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The Bodily Frame: Learning Romance in Persuasion Author(s): Judy van Sickle Johnson Source: Nineteenth-Century Fiction, Vol. 38, No. 1 (Jun., 1983), pp. 43-61 Published by: University of California Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044848 Accessed: 16/11/2010 20:18 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=ucal. 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University of California Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Nineteenth-Century Fiction. http://www.jstor.org The Bodily Frame: Learning Romance in Persuasion JUDY VAN SICKLE JOHNSON How eloquent could Anne Elliot have been, -how eloquent, at least, were her wishes on the side of early warm attachment, and a cheerful confidence in futurity,against that over-anxious caution which seems to insult exertion and distrustProvidence!She had been forced into prudence in her youth, she learned romance as she grew older-the natural sequel of an unnatural beginning. Jane Austen, Persuasion , the reserved, sensible, ELLIOT blushing heroine of Jane Austen's Persuasion, reaches the certaintyof romanticlove througha most gradual process in which she displays genuine pleasure, mingled pain and joy, in the various sensations of her deeply feltphysical life.' She is a heroinewho achieves a happy balance of reason and passion, displayingthe decorousrestraintshownbymostofAusten's characterswho fall in love. However, in spite of her reserve,and genteel withinthe usual conventionsand constraintsof superficially society,Anne is unafraid of physicalsensationand excitement.In[NNE ? 1983 by The Regents of the Universityof California 'See Susan Morgan, In theMeantime: Characterand PerceptioninJaneAusten's Fiction (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, I980), p. i68; A. Walton Litz, "Persuasion: Forms of Estrangement," in Jane Austen: Bicentenary Essays, ed. John Halperin (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, I975), p. 223. 43 44 NINETEENTH-CENTURY FICTION deed, she is Austen'smostmature, thoughtful,and selflessheroine. She is certainlyprudent, but she is less a prude than her fictional relative, Emma. Anne Elliot possesses nerves and flesh as well as sense; she experiencespassionatefeelingsto a remarkablyactiveand refreshingly explicit degree. Although the rekindlingof romantic sensibilitiescauses Anne a good deal of discomfortand agitation, she is nonethelesscomfortablewithdiscomfort;she delightsin the sharp, physical sensationsof her own passionate nature. In short, she actually thrillsat the idea of being physicallynear Captain Wentworth.It is thisnew excitementof physicalcontact,thisarousing consciousness of growing intimacy, that lends Persuasion its "peculiar beauty."2 Jane Austenis not knownforher explicitor confidenttreatment of the romantic love scene.3 However, Persuasion points toward a heightened interestin romance, an increasinglyphysical tendency, particularly on the part of Austen's reserved yet emotional heroine. Mary Lascelles has noted that in Persuasion Austen uses the term "romantic" in a new way: ". . . it is the firsttime thatJane Austen has used thisadjective sympathetically."4Emphasizing the importance of fading bloom and frequent blushing in Anne's mature features,A. Walton Litz has commented on the "deeply physical impact of Persuasion"; he regards the novel as Austen's "most successfuleffortto build this sense of physical life into the language and structureof a novel."5 Such perceptionsof physical excitement in Persuasion depart dramatically from Charlotte Bronte's unjust rejection of Austen's cold, delineatorymethods of characterization: "The Passions are perfectlyunknownto her; she 2VirginiaWoolf, "JaneAusten," The Common Reader (I925; New ed., rpt. London: Leonard and Virginia Woolf at the Hogarth Press, I933), p. i8o. See also, "She is beginning to discover that the world is . .. more romantic than she had supposed" (p. i8i). 3Wayne C. Booth, "Control of Distance in Jane Austen's 'Emma,' " chapter 9 in The Rhetoric of Fiction (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, I96I), remarks,"[In Emma] we are refused the romantic love scene" (p. 266). I would argue that in Persuasion Austen does care about the romantic love scene; the novel is built of one such scene after another. 4JaneAusten and Her Art (London: Oxford Univ. Press, I939), p. I83. My use of the term "romantic" is not to be confused with currentinterpretationsof the relationship between Austen's prose and the Romantic period. See, forexample, Morgan, In the Meantime, pp. 3-II; and Penny Gay, "The Romanticism of Per- suasion,"SydneyStudiesin English,5 (I979-80), 5"Persuasion: Forms of Estrangement," pp. I5-30. 