Jane
Austen confines her creative activity to the depiction of whatever fell
within her range of personal experience. While her range of observation
in life is not so wide her work has been variously called as the “Two inches of ivory” and “three or four families”. All these titles exhibit the excellence as well as the limitations of her craft and outlook.
Although
she works on a very small canvas, yet she has widened the scope of
fiction in almost all its directions. Her stories mostly have indoor
actions where only family matters especially love and marriages are
discussed. However, her plots are perfect and characterization is
superb.
All of her six novels, including “Pride and Prejudice”,
have been controversial since their publication, on account of Austen’s
limited range. The critical view is divided in two groups – detractors
and admires. The former group had criticized her on various points.
Critics
object that her novels present a certain narrow physical setting. It
was the period of American War of Independence and of Napoleonic Wars,
but the characters of Austen are blissfully unaware of all these
tumultuous events. Whole of the story of “Pride and Prejudice” revolves
around Neitherfield Park, Longbourne, Hunsford Parsonage, Meryton and
Pemberley.
Nature
does not play any specific role in her novels. It seems to be an irony
of the history of English literature that when writers like Wordsworth,
Byron, Coleridge and others were discovering the beauties of nature /
outer world, Austen confines her characters within the four walls of the
drawing room or Hall. Edward Fitzgerald states:
She never goes out of the Parlour.
Austen
avoids the sense of passions described by the romantics, because of her
classical views of order and control. Bronte condemns her:
… the passions art completely unknown to her.
Critics
have complained that her subject matters are very much the same in all
her novels and she writes the same sort of story and also that she does
not introduce any great variety in her characters.
All
of her six novels deal with same theme of love and marriages. There are
pretty girls waiting for eligible bachelors to be married to. The
opening line of “Pride and Prejudice” is the theme of her six novels.
She writes:
It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.
Another
limitation of Jane Austen is the feminization of her novels. Men never
appear except in the company of women. All the information about Darcy
is proved through Elizabeth’s point of view. Hence, the reader looks at
Darcy through Elizabeth’s eye.
Even
in her limited world, Austen restricts herself to the depiction of a
particular class of country gentry. She excludes the matters of lower
class and hardly touches aristocracy. For instance she has discussed
Lady Catherine only for the purpose of satire.
There
is no terrible happening in her novels. Everything happens in a
civilized manner. The extreme severity in “Pride and Prejudice” is
elopement of Lydia with Wickham.
Wickham may elope with Lydia.
A famous critic, Charlotte Bronte believes that Austen has no concern with the morals and she is an author of the surface only:
Her business is not half so much with the human heart as with the human eye, mouth, hands and feet.
A.
H. Wright remarks that there is very little religion in her novels.
Politics is not mentioned too. There are no adventures found in her
books, no abstract ideas and no discussion of spiritual or metaphysical
issues.
The
defence of Jane Austen’s limited range comes from the nature of her
novels, the situation of her time and her physical surroundings.
Austen’s novels are termed as “domestic novels”. She belongs to the era
when neither the girls were allowed to be admitted to universities nor
to be intermingled freely with men. So it is natural that her range is
limited.
Austen
was a daughter of a country clergyman. She has very less exposure to
the world except her short visits to London and a few years study at
Bath. Hence the world she experienced was very small. In a letter to her
niece, Austen wrote:
There are four families in a country village is the very thing to work on.
Though
Austen’s limitations are very self imposed yet within her deliberately
restricted field, her art is perfect. Realization of one’s limitations
is a positive virtue. The restricted social setting and purely
interests, lend a sense of discipline to her art.
Within the limits she is superb.
She
gains in depth, what she loses in broadness of canvas. Her characters
stem from a class which she knows well and hence they are very realistic
and life-like. Elizabeth Bennet is one of the most delightful heroines
one could come across in literature. Wordsworth remarks:
Her novels are an admirable copy of life.
It
would be wrong to say that her novels lack passion and profundity. Her
themes are love, courtship and marriage and it is impossible to keep the
feelings out from such a novel. Besides love, there are also
significant emotions, like jealousy of Bingley’s, cunningness of
Wickham, snobbery of Lady Catherine – all are depicted by Austen with
perfect sincerity and conviction.
She
also holds a definite moral concern in her novels. She laughs at the
shortcomings of people to correct their behaviours. Beneath the theme of
love and marriage, she deals with manners to correct the conduct of the
middle class country gentry. She preaches the dictum of “know thyself”.
Hence she aims at high morality. She also depicts the merits and
strength of a marriage based on understanding through the wedding of
Elizabeth and Darcy. The nature of her craft is defined by Austen
herself as:
With bit of irony on which I work with so fine brush to produce little effect after much labour.
Within
her theme and subject matter, Jane Austen is unparalleled in her skill
and plot construction. The sub-plots of Jane-Bingley, Lydia-Wickham,
Charlotte-Collins all are closely linked to the main Elizabeth-Darcy
plot and highlight the theme of good marriage. Even in her limits, no
two of her characters are repeated. G. H. Lewis remarks:
Her circle may be restricted but it is complete. Her world is perfect orb and vital sphere.
Thus
it may be concluded that within her limited range Austen handles all
the characters, events, dialogues and the plot of her novels in a very
exquisite manner. Her art is fine, perfect and distinguishable. No doubt
she is a fine flower of the expiring 18th century.
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