Endnotes
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1 (p. 6)
four or five thousand a year: See the Introduction on
Austen’s attention to money and class.
2 (p. 8)
“When is your next ball to be, Lizzy?”: In the standard
edition, R. W. Chapman gives this sentence to Mr. Bennet, arguing
that Kitty would already know the date of her sister’s next ball
and citing typographical evidence from the first edition of 1813 to
support his point (The Novels of Jane Austen; see “For
Further Reading”). A reader might, however, expect that Kitty would
be more interested in opening a discussion of the ball than would
Mr. Bennet. This minor question of attribution points to a
characteristic problem that Austen noted in a letter to her sister,
Cassandra, when the first edition of Pride and Prejudice was
published. Even though Austen assumed that her clever readers would
be undaunted by a few obscure lines, she admitted that “a ‘said
he,’ or a ‘said she,’ would sometimes make the dialogue more
immediately clear” (Jane Austen: Selected Letters 1796-1817,
edited by R. W. Chapman, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985, p.
132).
3 (p. 19)
knighthood by an address to the king during his mayoralty:
Mr. William Lucas’s civic office of mayor has allowed him to
express his constituents’ appreciation and concerns in a formal
address to King George III. In honor of this occasion and of Mr.
Lucas’s civic and economic services to his country, the king has
bestowed upon Mr. Lucas a knighthood, which allows him to adopt the
title “Sir” during his lifetime. He receives this honor during a
ceremony at St. James’s Palace in London, one of the King’s formal
residences. Mrs. Lucas now becomes Lady Lucas, but the Lucas
children will not inherit the title. A member of Austen’s society
would recognize that Lady Lucas does not hold the more prestigious
inherited rank of Mr. Darcy’s aunt, Lady Catherine, because the
latter may be called by her first name.
4 (p. 29)
entailed . . . on a distant relation: The inheritance of the
Bennet property is limited to male heirs. Later in the novel, we
learn that Mr. Bennet regrets not having saved part of his
disposable income for his wife and daughters. We also learn that
the limited resources the Bennet girls will inherit will come from
Mrs. Bennet’s marriage portion, which has been invested at a low,
but stable, rate of interest. In order to live comfortably, the
girls will need to marry well. Among the gentry and aristocracy,
the inheritance of an estate (which, in the case of the Bennets,
includes the house, grounds, and income-generating farm) was
typically governed by the rule of primogenitur entail,
through which the eldest son becomes the sole heir to the land and
primary heir to most of the financial resources. The intention was
to preserve the prestige of the family by having the wealth
concentrated in the hands of one man. A smaller financial
settlement was typically made for younger sons, who would need to
be educated to a profession, and for daughters, who would require a
dowry for marriage.
It was sometimes the case, however, that the
“entail” of an estate would be legally restricted in some way. A
grandfather might entail his estate to his grandson if he feared
his son would squander the wealth at the gambling table. In the
case of the Bennets, the entail is in keeping with patriarchal
tradition: A male heir should inherit the estate. Women could,
however, be primary heirs; the wealthy widow Lady Catherine remarks
later in the novel, “I see no occasion for entailing estates from
the female line.” Mrs. Bennet will repeatedly decry the unfairness
of the entail that will disinherit her daughters, and she refuses
to credit its legality.
5 (p. 45)
the food of love: An allusion to the opening line of
Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night: “If music be the food of love,
play on.” Although Austen only occasionally makes direct references
to works of literature, and although she once pointed to her
ignorance in a diplomatic effort to decline a suggestion that she
write a novel about a learned clergyman, her novels show a solid
familiarity with the tradition of English letters and the Bible. In
several of her works, she indirectly alludes to Shakespeare’s
plays, which, as the character Henry Crawford observes in
Mansfield Park, are “part of an Englishman’s
constitution.”
6 (p. 65)
make us the atonement he thinks our due: To a modern reader,
the implication that this “cousin,” earlier described as a “distant
relation,” would wish to marry one of the Bennet sisters might seem
incestuous. Certainly Lady Catherine’s claim later in the novel
that she intends for Mr. Darcy to marry her daughter, who is his
first cousin, would seem odd today. In Austen’s time, however, it
was not unusual for cousins to marry in order to consolidate the
family’s wealth and estate. In Austen’s Mansfield Park, the
heroine, Fanny Price, weds her cousin, Edmund Bertram.
7 (p. 67)
condescension: Mr. Collins intends this term in a positive
light, and such usage is not entirely archaic today (the reader
will encounter several terms in the novel that are no longer
familiar or whose connotations have changed entirely). To a modern
reader, the idea of any person condescending to another is
offensive, no matter the difference in station. To a reader of
Austen’s day, Mr. Collins’s sentiment would merely seem ridiculous.
Austen’s purpose in placing “condescension” in the mouth of the
foolish Mr. Collins is not to question the lack of equality between
him and Lady Catherine, but to begin to expose the flaws of both
characters.
8 (p.
154) the Lakes: The Lake District, in the far northwest of
England, remains one of the most picturesque areas of Great
Britain. It is associated with the Romantic school of poets, who
wrote tenderly of the region. William Wordsworth lived at Dove
Cottage near Lake Grasmere in this district from 1799 to 1808 and
was visited there by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Walter Scott, and
Thomas De Quincey, among others. Although Austen was a contemporary
of the Romantic writers, she is generally not considered to have
been a part of that school, although inclusion as a Romantic
depends partly on one’s definition of the term. Elizabeth’s gleeful
response to her aunt’s proposal—“What are men to rocks and
mountains?”—is a romantic sentiment, to be sure, but its irony
marks Austen’s distance from such emotional effusions.