223, 225. LEARNING ROMANCE IN Persuasion 45 rejects even a speaking acquaintance with [them]."6 Mark Twain expressed even more vehement distaste for Austen's characters, whom he interpretedas "manufactures [unable to] warm up and feel a passion."7 In Persuasion, however,Austen does demonstrate more than a casual, polite interestin the warm sensationsof love betweenthesexes; herprosemay not "throbfastand full,"as Bronte would have it, but indeed, the blood does rushto the surfacein surprisinglyvibrant and seductive, though understatedways. To be sure, Austenpasses overthe mostprivate,intimatemomentsshared by lovers; she discreetlylimits her business to the "human eyes, mouth,hands, and feet,"prioritieswhichBronteregardedas superficial and superfluous.8 Throughout Austen's fiction,and most notablyin Persuasion, - are used the eyesand appendages - seeminglytrivialinstruments ofhuman feelas reliablemeasuresof thefeignednessor authenticity ing. Physicalgesturesand exchanged glances are crucial to the reunion of Anne Elliot and Captain Wentworth,who exchange very few words throughoutthe awkward period of rene,wedromance. The varyingdegrees of distance between them, as the undeclared loversread each other'slooks and seek to determinetrue feelings, are at once embarrassingand seductive,painfuland exquisite. The "littleparticulars"of entrancesand exits,surprisemeetings,shocks of momentaryphysicalcontact, deliberate or fortuitousproximity on a sofa, in a carriage-all circumstancesare profoundlysignificant and physicallystimulating,if not sexually suggestive.Depth of feeling, good judgment, and sensual excitement are perfectly balanced and reconciled in Persuasion. Jane Austen's claustrophobic,confinedsettingsin drawingrooms and carriagesdo not restrictthe romanticpossibilitiesof thislove story.On the contrary, thesmall social boundarieswithinBath, Lyme, and Uppercrossprovide wonderfulcircumstancesin which the ex-loversare forcedto see each other face to face, to be physicallynear each other, and 6Charlotte Bronte to W. S. Williams, I2 April I850, afterreading Emma. See extract of letterinJane Austen: The Critical Heritage, ed. B. C. Southam (New York: Barnes and Noble; London: Routledge, I968), p. I28. 7Unpublished MS on Jane Austen, quoted in Ian Watt, introd.,Jane Austen: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. Ian Watt (Englewood Cliffs,N.J.: PrenticeHall, I963), p. 78Charlotte Bronte to W. S. Williams, inJane Austen: The Critical Heritage, p. I28. 46 NINETEENTH-CENTURY FICTION to experience embarrassment, expectation, anger, agitation, discomfort,and pleasure in small but veryintensespaces. 9 Mutual feelingand physical attractionare simultaneouslythreatenedand intensifiedby social restrictions. The renewedcourtshipbetweenFrederickWentworthand Anne Elliot is remarkably,almost dangerouslynonverbal. The man and woman say verylittleto each other, but much is felt,physicallyas due to social necessity well as emotionally.They speak infrequently, and personal embarrassment;later, when the social contextproves to be almost insignificant,and indeed ratherludicrous, Anne and Frederickremain silentout of privacy,intimacy,and depth of feeling. Reticence strengthensemotion and rendersphysical gestures and bodilycontactmore appealinglyromantic. The delicacy of intimacyslightlysuggestedand the simple beauty of a warm gesture, a glowing look, are especially refreshingto the twentieth-century reader, whose sensibilitymay be dulled by the samenessof contemporarysexual explicitness. Persuasion begins where Austen's othernovels reach a climax: the heroinehas alreadyenjoyeda "period of exquisitefelicity"'0and she knowsherself."IAnne Elliot's romanticattachmenthas ended, however,in a "rupture"-a somewhat arrestingand violent term thatsurfacesquite dramaticallyin Austen'spolite prose. The word "rupture" conveysa sense of physical shock, the consequences of which are also acutely physical. When the separated lovers are reunitedaftera period of eight-and-a-halfyears,the reunion, like the preceding rupture, necessarilyinvolvesstrongphysical sensationsand self-consciousness. Anne blushes. Frederick'scheeksglow with reproofand with passion. These flushed and blushing faces are not stockimages; theyare delicatelycontrolledmanifestations of physical discomfortand repressedsexual desire. Prior to the reunion in which the lovers come silentlyface to 9See D. W. Harding, introd., Persuasion (Baltimore: Penguin Books, I965), p. I5; Francis R. Hart, "The Spaces of Privacy:Jane Austen," NCF, 30 (I975), 332-33. See also Tony Tanner, introd., Sense and Sensibility(Baltimore: Penguin Books, I969). Tanner commentson the difficulties of directmovementin social places and the degree to which the energies and desires of the private world are repressedby public "screens" and "sheaths" (pp. I8-20). I Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, ed. John Davie, Oxford English Novels (London: Oxford Univ. Press, I97I), Persuasion, p. 248; subsequent citations in my text to Persuasion are to this edition. IIA. Walton Litz,Jane Austen: A StudyofHer ArtisticDevelopment (New York: Oxford Univ. Press, I965), p. I54. LEARNING ROMANCE IN Persuasion 47 face, Jane Austen devotes three chapters to the satiric delineation of a social context.'2 She draws boundaries of vanity, stupid elegance, and insipidity,which prove ultimatelyto be no limitation whatsoeverto a confidentheroine. Out of bathetic dialogue and mean arrogance emergesa heroinewhose firstappearance on the scene marks a dramatic modulation in authorial tone: "Anne, who had been a most attentivelistenerto the whole, leftthe room, to seek the comfortof cool air forher flushedcheeks"(p. 247). Anne leaves the centerof gossip not so much out of embarrassmentas in anticipationand apprehensionof Captain Wentworth'sforthcoming visit. She seeks freshair because she is physicallywarm as well as stifledby the narrownessof a proud fatherand sister;her cheeks are hot, her blood stimulated at the verypossibilityof being near the man who is still a bewitchingattraction,the deepest object of her affection. Contrary to Anne's hopes, she has not "outlived the age of blushing" (p. 268), and she continues to color wheneverCaptain Wentworth'spresence is imminentor real: "Anne's heart beat in spite of herself,and brought the colour into her cheeks when she thought of Captain Wentworth unshackled and free" (p. 377). Austen has designed forherselfthe challenge of making believable a love stillpassionate aftereightyearsof separation. Moreover,she choosesto dramatizethe romanticattachmentwithoutthe resource of dialogue. 