Running now for its second 12 months, the British Library and National Trust have collaboratively designed a doctoral fellowship programme which goals to look at the connections between every organisation’s collections. Starting in January 2023, I’ve had the pleasure of taking the function of Doctoral Fellow on a undertaking which examines the significance of public leisure areas, reminiscent of Bath’s Assembly Rooms, inside Georgian society. The undertaking’s major intention has been to analyse literature and different paper-based ephemera, discovered within the British Library and National Trust’s in depth catalogues, with the intention to acquire perception into Austen’s society and, extra broadly, social life in Bath.
During the eighteenth century, Bath was a spot for each the modern and the infirm, a metropolis which enticed individuals for each their therapeutic waters and lavish entertainments. Bath grew to become synonymous with leisure. Whilst there was an abundance of scheduled entertainments reminiscent of performs, balls and musical concert events, the largest leisure of all was that of the spa city’s social theatre.
Whether you imagine that Austen appreciated or loathed Bath, town most definitely had an impression on her life and writings. In truth, there isn’t a single one in all Austen’s six main novels which doesn’t point out Bath in some capability, whether or not through the use of town as the principle theatrical stage for Northanger Abbey (1817), or a quick point out of Mr Wickham ‘enjoy[ing] himself in London or Bath’ in Pride and Prejudice (1813). The metropolis options most prominently in Austen’s posthumously printed novels, Persuasion (1817) and Northanger Abbey. The remedy of Bath inside these texts receives two opposing views: one in all surprise and pleasure of a small-town woman going to the “Big City” in Northanger Abbey, contrasted with the view of Bath as a light metropolis, a spot by which Anne Elliot somewhat reluctantly goes to hitch her household in Persuasion.
Whilst town attracted modern society, this very social class grew to become a main goal for criticism and mock, as seen in satirical prints of the interval. Found inside the British Library assortment is an 1858 certain e-book which features a collection of satirical prints by Thomas Rowlandson titled, The Comforts of Bath, first printed in 1798. The twelve-plate collection depicts totally different entertainments inside the metropolis, together with each a live performance and dancing, waters being drunk on the Pump Room, and public gaming.
Christopher Anstey, plate ten from The Comforts of Bath. Designed and etched by Rowlandson, with versification by Christopher Anstey, Esq, 1858. British Library, shelfmark 1267.f.21.
Accompanying every print is an extract from Christopher Anstey’s New Bath Guide, first printed in 1766. The title of Anstey’s work is pretty deceptive. Instead of an educational piece recommending the most recent and most trendy of Bath’s hotspots, the publication is written in a collection of satirical, anapaestic poems, following the lives of the fictional Blunderhead household. In truth, it’s not likely a guidebook in any respect. Here, the combining of each textual content and print merges the visible and textual, presenting two very comparable satiric critiques of Georgian Bath society.
Christopher Anstey, The new Bath information: or Memoirs of the B-r–d household. In a collection of poetical epistles.1766. British Library, shelfmark 11633.c.5.
Looking intently at plate ten of Rowlandson’s The Comforts of Bath, we will see a mess of exercise taking place on this live performance setting. Whilst there are viewers members intently watching the efficiency, many might be seen having conversations between themselves, staring off into the space, fidgeting, and even having a light-weight snooze. The function of the viewers in Georgian leisure areas was vastly totally different to what we expertise at the moment. Whilst we’re instructed to show off the distractions which are cell phones, and speaking by films is usually met with a passive aggressive “shush”, eighteenth-century leisure etiquette was a little bit totally different. Speaking of the expertise of the theatregoer, Jim Davis states, ‘[r]efreshments, discussion of the performance in progress, casual conversation, a little ogling and flirting, were all part of the experience’ (Davis, p.520).
Christopher Anstey, plate two from The Comforts of Bath. 1858. British Library, shelfmark 1267.f.21.
The function of the viewers member, or spectator, was a subject which many artists like Rowlandson adopted of their work. Found inside the British Library assortment, George Cruikshank’s Pit, Boxes & Gallery, printed in 1834, illustrates a vigorous theatre viewers cut up throughout three ranges. Like Rowlandson’s The Concert, the print reveals quite a lot of comedian characters, all engaged in an array of actions, from conversing and ingesting to preventing for area within the higher gallery.
George Cruikshank, Pit packing containers & Gallery, from My Sketch Book, 1834, British Library, shelfmark C.59.d.5.
