zondag 24 april 2011

Muziek


In de Regency-periode,
 werd muziek vaak in huiselijke kring beleefd.
De muziek uit Jane’s tijd
 kenmerkt zich door
 sensualiteit en onvervuld verlangen,
 maar is elegant en lichtvoetig vormgegeven.

In haar eigen muziekcollectie,
die bewaard is gebleven,
zijn componisten te vinden als
 Arne, Händel, Purcell, Dibdin en Hook
 maar ook eenvoudige volksliederen.

zaterdag 23 april 2011

Happy Easter



Happy Easter

During Jane Austen’s day, the Easter Season (Easter and the 40 days following it, until Ascension Sunday, when Christ’s final ascension into heaven is celebrated) or the Easter Holidays as they are sometimes referred to, were a time of traveling and visiting Family. Every mention of Easter in her letters and novels involves travel, including her most notorious use in Pride and Prejudice when Mr. Darcy arrives at Rosings Park, to visit his aunt, Lady Catherine DuBourgh.

There is not a lot of information about how the Austen’s celebrated the season. What little we do know is drawn from Jane’s letters and what was typical for the period. While it is assured that Jane Austen celebrated Easter, her holiday was probably a quiet one. She would have observed Lent and broken the “Fast” on Easter with a special dinner with her family. She may have dyed eggs and probably ate them in abundance once Lent was concluded. Mrs Austen is known to have had chickens at Chawton Cottage and it is unlikely that they would have allowed the eggs to spoil.


Likewise, Austen mentions Lambs at Steventon, as well as Hams that her mother cured so either might have been eaten at Easter dinner. In her letters, she mentions using the Easter Holidays as a time to travel, and visiting friends along the way to one of her brothers’ houses.


Simnel cake is a light fruit cake, similar to a Christmas cake, covered in marzipan, and eaten at Easter in England and Ireland. A layer of marzipan or almond paste is also baked into the middle of the cake. On the top of the cake, around the edge, are eleven marzipan balls to represent the true apostles of Jesus; Judas is omitted. In some variations Christ is also represented, by a ball placed at the centre.




zaterdag 9 april 2011

Fashions of the Extended Regency Era


 read:   fashion

Transportation during the Regency


There were no
'planes, trains or automobiles'
in Regency days
so the vast majority
 of the populace
 walked to their destinations.

If they could afford a horse, they rode.

zaterdag 2 april 2011

"something between a Man & an Angel"

In October 1815 Jane Austen (then 39 years old) was staying with her brother Henry in London while they negotiated with John Murray for the publication of Emma. Henry became seriously ill, and Charles , a 28-year-old surgeon and neighbor of Henry’s, was called in. Austen wrote to Cassandra (mistakenly identifying Haden as an apothecary): “Mr H. is the apothecary from the corner of Sloane St—successor to Mr Smith, a young Man said to be clever, & he is certainly very attentive & appears hitherto to have understood the complaint” (17 October 1815).
The Austens’ friendship with Haden grew over the next few months. In mid-November Fanny Knight came to stay with her aunt and uncle. Deirdre Le Faye, in Jane Austen: A Family Record, says that Fanny hired a harp and engaged a music master to instruct her. In the evenings Henry’s friends often visited. On November 24 Austen wrote to Cassandra, “Tomorrow Mr Haden is to dine with us.—There’s Happiness!—We really grow so fond of Mr Haden that I do not know what to expect.—He, & Mr Tilson & Mr Philips made up our circle of Wits last night; Fanny played, & he sat & listened & suggested improvements.”
Later, in the same letter, Austen expressed disappointment on learning that two ladies had invited themselves to tea on the following day: “here is an end of our extreme felicity in our Dinner-Guest.—I am heartily sorry they are coming! It will be an Evening spoilt to Fanny & me.”
The evening, however, turned out better than anticipated.  “So much for the morning; then came the dinner & Mr Haden who brought good Manners & clever conversation;—from 7 to 8 the Harp;—at 8 Mrs L. & Miss E. arrived—& for the rest of the Evening the Drawing-room was thus arranged, on the Sopha-side the two Ladies Henry & myself making the best of it, on the opposite side Fanny & Mr Haden in two chairs (I beleive at least they had two chairs) talking together uninterruptedly.—Fancy the scene! And what is to be fancied next?—Why that Mr H. dines here again tomorrow. . . . Henry calls himself stronger every day & Mr H. keeps on approving his Pulse—which seems generally better than ever—but still they will not let him be well. . . . Perhaps when Fanny is gone, he will be allowed to recover faster” (26 November 1815).
Charles Haden became a close enough friend that he was admitted to the secret of Jane Austen’s authorship. She told Cassandra,
“Mr H is reading Mansfield Park for the first time & prefers it to P&P” (26 November 1815). Perhaps Fanny Price was the inspiration for this playful remark reported by Austen in another letter: “I have been listening to dreadful Insanity.—It is Mr Haden’s firm beleif that a person not musical is fit for every sort of Wickedness” (24 November 1815).
When Henry was fully recovered, Austen wrote to Cassandra, correcting her mistake about Haden’s profession with an affectionate description:  “To make [Henry’s] return a complete Gala, Mr Haden was secured for dinner.—I need not say that our Evening was agreable.—But you seem to be under a mistake as to Mr H.—You call him an Apothecary; he is no Apothecary, he has never been an Apothecary, there is not an Apothecary in this Neighborhood—the only inconvenience of the situation perhaps, but so it is—we have not a medical Man within reach—he is a Haden, nothing but a Haden, a sort of wonderful nondescript Creature on two Legs, something between a Man & an Angel—but without the least spice of an Apothecary.—He is perhaps the only Person not an Apothecary hereabouts. He has never sung to us. He will not sing without a P. Forte accompaniment” (2 December 1815).
Fanny’s diary records another “delightful musical evening with Mr Haden” on December 4, after which Fanny returned to Godmersham.
As Austen prepared to leave London later that month, she sent Haden a note along with some books she had borrowed:  “Dear Sir, We return these volumes with many Thanks. They have afforded us great amusement.—As we were out ourselves yesterday Evening we were glad to find you had not called—but shall depend upon your giving us some part of this Evening. I leave Town early on Saturday, & must say “Good bye” to you.—Your obliged & faithful J. Austen” (14 December 1815).