13 The author succeeds in sustainingthe credibilityof a growing intimacy through bodily gestures, facial signs, and physical encounters. Throughout the first half of the novel, Frederickand Anne are incapable of engagingin extended conversations; as the narratorsuggests,theyexchange thesparestof polite pleasantries. The marked sterilityof theirspeech barely conceals and delicately reveals the deeper glow of feeling and sensual enthusiasm. The firstsegmentof conversationrecorded in dialogue formis briefand barelyacknowledged:"I beg yourpardon, madam, '2Norman Page, The Language ofJane Austen (New York: Barnes and Noble; Oxford: Basil Blackwell, I972), p. 48. I3See Alistair M. Duckworth, The Improvement of the Estate: A Study ofJane Austen's Novels (Baltimore: JohnsHopkins Press, I97I), pp. 204-20. In his analysis of unspoken discourse, Duckworth writesthat "Jane Austen has taken great care to emphasize the private, largelynon-linguisticnature of the communication between the lovers" (p. 204). Duckworth also observes Austen's unusually strong statementsof emotional response in light of her characteristicreticence, and he notes that the author approaches "a more 'modern' examination of personal relationships," in Persuasion (p. 201). 48 NINETEENTH-CENTURY FICTION thisis yourseat," is all Captain Wentworthcan manage to say. The narratordescribesAnne's quick response:"thoughshe immediately drew back with a decided negative, he was not to be induced to sit down again" (p. 290). Anne is often"withinreach" ofCaptain Wentworth's conversation, and he likewise seeks to overhear her dialogues. They "converse"witheach otherobliquely, sendingverbal messages usually througha thirdparty. Anne is informedby her self-centered,insensitive,hypochondriacal sisterthat Frederick has said, "You were so altered he should not have known you again" (p. 279). In the meantime, unwilling to address Anne directly,Frederickasks an anonymousdancing partnerwhetherMiss Elliot everdances. In chapter9 both Anne and Frederickspeak with Walter Hayter,but theyconsciouslyavoid dialogue witheach other. Later, whilesittingbehind a hedgerow,Anne overhearsFrederick's discourseto Louisa on the beauty of a firmhazelnut (p. 303). During the same excursion, he urges his sister to address Anne's weariness:Mrs. Croftinvitesherinto the carriagewithwords,while Frederickleads her by the hand. It is not untilthe accident at Lyme in chapterI2 that Austenrecords the slightestconversation;but even here, the stiltedspeeches are mere exclamations addressed more to a hystericalcrowd than to each other. In everyscene that precedes the extremelysatisfying encounter in the concert hall at Bath, Jane Austen focuseson her characters' eyes, cheeks, entrances and exits, their "mouths, hands, and feet," their positions in carriages and on sofas, in enclosures and open spaces. Anne attempts to "reach" Captain Wentworthwithher eye; she recordsmomentswhen he is near and when he does not seem to want to be near. Little circumstanceswhen eyesjust miss, or when hands touch, whetherby accident or intent- are interspersedamong more dramatic scenes in which a man and woman feel acutelyeach other'sphysical presence. Most important,the man and woman in Austen's last novel enloywhat theyfeel, despite momentaryvexations and confusions. Earlyin the novel, as Anne anticipatesa renewedacquaintance withCaptain Wentworth,her suppressedemotion is half-revealed in a tentativeconjecture regarding his intentions: Anne understoodit. He wished to avoid seeing her. He had enquired after her, she found, slightly,as mightsuit a formerslightacquaintance, seeming to acknowledge such as she had acknowledged, actuated, perhaps, by LEARNING ROMANCE IN Persuasion whentheyweretomeet. thesameviewofescapingintroduction 49 (pp. 277-78) The definitiveopening statementsare qualified by a thirdsentence which is syntacticallyand emotionallyfarmore complex and more true.14 Clearly,Anne's understandingis not so confidentas the initial wordsindicate; throughhesitant,flexiblephrasing,Austengives a fullerglimpse of the heroine's confused mind, using qualifying termsthat throwthe whole idea of slightacquaintance into question: "mightsuit," "seemingto acknowledge,""actuated, perhaps." The repetition of "slightly . . . slight" underscores the fragile paradox in a relationshipthatwillproveto be apparentlybut deceptivelyslight,according to conventionalmeasures of civilbehavior. Anne and Frederickcommunicatewitheach otherthroughthe slightestsigns-they move by degrees and halves of degrees. Each half wishes to see the other. When they finallydo confrontone another aftersufficientanticipation, theireyesbarely meet: "Her eye half met Captain Wentworth's; a bow, a curtseypassed; she heard his voice-he talked to Mary, said all thatwas right . . . but a fewminutesended it. . . . theirvisitorhad bowed and was gone" (p. 278). Jane Austen devotes only three sentences to their first meeting, from the moment Wentworthenters and exchanges a slightglance, to his equally abrupt and affectingexit. Frederickhas a knack fordisappearing quicklyand silentlyfromrooms in which Anne is