was how to visually present Jane’s experience at the Abbey
School in a single evocative image.
Jane herself is silent on the
subject, aside from a glancing remark in a letter to Cassandra, ten years after
the event: “I could die of laughter at it, as they used to say at school.”
In her mature work as a writer — at
a safe remove from the experience — she would issue some scathing little comments
about girls’ schools; we come across them in Emma and in Sense and
Sensibility.
In Jane Austen: Her Life, Park Honan speculates that it was at the
Abbey School, in a setting that included girls from a higher social strata,
that Jane — coming from a financially insecure family on the lower fringes of
the gentry — encountered her first strong dose of class consciousness. (In the
years to come, themes of class and money would certainly dominate her work.)
Honan muses, “Ordinary life can be more horrifying than horror fiction and a
girls’ school consists of other girls.”
Too, Austen’s more sensitive
biographers point to letters both from Jane and about Jane which suggest that
she may have been quirky, offbeat, different
— as precocious children tend to be. Such children frequently have a
difficult time socially.
All in all, what little we know,
sifted through and analyzed, interpreted, seems to produce the impression that
Jane’s time at the Abbey School was more of an ordeal than not; indeed, such is
Claire Tomalin’s strongly stated view in her biography Jane Austen: A Life.
Thus, below, the “snapshot” in Young Jane Austen: dwarfed by her surroundings, we see the small, solitary figure of ten-year-old
Jane. Forlorn and excluded from the society of the other girls? Or escaping, breathing
deeply, enjoying a few moments of quiet pleasure: “the comfort,” as a beleaguered
Jane Fairfax will confide to Emma, “of sometimes being alone.”
“The Abbey School” by Massimo Mongiardo. |
It is yet another one of the many mysteries
which surround this most fascinating of writers.
***
Lisa Pliscou
writes for both children and adults. Her work has been praised by the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Sun-Times, Publishers Weekly,
Booklist, the Associated Press, VOYA,
The Horn Book, and other media. Young
Jane Austen: Becoming a Writer is her eighth book, and coming next spring
is a new edition of her first novel, Higher
Education, which was praised by David Foster Wallace, Betsy Byars, Tara
Altebrando, and others. Coming in 2017 is a picture book, Jane Austen, the Girl Who Wrote, to be published by Henry Holt and
illustrated by Jen Corace.
Written content of this post copyright © Lisa Pliscou, 2015.
6 comments:
Lovely piece! This dialogue between Emma Watson and her sister seems to reinforce the idea that school might not have been a happy place:
"I would rather be teacher at a school (and I can think of nothing worse) than marry a man I did not like."
"I would rather do anything than be teacher at a school," said her sister. " I have been at school, Emma, and know what a life they lead; you never have."
"I would rather do anything than be teacher at a school," said her sister. " I have been at school, Emma, and know what a life they lead."
Interesting, Monica, that it is the teacher whose life is highlighted in that piece as unenviable; I suspect Jane Austen saw the teachers, girls in a similar social position to herself, perhaps, hideously ragged by the better-off pupils. Jane Fairfax on governesses is a similar story; was it something Austen herself feared? having to remain on at the Abbey to teach?
I feel for Jane, I was the scholarship girl to a public school [a form of private school in US-speak] and though many of the girls were perfect ladies, it's true that girls can be little beasts. And I was a day-girl and was able to go home each night...
forgot to tick the notify me box
Interesting point, Sarah. I think Elizabeth suggests that not having been sent to school is one of the privileges her sister has enjoyed- we know she’s been brought up “to be rather refined,” and is “used to many of the elegancies of life.” Now they both face the prospect of a teaching career if they don’t get married - Elizabeth knows what it’s like while Emma doesn’t. While pining for home, the elder child might well have thought: “Imagine staying here forever…” Perhaps JA was afraid of that too - I hadn’t thought of it quite that way.
Jane Fairfax, on the other hand, “with the fortitude of a devoted novitiate, ... had resolved at one-and-twenty to complete the sacrifice, and retire from all the pleasures of life, of rational intercourse, equal society, peace and hope, to penance and mortification for ever.” That sounds even worse: school teachers at least had each other, while governesses could befriend neither servants, who were considered their inferiors, nor their masters or mistresses, who were much higher up on the social ladder.
I wonder though whether there was a rivalry and snobbery amongst preceptresses... but yes, at least they had more equality.
I'm writing a series around a charity school and its staff and pupils, opening in 1809 with 'Elinor's Endowment' so this is a fascinating look inside as you might say... I have to say Mrs Goddard's school was one of my sources, as well as 'The Female Preceptress' and numerous adverts in the newspapers and what they left unsaid.
Sounds fabulous! I love Mrs Goddard's school, with Miss Nash and the girls peeping through the blinds at Mr Elton :) We can only speculate, but perhaps Mrs Cawley's school resembled the one Elizabeth Watson was sent to, whereas Madame La Tournelle's was more like Mrs Goddard's ...
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