English Classics: Persuasion
I just finished reading Persuasion, the last novel completed by the English author Jane Austen that has been adapted for film numerous times, including Netflix's 2022 version of Persuasion. Interestingly, the novel was published on 20 December 1817, six months after Austen's death, although its title page was dated 1818.
Captain Frederick Wentworth is the co-protagonist. He is a naval officer who proposed to Anne eight years earlier. At the time, he had no fortune and uncertain prospects, but owing to his achievements in the Napoleonic Wars, he advanced in rank and in fortunes. He advanced to post-Captain, and gained wealth amounting to about £25,000 from prize money awarded for capturing enemy vessels. He became an eminently eligible bachelor — the prototype of the new nineteenth century gentleman: a self-made man who makes his fortune by hard work rather than inheritance.
Another theme I found interesting is the traditional view of separate spheres: public vs. private. The traditional nineteenth-century view held that men belonged to the public sphere (work, politics, finance) and women to the private sphere (home, family, domesticity), as seen in many of the novel's characters. However, the couple of Admiral and Mrs. Croft provides a progressive counter-narrative; they are portrayed as a true partnership, where they share activities that would traditionally be assigned to one gender. Mrs. Croft accompanies her husband on his ship, and the Admiral is happy to help with chores at home. They move beyond the restrictive limitations of separate spheres, which sounds normal today but could have been exceedingly progressive in the nineteenth century.
Anne, the protagonist, is the second daughter of Sir Walter Elliot, a vain and self-satisfied baronet. Sir Walter is a man whose extravagance since the death of his prudent wife thirteen years before has put his family into a dire financial situation, forcing him to lease his estate, Kellynch Hall, to Admiral Croft and rent a more economical residence in Bath. Elizabeth is the eldest and most beautiful of Sir Walter's three daughters, who appears to be his favourite, and shares his trait of vanity. Mary, the youngest daughter of Sir Walter, is married to Charles Musgrove. She is attention-seeking, always looking for ways she might have been slighted, and is just as obsessed with social standing and wealth as the rest of her family.









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