present; she watches intentlyeach departure. During their subsequent half-meetingat Uppercross, Anne overhearsCaptain Wentworth'svoice, speaking not to her but to a general crowd; in sequential double negatives,her mind detects some slightacknowledgmentof theircommon past in Frederick's near glance toward her direction: "though his voice did not falter, and thoughshe had no reason to suppose his eyewanderingtowards her while he spoke, Anne felt the utter impossibility,from her knowledgeof his mind, thathe could be unvisitedby remembrance any more than herself"(p. 28I). Within the next severalmoments, Captain Wentworthdraws closerto Anne, engagingin a discussion withMrs. Musgrove,who indulges in hollow lamentationsoverthe death of her unworthyson. Again, Anne reads the satiricalamuse14Page, The Language ofJane Austen, pp. 49, I97. "JaneAusten has developed a syntax exceptionally sensitiveto shiftsin emotional tone." 50 NINETEENTH-CENTURY FICTION mentbetrayedin Frederick'sface; her eye catches "a certainglance of his brighteye, and curl of his handsome mouth" (p. 285). Anne's perceptionsindicate that she is not onlyinterestedin his opinions, but also attractedto and captivatedby theparticularsofhisphysical appearance. When Frederickseats himselfnext to the capacious Mrs. Musgrove,Austen'ssatiricaldescriptionsof the lattercounterbalance but do not outweigh Anne's more serious arousal at the noveltyof being physicallyclose to her ex-lover:"They were actually on the same sofa." Quietly hidden among Austen's comic descriptionsof Mrs. Musgrove's"fatsighings"is a passing,almostimperceptible referenceto Anne's body, unobtrusiveand greatlyaffectedby the intensityof close confinement:"the agitationsof Anne's slender form, and pensive face, may be considered as very completely screened" (pp. 285-86). The broad body of Mrs. Musgrove is the social "screen" that allows Anne's passionate impulses to remain undetected and unfulfilledby Wentworth;nonetheless,the sexual longings within the heroine's seeminglydelicate frame are by no means screenedfromthe reader,who perceivesthe agitationof suppressed desires.'5 This scene a troisis a more seriousversionof a similarbut comically wrong encounter in Emma, in which Mrs. Weston, Emma, and Mr. Elton forman annoyinglycozy threesomeon a sofa: "at last the drawing-roomparty did receive an augmentation. Mr. Elton, in verygood spirits,was one of the firstto walk in. Mrs. Westonand Emma weresittingtogetheron a sopha. He joined them immediately, and with scarcely an invitation,seated himselfbetween them."16 Whereas Frederick Wentworth prudently and strategicallysitsone seat removedfromAnne, Mr. Elton obtrudes his unwanted presence upon close friends,invading Emma's exclusivelyprivate momentswith her beloved companion. Emma is offendedby Mr. Elton's sillyaggression physicalclosenesscauses hergreatdiscomfort.Moreover,once the unknowingheroinebegins to perceivethatshe is the object of his parading romanticovertures, 15Tanner,introd., Penguin edition of Sense and Sensibility,describesthe society that impinges similarlyupon Marianne Dashwood's passions and fantasies: "It is a world completelydominated by forms,forwhich another word may be screens" (p. I5). '6Emma, ed. David Lodge, OxfordEnglishNovels (London: OxfordUniv. Press, I97I), p. II2. LEARNING ROMANCE IN Persuasion 51 the claustrophobic seating arrangement is hardly a source of pleasure; it is indeed "perverse"(Emma, p. 113). Emma is a decidedly cool and unphysicalheroine, immensely threatenedby bodily contact, especially when such contact points only to her own errorand misperception. When she is vexed and agitated, she is angry. Anne Elliot also suffersagitation in similar but potentially more serious and more authentically romantic circumstances;her agitation, however,does not consistin anger. There is nothingperversein the comedyon the sofa at Uppercross. On the contrary,the opportunityaffordsAnne great satisfaction and pleasure in spite of simultaneous uncertaintyand embarrassment. When Anne is agitated and vexed by intimationsof physical attraction,she feels an ambiguous, arousing emotion of mingled pleasure and pain. While Mrs. Musgrove occupies the most space on the couch, absorbing most of Austen's narrative, the comedy rankssecond to the more subtle, decisive beginningsof a renewed love affair. The busysocietyof the extended Musgrovefamilyprovidesfew opportunitiesin which Anne and Frederickfindthemselvesalone; nor are theyready at early stages of the novel for a private tete-'atete. Insignificantcharacterssuch as Mrs. Musgrove and Charles Hayter are but inconsequential barriers who enable Anne and Frederickcomfortablyto maintain theirdistance and apparent indifference;such obstructionsactuallyserveto throwthe loversinto sharperreliefas theyseek subtlyappealing methodsof testingeach other's feeling and will. The drawingroom at theCottageis thesettingforanothercomic satistriangle,whichis at once extremelyawkwardand wonderfully fying.Upon Captain Wentworth'sentrance,both he and Anne experience nervouspleasure at findingthemselvespracticallyalone: "The surpriseof findinghimselfalmost alone with Anne Elliot, deprived his manners of their usual composure" (p. 296). Their clumsy, stilted greetingsmark the firsttime Austen representsa completed exchange of dialogue between them. Their words are nicelysupplementedwithnarrativedescriptionof theirmutual selfconsciousness and discomfort: had been He started,and could onlysay,"I thoughttheMissMusgroves here- Mrs.Musgrovetoldme I shouldfindthemhere," beforehe walked to thewindowto recollecthimself,and feelhowhe oughtto behave. 