9 (p.
205) Till this moment, I never knew myself: One of the
climactic moments of the novel, Elizabeth’s declaration of sudden
self-knowledge is in the tradition of the “recognition” scene (or
anagnorisis ) of classical tragedy and Shakespeare.
Elizabeth’s initial hubris and her error in judgment—her pride and
prejudice—lead her, like a tragic hero, to misread the situation at
hand and, after being enlightened, to experience an acute sense of
shame. Unlike the tragic hero, Elizabeth learns of her mistake and
recognizes her own shortcomings in time to make amends.
10 (p.
234) Matlock, Chatsworth, Dovedale, or the Peak: Mrs.
Gardiner has decided to forego these picturesque tourist
destinations found chiefly in Derbyshire, the north Midlands county
where Mr. Darcy’s Pemberley is situated. The Gardiners have also
decided to shorten the trip. To continue to the Lake District would
have taken them much farther north than the revised plan, which
already takes them a significant distance north and west of London,
if we consider that they traveled in a horse-drawn coach on
early-nineteenth-century roads. Although Austen does mention
Chatsworth in this passage, some scholars have argued that this
magnificent estate also provided the model for the fictional
Pemberley. Others have suggested that Mr. Darcy, wealthy as he is,
could not have supported a manor house and grounds this grand.
Today the 35,000-acre estate of Chatsworth, seat of the eleventh
Duke and Duchess of Devonshire (whose ancestors acquired most of
the land in 1549), remains a popular tourist destination.
11 (p.
239) On applying to see the place: Domestic tourism, which
included visits to stately country manor houses listed in
guide-books as well as the picturesque countryside, had come into
vogue in England during the eighteenth century. A touring party of
the gentry class might be admitted to one of England’s great homes
at certain stipulated times, often for a fee. The craze for
visiting great privately owned estates coincided with the
increasing tendency of the upper gentry and aristocracy to
“enclose” for exclusive, private use what had previously been
common lands, on which the lower classes had been able to farm and
hunt for food.
12 (p.
265) gone off to Scotland: After Lord Hardwicke’s Marriage
Act of 1753, which sought to give consistency to the laws governing
marriage and to protect young heiresses and heirs against predatory
suitors and upstart brides, couples under the age of twenty-one
wishing to marry quickly and without the consent of their parents
had to elope to Scotland, where the Marriage Act did not apply.
Lydia believes, we soon hear, that she and Wickham will make the
long journey to Gretna Green, which is the closest Scottish village
to the English border and where speedy weddings had become
something of an industry.
13 (p.
286) the death of your daughter would have been a blessing:
Mr. Collins’s pompous moralizing complements Mary Bennet’s pedantic
observation several pages earlier that “loss of virtue in a female
is irretrievable, that one false step involves her in endless
ruin.” Relationships out of wedlock were, indeed, fodder for
scandal, and a young woman of good family could expect serious
consequences to ensue from an extramarital affair, but Austen is
also drawing on a formidable literary tradition of melodramatic
accounts of the “fallen” or “ruined” heroine, whose fate was
usually destitution, illness, and death.
14 (p.
298) Five daughters successively entered the world: One
might wonder why the Bennets persisted in having a large family
when their financial resources seemed limited and when it was
possible to limit the number of children (through, for example,
breast-feeding, which had become popular among the middle and upper
classes under the reign of Queen Charlotte and which helps to
inhibit the rate of conception). This passage suggests that part of
the motivation was to have a son who would be able to preserve the
estate for the immediate family. Mr. Collins’s legal claim would
then no longer be valid.
Austen herself came from a family of eight
children, the size of which created some financial difficulties for
her father, an Anglican minister. Two of Austen’s six brothers
would each have eleven children, and a third would have ten.
Historians have argued that the penchant for large families during
this era reflects national propaganda in favor of having many
children; more babies meant more bodies for the building of empire
and the ongoing wars with France.
15 (p.
366) special license: Upper-class couples could be married
by special permission of an Anglican bishop and without the
otherwise required banns, or public proclamation for three Sundays
running, of the intent to marry. Mrs. Bennet regards the
procurement of a bishop’s license as a status symbol. However, in
an earlier passage, Lydia and Wickham, who do not, in fact, elope
to Scotland, are “married privately in town,” which means that
interested parties with elite connections in London have procured
them a special license to avoid the scandal of a public
announcement of this undesirable marriage.
16 (p.
374) the restoration of peace: Possibly a reference to the
brief peace between England and France following the signing of the
Treaty of Amiens (1802), during which a number of British writers
flocked to Paris. The Napoleonic Wars would soon follow. Some
scholars believe that this reference suggests that Pride and
Prejudice, which was published in 1813, may be set a generation
earlier. Austen had indeed written a draft of the novel in the late
1790s but is believed to have substantially revised it in 1811 and
1812. It is possible that the reference applies to some other, less
consequential “peace” or to a hope for a future end to the wars,
which occurred in 1815.