Friday 6 June 2014

Jane Austen’s Limited Range:

Jane Austen as a novelist has stringently set her limits which she seldom oversteps. She was amazingly aware of which side her genius lay and she exploited it accordingly without any false notions of her capabilities or limitations. As Lord David Cecil points out, she very wisely stayed "within the range of her imaginative inspiration." Her imaginative inspiration was as severely limited as, for example, Hardy's or Arnold Bennett's. Her themes, her characters, her background setting -everything has a well-etched range within which she works, and works exquisitely. Jane Austen herself referred to her work as “Two inches of ivory.” In a letter to her niece, Fanny Knight, Jane Austen wrote, “Three or four families in a country village is the very thing to work on.”

Although she works on a very small canvas, yet she has widened the scope of fiction in almost all its directions. Her stories are mostly indoor actions where only family matters are discussed. However, her plots are perfect and characterization is superb.

Critics have labeled her novels belonging to a narrow range of themes and characterization. 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. The same sort of story is repeated, subject matters are very much the same in all her novels, confined to the landed gentry Servants, laborers and yeomanry rarely appear in her novels. Her nephew James Austen-Leigh, alludes to her limited range: “She was always careful not to meddle with matters with which she did not thoroughly underst. There is no terrible happening in Jane Austin’s novels. Everything happens in a civilized manner. The extreme severity in “Pride and Prejudice” is elopement of Lydia with Wickham.

Charlotte Bronte was constrained to observe about Jane Austen:
"She ruffles her reader by nothing vehement, disturbs him by nothing profound. The passions are perfectly unknown to her : she rejects even a speaking acquaintance with that stormy sisterhood."
Charlotte Bronte believes that Jane Austen is not concerned with the deep 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.”
Andrew H. Wright points out that there is very little religion discussed 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.
Macaulay declares that her characters are commonplace, “yet they are all as perfectly discriminated from each other as if they were the most eccentric of human beings.”

Sir Walter Scott appreciates the precision of her Art and its merit:“That young lady has a talent for describing the involvement of feelings and characters of ordinary life which is to me the most wonderful I have ever met with.”

G.H. Lewes pays glowing tribute to her:“First and foremost, let Jane Austen be named, the greatest artist that has ever written... Her circle may be restricted, but it is complete. Her world is a perfect orb, and vital sphere.”

Pride and Prejudice like her other novels has a narrow physical setting in which she lived. The story revolves around Netherfield, Longbourn, Hunsford, Meryton and Pemberley. It seems to be an irony of the history that when the Romantic Poets were discovering the beauties of nature, Jane Austen confined her characters within the four walls of the drawing room. Her heroines also famously never leave the family. Edward Fitzgerald states: “She never goes out of the Parlour.”
Jane Austens limitations stemmed from the choice of her themes: love, marriage and courtship. All of her six novels deal with same theme of love and marriage. There are pretty girls waiting for eligible bachelors to be married to.
 Another limitation is the feminization of her novels. Men do not 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

However her novels are profound in the psychological delineation of her characters. She is able to capture superbly, the subtlety of thoughts and reflexes of her characters. We can sum up above discussion in the words of Virginia Woolf:Jane Austen is the mistress of a much deeper emotion than appears on the surface.”