52 NINETEENTH-CENTURY FICTION "They are up stairswithmysister-they willbe downin a fewmoments,I daresay," -had beenAnne'sreply,in all theconfusionthatwas natural;and ifthechildhad notcalledhertocomeand do something for him,shewouldhavebeenoutoftheroomthenextmoment. (p. 296) Neitherthe child nor Mr. Haytercan smoothoverthe "zigzags" ofembarrassment;insteadtheycause Anne and Frederickto be even more conscious of the inevitabilityof a confrontation.The scene culminatesin a peculiar entanglementbetweenAnne and her persistentnephew. It is importantforthe reader to visualizethisscene, because it is such a rare passage of explicit descriptionin Austen's prose; moreover, it is a literal embodiment of awkward feelings, which are becomingincreasinglyagitated. This is the mostunusual and dramatic physical confrontationin the novel: Therebeingnothingto be eat, he could onlyhavesomeplay; and as his auntwouldnotlethimteazehissickbrother,he began to fastenhimself uponher,as sheknelt,in sucha waythat,busyas shewasaboutCharles, she could notshakehimoff.She spoketo him-ordered,intreated,and insistedin vain. Once shedid contrive to pushhimaway,buttheboyhad the greaterpleasurein gettingupon her back again directly. (pp. 296-97) For a brief and highly entertaining moment, drawing-room decorum is pushed aside by the vigorousspontaneityof an active child. In thisatypicalscene, we are givena glimpseof characterschildren and adults -not as mere minds and sensibilities or stereotypes,but as tangible and tangled bodies. The child enjoys physical contact with his attractiveaunt, and when he is pushed away, he seeks the pleasure a second time, with his "little sturdy hands." In the meantime, the heroine is pictured in a distinctly unheroic,unflattering position;howevercontortedher posturemay be, she is nonethelessan appealing physicalpresence in the eyesof her playfulnephew. Most important,her contortedposition,kneeling and struggling,and her fruitlessattemptsto resistthe vexing assault, are witnessedand relievedby Captain Wentworth,who is also acutelyaware ofAnne as one who here assertsherselfphysically. He looks upon her back, her neck, her head (and her eyes,mouth, hands, and feet), intriguedby her veryawkwardness.Naturally, LEARNING ROMANCE IN Persuasion 53 therefore,it is he who rescues her, touching her forthe firsttime in eight years: In anothermoment,however,shefoundherselfin thestateofbeingreleasedfromhim;someone was takinghimfromher,thoughhe had bent handswereunfastened from downherhead so much,thathislittlesturdy borneaway,beforesheknewthat aroundherneck,and he wasresolutely (p. 297) Captain Wentworth had done it. Not a word passes between them. Anne is rendered perfectly speechless -in part, no doubt, by sheerexhaustionand vexationbut mostlyby her "sensations"on discoveringthat FrederickWentworthhad been so close to her. Affectedwiththe "mostdisordered feelings,"Anne reviewsthe episode, with apparent relishforeach detail, each littleparticular: His kindnessin steppingforwardto herrelief-themanner- thesilence - with in whichit had passed- thelittleparticularsofthecircumstance theconviction soonforcedon herbythenoisehe was studiously making withthe child,thathe meantto avoid hearingher thanks,and rather thatherconversation was thelastofhiswants,produced soughtto testify sucha confusionofvarying,butverypainfulagitation,as she could not recoverfrom,tillenabledbytheentranceofMaryand theMissMusgroves tomakeoverherlittlepatienttotheircares,and leavetheroom.She could notstay. (p. 297) Jane Austen's diction for physical gratification- "sensations" and "littleparticulars"-is vague and, by currentstandards, quite prim and primitive; nevertheless,she distinctlysuggests Anne's aroused statein passingphrases. She acknowledgesAnne's pleasure, not onlyin Frederick'skindnessbut in his engaging "manner," and mostof all in the charming"littleparticularsof the circumstance."''7 Although Anne leaves the room in "verypainful" confusion,her pain carrieswithit the paradoxical pleasure of passionate warmth and romantic possibility. On the excursion to Winthrop Anne is at times "withinreach of Captain Wentworth'sconversation,"although she neverspeaks with him. Nor, forthat matter, do any members of the partyindicate a desireto speak to her. She is a mute listener,and when she "7Litz,"Persuasion: Forms of Estrangement,"notes the "rapid and nervoussyntax designed to imitate the bombardment of impressionsupon the mind" (p. 228). 54 NINETEENTH-CENTURY FICTION inquires,"Is not thisone of thewaysto Winthrop?"no one responds (pp. 300, 30I). Anne is contentsimplyto be near Captain Went- worth. She catches his contemptuousglance in response to Mary's affected snobbery, and later, afraid to move, she overhears Frederick'scriticismsof yielding and indecisive characters, as he flirtswithLouisa Musgrove.The scene reachesa climax in one more point of contact in a favoriteAusten setting,the carriage. Inspired by the courteousappeal of theirbrother,the happilymarriedCrofts eagerly"compressed themselvesinto the smallestpossible space to leave her a corner,and Captain Wentworth,withoutsayinga word, turned to her, and quietly obliged her to be assistedinto the carriage" (p. 307). At thisjuncture Wentworth'smere act of turning in Anne's directionis more than enough, both to satisfyher of his likelyaffectionand to provoke the most agitated