This visualisation of spectatorship, created by artists reminiscent of Cruikshank and Rowlandson, usually portrays an viewers whose full consideration is never directed on the leisure in query (Davis, p.520). Consequently, the viewers are introduced as lively spectators versus passive ones, enjoying a significant function inside the expertise of Georgian entertainments. This lively participation of the viewers is due to this fact instrumental to what we take into account Georgian leisure. It isn’t just the bodily exercise of dancing, appearing or singing which creates leisure, however the people who each watch and take part in not simply the live performance halls but in addition the social theatre of Bath. For is the spa city itself not merely a dramatic stage for the rich and trendy to “perform” their celeb? Bath due to this fact acted as a stage which facilitated the gossipy tête-à-têtes of the modern elite.
The theatre and live performance halls weren’t the one areas which society carried out spectatorship; the Pump Rooms have been a spot which individuals frequented with the intention to see and be seen. In chapter three of Austen’s Northanger Abbey, the narrator describes the day by day rituals of Bath life:
“Every morning now introduced its common duties – outlets have been to be visited; some new a part of the city to be checked out; and the pump-room to be attended, the place they paraded up and down for an hour, all people and chatting with nobody.” (Northanger Abbey, p.25).
Austen paints an image of a society which, as Kathryn Sutherland states, is ‘continually watching’. The Pump Room was not solely a spot for therapeutic, the place healing waters can be taken for these in ill-health, but in addition an area to be seen performing your right, societal function. The presentation of oneself inside society was additionally seen by newspaper bulletins, evident in Austen’s Persuasion the place the arrival of the Elliot’s rich cousins, the Dalrymples, are introduced within the paper:
“The Bath paper one morning introduced the arrival of the Dowager Viscountess Dalrymple, and her daughter, […] for the Dalrymples (in Anne’s opinion, most sadly) have been cousins of the Elliots; and the agony was easy methods to introduce themselves correctly.” (Persuasion, p.139).
Seen in each extracts, Austen not solely exposes this societal “peacocking”, but in addition subtly hints on the absurdity of social formalities, for if agony is brought about in making an attempt to speak to 1’s personal relations, it should be close to unattainable to socialize with anybody else.
Taking half within the social show of oneself inside these public environments, each created and fed right into a tradition of gossip. To be spoken about, to be identified, to have a revered fame, have been all a method to faucet into the advantages of the celeb tradition of the time. For in Georgian Bath, gossip was the last word type of leisure. Similar to the function of audiences, gossip was about lively and passive spectatorship. Whilst the buying and selling of gossip offered loads of leisure for consumption, members of those social lessons additionally stared because the entertainers themselves, each being the themes of such gossip and thru their social look on this “stage”. This gossip tradition can be an intrinsic function of Austen’s writings. Catherine Morland’s naivety in Northanger Abbey is obvious when she struggles to know whose gossip to hearken to, or within the case of John Thorpe, his lies and trickery. In a bid to thwart Catherine’s plans with the well-mannered Henry and Eleanor Tilney, John spreads misinformation of the Tilney’s whereabouts with the intention to safe Catherine’s time for himself.
Thus, Bath was a city of each lively and passive leisure. Bath’s amusements existed on the stage and within the audiences of performs and concert events, but in addition in equal measure in social areas such because the Pump Room and tea rooms. People delighted within the scripted entertainments of the stage and ballroom, in addition to participating within the unscripted social theatre. Thus, public leisure areas in Bath have been important for the facilitation of not solely scheduled leisure but in addition the social shows of wealth and significance. It would due to this fact be remiss to outline Bath’s public leisure areas as merely the websites of formal actions. The standard resort city functioned as a theatrical backdrop for the social circus that was the Georgian elite, finally offering a modern area to see and be seen.
By Joanne Edwards, Doctoral Fellow with the British Library and National Trust.
Sources
Austen, Jane, Northanger Abbey, 1817, (London: Penguin Classics version, 2011)
Austen, Jane, Persuasion, 1817, (London: Penguin Classics version, 2011)
Austen, Jane, Northanger Abbey, 1817, (London: Penguin Classics version, 2011)
Austen, Jane, Jane Austen’s Letters, ed. by Deirdre Le Faye (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011)
Davis, Jim, ‘Looking and Being Looked At’, Theatre Journal, 2017, 69. 4, pp. 515-53
Sutherland, Kathryn, ‘Jane Austen and social judgement’, Discovering Literature: Romantics & Victorians, <www.bl.uk>