Part of a painting in The Tudor House Museum in Bugle Street. It shows the Marquis of Landsdownes house next to Castle Square. The house Jane lived in is just before it.
We can refocus our view of Jane Austen's life and her novels by seeing it through the prism of her stay in the maritime port of Southampton. It is so easy to ignore or pass by Jane's Southampton experiences but they were an integral part of her life.
We can refocus our view of Jane Austen's life and her novels by seeing it through the prism of her stay in the maritime port of Southampton. It is so easy to ignore or pass by Jane's Southampton experiences but they were an integral part of her life.
In 1782, Jane, at the age of seven, was sent to Mrs
Crawley’s school in Oxford, with her sister Cassandra and her cousin, Jane
Cooper. However a measles epidemic occurred in Oxford in 1783. Mrs Crawley
removed her school swiftly to Southampton. Measles could be a killer in
the 18th and 19th
centurys and removing her charges was the best thing Mrs Crawley could do. Jane
was in Southampton only a short while before an infectious fever rampaged
through Southampton, brought to the town by troops arriving from foreign fields.
The three girls became very ill and although Mrs Crawley, for some reason, did not want them to write to their
parents, Jane Cooper, managed to get a message to her mother who was staying in
Bath at the time along with Mrs Austen. The two mothers immediately traveled
to Southampton and nursed their children to health before taking them back to
Bath. Unfortunately Mrs Cooper caught the fever herself and died. So Jane’s
first encounter with Southampton was not an auspicious one.
The medieval entrance into Southampton, The Bargate. The site of the Costa coffee shop is the site of All Saints Church where Jane attended services given by Dr Mant.
Jane,visited Southampton again in 1793. She was nearly eighteen and arrived in Southampton to visit a cousin from her fathers side of the family from Tonbridge in Kent. Elizabeth Matilde Austen had married a
Southampton gentleman with the surname Butler-Harris. He became the Sherriff of
the town.They lived in the St Mary's district of Southampton, outside the ancient walls, on the site of the old Saxon town. Jane was asked to help her cousin because she was about to have
a baby. While in Southampton Jane went to a ball at The Dolphin Hotel in the
High Street to celebrate her 18th birthday.
Her third experience of Southampton followed her time in Bath. In 1801, to the consternation of Cassandra and Jane, their
father, George Austen, retired, and left the parish of Steventon, along with
the rectory, to his son, James and his wife Mary. Jane was twenty five years
old and had imagined she would lead the rest of her life at Steventon. She had led
a settled existence and had formed her writing habits in those familiar rural surroundings. Suddenly all this
was disrupted and she and Cassandra were removed to Bath for the next five
years. George Austen died in 1805, the year of The Battle of Trafalgar, and the
following year,Cassandra, Jane, Martha Lloyd, Jane's best friend, and their mother all moved
to a house in Castle Square, Southampton.
In 1806 Jane’s brother, Francis, married Mary Gibson. He was a naval officer and so had to go away to sea. He wanted his mother and sisters to live with his new wife and keep her company. Portsmouth, where Francis would sail from, was a place for sailors, a rough and colourful place, rife with the dens of iniquity. Southampton, nineteen miles away at the head of Southampton Water, was far more genteel and had been a successful spa town attracting the aristocracy. Jane and her family immersed themselves in the life of Southampton for two years, shopping, attending balls, going to the theatre, attending church services, visiting new acquaintances and receiving and entertaining nephews, nieces, brothers, friends, neighbours and sisters’ in-law. Jane commented on many detailed aspects of her life in Southampton in her letters to Cassandra and also to other members of her family.
In 1806 Jane’s brother, Francis, married Mary Gibson. He was a naval officer and so had to go away to sea. He wanted his mother and sisters to live with his new wife and keep her company. Portsmouth, where Francis would sail from, was a place for sailors, a rough and colourful place, rife with the dens of iniquity. Southampton, nineteen miles away at the head of Southampton Water, was far more genteel and had been a successful spa town attracting the aristocracy. Jane and her family immersed themselves in the life of Southampton for two years, shopping, attending balls, going to the theatre, attending church services, visiting new acquaintances and receiving and entertaining nephews, nieces, brothers, friends, neighbours and sisters’ in-law. Jane commented on many detailed aspects of her life in Southampton in her letters to Cassandra and also to other members of her family.
The Assembly Rooms near castle Square.
By the time Jane Austen and her family moved to Southampton in 1806 she had already written, Susan, an early version of Northanger
Abbey, Elinor and Marianne, an early version of Sense and Sensibility and First
Impressions a first version of Pride and Prejudice. Later, after leaving
Southampton for Chawton, she was to edit these early versions before publishing
them and also to write, Mansfield Park, Emma and Persuasion in their entirety. Southampton
and her experiences there must have influenced her editing and her writing. Jane Austen wrote about the world she knew and lived in.
This year, 2014, is the two hundredth anniversary of the
publication of Mansfield Park. One of the strands in Mansfield Park, that Jane
Austen explores, is the clergy. The clergy feature strongly in Pride and
Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility also and to a greater and lesser
extent in all her novels. Her father was a clergyman, James her brother was a
clergyman and her brother Henry eventually became one. In many of her letters
she mentions the clergymen she knew and this is evident in her letters written
from Southampton.
It is interesting to note that while living in Southampton,
Jane and Martha Lloyd attended the services officiated by Dr Mant at All Saints Church in the High Street. There were other churches closer to Castle Square.
St Michaels Church in St Michaels Square was a short distance from Castle Square and is
the oldest church in Southampton, and also there was Holyrood Church, in the
High Street. There is no mention of these churches in her letters. It seems
that Jane Austen searched out Dr Mant and his sermons, to be challenged by his
radical views.