sensations. The exquisitemomentof physicalcontact,however,evokeseven greater pleasure, a sharper sense of mutual warmth and attraction: Yes,- he had doneit. Shewasin thecarriage,and feltthathe had placed herthere,thathiswilland hishandshad done it, thatsheowedit to his perceptionofherfatigue,and hisresolution togiveherrest.She wasvery muchaffectedbytheviewofhisdispositiontowardsherwhichall these seemedthecompletionof thingsmade apparent.Thislittlecircumstance all thathad gone before. (p. 307) Carriages affordwonderfulopportunitiesforphysicalintimacy, vexation, and anxiety-with eithercomic or tenderresults.It was in a carriage that Emma Woodhouse found "her hand seized -her attentiondemanded," and sufferedthemortification of a "Mr. Elton actuallymakingviolentlove to her" (Emma, p. II7). In Anne's case, Captain Wentworth'shands are just as real and important as his will. She knows romance keenly, though her youthfulbloom has passed. Anne Elliot and Captain Wentworthare onlyhalf together at this"momentof completion"; she is in a compact, crowded carriage, while he remains at the door. The relative distance hardly mattersto Anne, who is more than content;the certaintyof hishand is enough -"he had done it." Frederick's short-livedflirtationwith Louisa Musgrove and Anne's subsequentidentificationwithher cousin Mr. Elliot are but temporaryaggravationsthat serveto intensifytrueremotions and LEARNING ROMANCE IN Persuasion 55 draw the loversnearer theircommon destination. In Lyme Anne enjoysa quick successionof male admirersand companions -Mr. Elliot, Captain Benwick, and even Captain Harville- who arouse to Anne's physicalattributesand charms. He Frederick'ssensitivity is piqued withwarm admirationand withjealousy whenhe sees how attractiveshe is to othermen. When Anne passes Mr. Elliot on the stairwayfromthe beach, he is arrestedby her physicalappearance: "Anne's face caught his eye, and he looked at her with a degree of earnest admiration, which she could not be insensibleof. She was lookingremarkablywell; herveryregular,veryprettyfeatures,having thebloom and freshness ofyouthrestoredbythefinewindwhich had been blowingon her complexion, and by the animation of eye which it had also produced." To Frederick,who has witnessedthe suggestiveencounter, Anne is no longer a bittermemory,a slight acquaintance with a sensible mind and an injured heart; she is a woman whose personis lovelyand remarkablysensuous. Mr. Elliot, who eventuallyprovesto be an interference,is at firsta catalystfor Captain Wentworth'ssparked passion. The triangularencounter enables Frederickto addressAnne, firstimplicitlywitha glance that Anne interprets,and later in a warmer and more direct address, as theywatch Mr. Elliot'sdeparturefromthe inn: " 'Ah!' cried Captain Wentworth,instantly,and withhalf a glance at Anne; 'it is the veryman we passed' " (pp. 3I9, 320). Anne is so secureand certainin herlove forCaptain Wentworth, and so hopeful of a returnof affection,that she is not threatened byphysicalcontactwithothermen who enjoyherelegant,intelligent company.She respondsto Captain Benwickand happilyinviteshim to be near her, withoutfear of the implications or consequences. Since she knows her own heart, she does not sufferthe physical alarms of a naive and obtuse Emma. Captain Benwick is always drawing near Anne; he even "cling[s]" (p. 324), and she comfortably accepts his familiarityand satisfieshis simpleneeds. When she actuallyrunsinto Mr. Elliot in the hotel'snarrowpassageway,Anne is not vexed. She is relaxed withsuch men and withherself.It is only in the presence of Captain Wentworththat she experiences quite differentsensations. AlthoughJane Austenwas ill and fatiguedas she composed her final novel, and though the final chapters of Persuasion are 56 NINETEENTH-CENTURY FICTION somewhat clumsy,particularlythose which treat Mrs. Smith, the author nonethelesscontrolsskillfully and delicatelythe growingintimacybetween her hero and heroine. The energyand interestin theirincreasinglypassionate, albeit painfuland occasionallyuncersustainedrightup to the culminating tain attachmentis masterfully declarationof love. While the reader is fullyconfidentof the novel's happy outcome, Austen's slow, meticulous preparation for the climax-with all the little complications of circumstance-is rewardingin its suspense and romance. The accident at Lyme marks the end of Captain Wentworth's attachmentto Louisa (and almostthe end of Louisa herself);it also opens thewayformore frequentand directdiscoursebetweenAnne and Frederick.They discussappropriatemeasuresto be takenwith the injured Louisa, while the restof the company stand by helpless and hysterical.Frederickasks Anne's advice and trustsin her rare ability. The minimal conversationtheyshare, however,is superseded by the warmththat arisesfromthe privateconsciousnessthat they are once again physicallyclose: "You willstay,I am sure;youwillstayand nurseher;"criedhe, turning whichseemedalmost toherand speakingwitha glow,andyeta gentleness, restoring thepast.- She coloureddeeply;and he recollected himself, and movedaway.