February 25

1756




When my kids were growing up, because it was a fun way of filling up the emptiness of a long car journey, or a means of making that boring activity a visit to an art gallery or museum a little less boring, we played a game I had invented called "Spot The Derivative". Switch on Radio 3 and whatever happens to be playing is... they were both doing music at school, one learning violin, the other wind instruments, and both a little bit of piano, so the background was there. "Sounds like late Romantic" or "has to be Mozart" might even turn into, "no, I know that, one of my friends did it for her GCSE solo, that's Chopin." Or recognising the use of light in a Rembrandt because we had been to the Caravaggio exhibition the week before. Or my elder daughter, telephoning me one day in Toronto, because she was in Reading with her mum and Jane Austen was the next author on her A level syllabus. "I need something that will get me an A-grade dad, something different from the standard essay everybody's going to write." Which book, I asked her? "Sense and Sensibility".

So we talked about 
Charlotte Turner Smith and the "School of Sensibility", which gave Wordsworth and Coleridge their "Lyrical Ballads", but also Jane Austen her title (see Oct 28), and mentioned, because it would make a good footnote, that "Pride and Prejudice" was likewise "borrowed", from Dr Lyster in Fanny Burney's "Cecilia" (see June 13); and then I sent her off to do some research into Maria Edgeworth, probably the authoress who had the greatest impact on Jane (see Jan 1).

Three days later she called again, wanting more. So we talked about the play at the heart of "Mansfield Park", which
Jane had basically "lifted" from Elizabeth Inchbald's "Lovers' Vows" (see Oct 15), and then about Elizabeth Inchbald, who made her stage-name in a production of the same play, though not in Jane Austen's production (ditto Oct 15).

But that was "Mansfield Park", and she was studying "Sense and Sensibility", and so we talked about
Eliza Haywood, Elizabeth Fowler her birthname, born somewhere around 1693, and on this page because she died today, in 1756: an actress to begin with - at the Smock Alley Theatre in Dublin around 1714, then in London from 1717 - but mostly a writer, very much of the hot passion genre in her novels, though intermingled, indeed closely coupled with social and political commentary (Alexander Pope detested her, and it was probably just envy of her skills); there were plays too, articles in periodicals, poetry, translations - she even became a publisher, founding and editing “The Female Spectator” 
(here and here) - and spot the derivative of that title!

But enough. As one who believes in autodidacticism, the importance of discovering knowledge for oneself, I recommended my daughter to the
Jane Austen Society's website, which states unequivocally that

"Austen’s cyclical Eliza narratives in "Sense and Sensibility" owe a debt to the earlier highly patterned amatory plots of her predecessor Haywood, and each of Austen’s novels encodes and gestures towards the sort of seduction narratives that generated Haywood’s initial rise to fame."

Spot the derivative! You can read her full biography, and get the same A-grade that my daughter got, here.

Oh, and while you're pursuing the subject, you might want to look up the other two ladies in the picture at the top: left to right 
Fanny BurneyEliza HaywoodJane CollierJane Austen and Sarah Scott. Start here, which is where I found the picture.


 


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