Jane Austen's Persuasion depicts a young
woman's struggles with love, friendship and family. Anne Elliot who is pretty, intelligent and
amiable, had some years before been engaged to a young naval officer, Frederick
Wentworth, but had been persuaded by her trusted friend Lady Russell to break
off the engagement, because of his lack of fortune and a misunderstanding of
his easy nature. The breach had brought
great unhappiness to Anne. Pre-Victorian
England offers a romantic and whimsical backdrop for the characters.
When the story opens Anne is twenty seven, and
the bloom of her youth is gone. She is the daughter of Sir Walter Elliot, a
spendthrift baronet and widower, with a swollen sense of social importance and
personal elegance. His eldest daughter,
Elizabeth, haughty and unmarried, is now twenty-nine. Captain Wentworth, who has had a successful
career and is now prosperous, is thrown again into Anne's society by the
letting of Kellynch (her family estate) to his sister and brother-in-law. Throughout the years Anne has remained
unshaken in her love for Wentworth. Thus
Austen creates a emotional fairy tale which keeps you dreaming and makes you
believe that true love never dies.
Austen presents her strongest feminist character
in this novel. The roles of hero and
heroin are reversed and men and woman are presented as moral equals. It is interesting that the most explicit
feminist protests by Austen in her novels all have to do with literature. In Persuasion Anne Elliot debates Captain
Harville on who loves longest, women or men:
Captain Harville:
"I do not think I ever opened a book in my
life which had not something to say upon woman's inconstancy. ... But perhaps
you will say, these were all written by men."
Anne Elliot:
"Perhaps I shall. Yes, yes, if you please, no reference to
examples in books. Men have had every
advantage of us in telling their own story.
Education has been theirs in so much higher a degree; the pen has been
in their hands. I will not allow books to prove anything." (Austen, Page 222)
As the story
unfolds, Anne frees herself from familial authority through her relationship
with other strong women. In Austen's
time, there was no real way for young women of the "genteel" classes
to strike out on their own or be independent.
Professions, the universities, politics etc. were not open to
women. Therefore most women could not
get money except by marrying for it or inheriting it.
The beauty of this novel lies in its portrayal
of the understated virtues of constancy, integrity and the balance of qualities
that make for a complete character. The
contrast between Anne's values and those shallow and duplicitous qualities of
her father, her cousin and others is striking but always subtle. Anne is a mature and independent heroine who
frees herself from the authority of her genealogically obsessed father through
her bond with other female characters, however imperfect, such as Lady Russell
and the remarkable Mrs. Croft.
In this, Jane Austen's last complete work,
satire and ridicule take a milder form, and the tone is more grave and tender.
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