-She expressedherselfmostwilling,ready,happyto remain. (p- 329) Even the carefulpauses enhance the romanticimplicationsof this warm exchange. When theyeventuallyfindthemselvestogetherin the same carriage en route to Uppercross,Frederickspeaks onlyto Henrietta. Anne is silent,out of embarrassmentperhaps, but more likelyout of the sense that to be so close to Captain Wentworthis more than sufficient.Dialogue would be superfluous. Once Louisa is removed fromthe central plot, Mr. Elliot is introduced to provide additional delay and agitation. Throughout the sojourn at Bath, Austen makes the most of chance meetings, handshakes,surpriseentrancesand disappointingexits.When Anne and Captain Wentworthmeet suddenlybelow Milsom Street(after a long separationspanningfivechapters),each experiencesthe ambivalence of pleasure and discomfort: He wasmoreobviously struckand confusedbythesightofher,thanshe had everobserved before;he lookedquitered.Forthefirst time,sincetheir LEARNING ROMANCE IN Persuasion 57 theleastsensibilrenewedacquaintance,she feltthatshewas betraying ityof thetwo.She had theadvantageof him,in thepreparationof the firstefblinding,bewildering, lastfewmoments.All theoverpowering, wereoverwithher.Still,however, shehad enough fectsofstrongsurprise betweendelightand tofeel!It was agitation,pain,pleasure,a something misery. (P. 384) Once Mr. Elliot arrives,the consciousnessis even more acute. In a scene reminiscentof the memorable greetingon the stairwayat Lyme, FrederickwatchesMr. Elliot as thelatterwatchesAnne. This time, however,Mr. Elliot does not merelywatch; offeringhis arm, he gallantlyescortsAnne fromthe square, leaving her littletime to show Frederick an explanatory sign: He came in witheagerness,appearedtosee and thinkonlyofher,apologisedforhisstay,wasgrievedtohavekeptherwaiting,and anxioustoget herawaywithoutfurther lossoftime,and beforetherainincreased;and herarmunderhis,a gentle in anothermomenttheywalkedofftogether, and embarrassed glance,and a "goodmorningtoyou,"beingall thatshe had timefor,as she passed away. (PP. 385-86) Jane Austen'sexplicitstage directions,her meticulousblocking of individualpositionsand movements,her configurationof groups of charactersare renderedwithcomic skilland seriousconsequence in all the novels. The stagingof the scene at the concerthall in Persuasion is a matterof great significance,fromthe momentCaptain Wentworthenters- alone. His very arrival is no small thrillfor Anne. For the firsttime,he seemsrelativelycomposed: "Aftertalking howeverof the weather and Bath and the concert, theirconversationbegan to flag, and so littlewas said at last, that she was expecting him to go everymoment; but he did not; he seemed in no hurryto leave her" (pp. 389-go). In thisscene, each character is more sensitivethan ever to the glances and blushesof the other,and both Frederickand Anne are equally consciousof theirown internalstates.He pauses in the middle of a substantial speech, arrested by her telling blush: "He stopped. A sudden recollectionseemed to occur, and to give him some tasteof that emotionwhichwas reddeningAnne's cheeksand fixingher eyeson the ground." His impassioned monologue on the subject of Benwick'sdevotion causes Anne "to breathe veryquick, and feel an hundred thingsin a moment" (pp. 390, 39g). Oblivious 58 NINETEENTH-CENTURY FICTION to the surrounding noises of the public hall, Anne suffersand delights in her own physical response, her "exquisite, though agitated sensations" and "delightfulemotions" (p. 392). She feels regretwhen he disappears, but takes time to review the minute details of the encounter: Shewasthinking onlyofthelasthalfhour,and as theypassedtotheirseats, hermindtooka hastyrangeoverit.His choiceofsubjects,hisexpressions, and stillmorehismannerand look,had beensuchas shecouldseein only an opinionwhich one light.His opinionofLouisa Musgrove's inferiority, he had seemedsolicitoustogive,hiswonderat CaptainBenwick,hisfeelingsas to a first, strongattachment, -sentencesbegunwhichhe couldnot finish -his halfavertedeyes,and morethanhalfexpressive glance,-all, to herat least. all declaredthathe had a heartreturning (p. 393) During the remainderof the evening,Anne's eyetriesto "reach" him, beyond the crowd, and particularlybeyond the ill-timedadvances of Mr. Elliot. As Mr. Elliot draws too near, Anne detects a change in Captain Wentworth'smood: "As her eyesfellon him, his seemed to be withdrawn from her. It had that appearance. It seemed as ifshe had been one moment too late; and as long as she dared observe,he did not look again." Recordingeverymovement, she strugglesin vain to meet his eye: "When she could give another glance, he had moved away. He could not have come nearer to her ifhe would; she was so surroundedand shutin: but she would rather have caught his eye" (p. 396).18 Against the busy backdrop of a crowdedhall,Jane AustenbringsAnne's physicallongingsand emotional uncertaintiesinto dramatic relief:"She could not quit that room in peace without seeing Captain Wentworth once more, withouttheinterchangeof one friendlylook." When he comes "only byveryslowdegrees . . . at last near enough to speak to her,"showing "almost a smile," the forthcomingreconciliation is disrupted once more by theinterference of Mr. Elliot,who touchesher: "They talked for a few minutes more; the improvementheld; he even looked down towardsthe bench, as ifhe saw a place on it wellworth occupying;when, at thatmoment,a touch on her shoulderobliged 18This scene is comparable to the London partysettingin Sense and Sensibility in which Marianne is snubbed by Willoughby: Marianne blushes crimson, while Elinor and Willoughby strugglefor composure. Tanner observes, "They are all in a sense trapped and immobilized and as a result all the activitygoes into the eyes"; and, according to Tanner, the blush exhibits "passion under pressure" (introd., Sense and Sensibility,Penguin ed., pp. 20-2I). LEARNING