 On December 16, Austen’s fortieth birthday, she left London for the last time.

A Footnote about Charles Thomas Haden.
Charles Thomas Haden had a brief but distinguished medical career. He graduated as a surgeon from the University of Edinburgh and continued his studies in Paris with Laennec, inventor of the stethoscope. Among his accomplishments, Haden is credited with introducing the stethoscope to England and discovering that gout can be treated successfully with Colchicum autumnale, commonly known as autumn crocus, a treatment still used today. Haden’s progressive, prevention-oriented medical views advocated fresh air, exercise, and moderation of food and drink, rather than medicines, to cure skin disorders. He also wrote in support of female education: “If young women were educated more with a reference to health, and less to personal accomplishments and delicacy of appearance, the number of inefficient mothers would be reduced.” A collection of his writings was published in London in 1827 by Dr. Alcock, Practical Observations on the Management and Diseases of Children.

Haden married Emma Harrison, who was a singer and the daughter of a celebrated vocalist. Their son, Francis Seymour, born in 1818, became a well-known surgeon and distinguished artist. Haden died in 1824, his life cut short by lung disease.

By Elizabeth Philosophos Cooper
http://www.jasna.org/

1 april 1816.

April 1st:

MY DEAR SIR, — I am honoured by the Prince’s thanks and very much obliged to yourself for the kind manner in which you mention the work. I have also to acknowledge a former letter forwarded to me from Hans Place. I assure you I felt very grateful for the friendly tenor of it, and hope my silence will have been considered, as it was truly meant, to proceed only from an unwillingness to tax your time with idle thanks. Under every interesting circumstance which your own talents and literary labours have placed you in, or the favour of the Regent bestowed, you have my best wishes. Your recent appointments I hope are a step to something still better. In my opinion, the service of a court can hardly be too well paid, for immense must be the sacrifice of time and feeling required by it.

You are very kind in your hints as to the sort of composition which might recommend me at present, and I am fully sensible that an historical romance, founded on the House of Saxe-Cobourg, might be much more to the purpose of profit or popularity than such pictures of domestic life in country villages as I deal in. But I could no more write a romance than an epic poem. I could not sit seriously down to write a serious romance under any other motive than to save my life; and if it were indispensable for me to keep it up and never relax into laughing at myself or at other people, I am sure I should be hung before I had finished the first chapter. No, I must keep to my own style and go on in my own way; and though I may never succeed again in that, I am convinced that I should totally fail in any other.

I remain, my dear Sir,

Your very much obliged, and sincere friend,

J. AUSTEN.

While visiting Carlton House, she was escorted by Rev. James Stanier Clarke, the Prince’s librarian,










Who was so struck by her that he painted her watercolor image from memory and kept up a correspondence afterwards. Eventually, Rev. Clarke had the audacity to suggest how Jane might proceed in her next novel. In March 1816, he wrote: “Perhaps when you again appear in print … chuse to dedicate your Volumes to Prince Leopold: any Historical Romance illustrative of the History of the august house of Cobourg, would just now be very interesting.”



JANE AUSTEN/ WEBSITES

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