ROMANCE IN Persuasion 59 Anne to turn round. -It came from Mr. Elliot." Consequently, Captain Wentworthleaves the room with a "reservedyet hurried sortoffarewell"and thebitterstatementthat"thereis nothingworth my stayingfor" (pp. 397, 398). As thenarratorhas describedthe tentativeyeturgentmovement between unavowed lovers, Anne Elliot and FrederickWentworth come near each other "only by veryslow degrees." The culmination of theiranxious effortsis delayed onlyby an awkward tension in whichFrederickdoes not seem to want to be near her; at the same time, however,he offersher a glowingcheek and a conscious look. Beforetheyfindthemselvescompletelysolitaryand intimatein the certaintyof love revealed, theycommunicate once more through a third party, Captain Harville. Uncertaintyand suspense cause acute sensations and abrupt movements: [Anne]felt. .. a nervousthrillall overher,and at thesamemomentthat glancedtowardsthedistanttable, Captain Wenthereyesinstinctively worth'spen ceased tomove,hishead was raised,pausing,listening,and he turnedroundthenextinstanttogivea look-one quick,consciouslook at her. (pp. 435-36) Mutual desireis realized in a penetratingglance betweenthe sexes; moreover,Anne's passion is manifestednot only in her eyes-she feels the somatic thrill"all over." The epistolaryconventionas a means of communicationat the crucial moment offersa few comic effectswhich ease the tedium of debate between Anne and Harville and relievethe nervoustension between Frederick and Anne. Captain Wentworth,who has been mute throughoutthe scene, takes his leave witha speech that is barelycoherent:"'Yes,' said he, 'verytrue; herewe separate, but Harville and I shall soon be afteryou, that is, Harville, if you are ready, I am in half a minute. I knowyou will not be sorryto be off. I shall be at your service in half a minute' " (p. 440). Like Mr. Knightley,Captain Wentworthmight be able to speak more eloquently if he loved Anne less passionately. Frederick'sdesperate, precious"halfa minute"determinesa lifetimeofhappiness.Leaving the room in a "hurried, agitated air, which shewed impatience to be gone," and passing out "without a look," Frederickreappears gloves. withinmoments,witha feeble,funnyexcuse about forgotten He offersa letterto Anne, with "eyes of glowingentreatyfixedon 60 NINETEENTH-CENTURY FICTION her fora moment." It is a letterwhich Anne "devour[s]" (pp. 440, 44'). The postscriptattached to Frederick'swrittenproposal sumsup the nature of this passionately earnest, sensible attachment: "A word, a look will be enough" (p. 442). Indeed, as if fulfillinghis prophecy,Anne accepts Captain Wentworth'sproposal withbut a look, receivinghis warm glow and accepting his active movement in her direction: Theywerein Union-street, whena quickerstepbehind,a somethingof familiarsound,gavehertwomomentspreparationforthesightofCapHe joined them;but, as ifirresolute whethertojoin or tainWentworth. to pass on, said nothing-onlylooked. Anne could commandherself The cheekswhichhad enoughto receivethatlook,and notrepulsively. been pale now glowed,and the movementswhichhad hesitatedwere decided. He walkedbyherside. (p. 444) Althoughseveralpages offriendlyconversationensue, Austen'swork is virtuallydone the moment FrederickWentworthwalks by Anne Elliot's side. A look, a gestureare enough. As Captain Harville has said, there is "a true analogy between our bodily framesand our mental." He is Austen's spokesman in Persuasion: "As our bodies are the strongest,so are our feelings"(p.437). Persuasion isJane Austen'smostunreservedlyphysicalnovel. In all her works,she is deeply interestedin dramatizing the circumstances and motivesthat cause charactersto walk arm in arm, ride in appointed carriages, group themselveson specificsofas. In her final novel, however,physical contact is seldom merelycomic or threatening.This is a novel in which a youngwoman leaps offa sea wall because the sensationof being in a man's arms is delightfulto her. A husband and wifeeagerlyaccompanyeach othereverywhere, happilycompressthemselvesinto a carriage,because theyenjoybeing physically close. As Louisa Musgrove contemplates the matrimonial state, she thinksnot in abstract termsof felicityand harmonybut in anticipationof sexual intimacy:"If I loved a man, as she loves the Admiral, I would be always with him, nothing should everseparate us, and I would ratherbe overturnedby him, than driven safelyby anybody else" (p. 30I). In the case of Anne and Frederick,the physicalmanifestations of love are hardly so obvious as those of the devoted and demonstrative Crofts. Nonetheless, the real power of the novel LEARNING ROMANCE IN Persuasion 61 residesin Austen'ssuccessin sustainingthe credibilityof a renewed emotional attachment throughphysical signs. A.lthoughtheyare seeminglydistant,Anne and Wentworthbecome increasinglymore intimatethroughseductivehalf-glances,consciousgazes, and slight bodily contact. Slowlytheycome to know each otherin a togetherness that is at once physicallygratifying and emotionallysatisfying. While Jane Austen's language forsensual pleasure is reservedand decorous, Persuasion is more than a slightacknowledgmentthat men and women have physicalneeds and desiresforclosenessand contact. By the slightestof degrees,Anne Elliot and Captain Wentworthcome nearer each other to rediscovera period of "exquisite felicity,"having experiencedpainful sensationsand delightfulvexations,in anticipationof a lifetimeof deep intimacyand intelligent love. The Spence School, New York City