The Greek columned building on the right is All Saints Church where Jane Austen attended services with Martha Lloyd.
Dr Mant was a leading biblical scholar. He was born in
Havant in Hampshire in 1745 and died in 1817. He was a clergyman who wrote and
delivered his own sermons, unlike Mary Crawford’s suggestion in Mansfield Park,
that a sensible clergyman should rely on prepared sermons such as those of
Blaire. Dr Mant wrote pamphlets and treatises and caused controversy and debate
about,”Regeneration and Conversion.”
Dr Richard Mant born 1745 died 1817,. Rector of All Saints, headmaster of King Edward VI Grammar School from 1770.
In 1770 he was the headmaster of King Edwards School,
then situated in Bugle Street, Southampton. It appears that he was an ambitious
clergyman who wanted to make a name for himself. He was interested in
education and, from Jane's letters, we know he took a very personal interest in his congregation
although it can be debated what sort of interest.
Wednesday 18th January 1809 (To Cassandra) Castle
Square
“Martha and Dr Mant
are as bad as ever; he runs after her in the street to apologise for having
spoken to a gentleman while she was near him the day before.-Poor Mrs Mant can
stand it no longer; she is retired to one of her married Daughters.- “
Tuesday 24th January 1809 (Castle Square)
(referring to Martha’s ongoing relationship with Dr Mant)
“As Dr M is a clergyman their attachment however immoral it is,
has a decorous air…!”
Mrs Mant was born Elizabeth Roe in Lambeth. Lambeth Palace was and is the London residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury,
the leading Church of England cleric. We can conjecture she was
the daughter of a high ranking cleric. Unfortunately It appears that
her husband, Dr Mant, was a flirt and that Martha Lloyd was besotted with him.
Jane often takes us to the heart of the drama of being a
clergyman, either real clergymen in her letters or fictitious ones in her novels. The
clergymen in the novels always add an important element to the plot and the
clergymen in real life add spice and intrigue to Jane’s everyday life.
Jane s letters from Castle Square also provide
some detailed insights into what a ball was like and the politics and
manoeuvrings that a ball entailed.
Friday 9th December 1808 Castle Square to
Cassandra
“Our ball was rather more amusing than I expected, Martha
liked it very much, and I did not gape till the last quarter of an hour.-It was
past nine before we were sent for, and not twelve when we returned.-The room
was tolerably full, and there were perhaps thirty couples of dancers;- the
melancholy part was to see so many dozen young Women standing by without
partners, and each of them with two ugly naked shoulders!-It was the same room
we danced fifteen years ago!-I thought it all over-and in spite of the shame of
being so much older, felt with thankfulness, that I was quite as happy now as
then.-We paid an additional shilling for our Tea, which we took as we chose in
an adjoining room.- There were only four dances, and it went to my heart that
the Miss Lances, (one of them too named Emma) should have partners only for
two.-You will not expect to hear that I was asked to dance- but I was- by the
gentleman we met that Sunday with captain D’auvergene. We have always kept up a
Bowing acquaintance since, and being pleased with his black eyes, I spoke to
him at the ball, which brought me to this civility; but I do not know his name,
and he seems so little at home with the English Language that I believe his black
eyes may be the best of him. Captain D’auvergne has got a ship.”
It appears that Jane was feeling
her age at this ball. She is sanguine about the whole affair and obviously made
the best of it. She even appears to have enjoyed herself. It, “was rather more
amusing,” than she expected. “I did not gape,” presumably meaning that she did
not yawn. The ball began at nine in the evening and went on past midnight. She
was concerned for the women with no partners. Women need partners, in more ways than one. It
is interesting to find that young ladies in their quest to keep up with fashion
will make some unsuitable dress decisions. Some fashions do not compliment all body shapes. “The two ugly shoulders,” reference points to a
fashion issue. These women should not have revealed their shoulders. They appear to be
keeping up with fashion no matter how painful the consequences.
In her letter, Jane is reporting to
Cassandra, in quite some detail, the goings on at the Dolphin ball. Who was
there, who was not; how people interacted and her sensations and feelings about
the ball. We have the preparation for the ball, the ball itself and the post
ball analysis. The ball at Netherton in Pride and Prejudice and also the ball at Highbury, in Emma, come to mind. In fact the ball at Highbury is held in an inn
just as the Dolphin ball is. We can see some similarities and connections
between the two locations. There is a fireplace at the end of the ballroom
in the Dolphin as there is a fireplace in the ballroom in Highbury. Similar
themes and actions occur in the fictitious balls and the real ball;expectations, anticipation of happiness, disappointments,
unexpected occurrences, absences and surprise attendances, character analysis, detailed observations, facial expressions, the tone of voices and
eavesdropping on conversations and all the rules and formalities of a ball.
For Elizabeth, the Netherton Ball, certainly
was not the smooth, elegant, enjoyable occasion she had probably hoped for. Perhaps the displaying of “two ugly shoulders,” in Jane's letter from Southampton, is not on a
par with what Elizabeth suffered but the element of suffering and embarrassment
is there.
At the Highbury Ball in Emma, Miss
Bates, one of the most irritating of characters, continually talks, describing the details of the ball. Jane Austen, in her letters to Cassandra about the Dolphin Balls
is playing, in a more subdued way, the part of Miss Bates. Jane and Miss Bates tell us the details,
things we would never find out otherwise.
While in Southampton, the Austens
got to know a family called the Lances. Jane attended balls with Mrs Lance and
her daughters and visited Mrs Lance at her grand house overlooking the valley
in which the Portsmouth Road wends its way from Southampton and across Northam
Bridge. All the social niceties, manners and rules of politeness are in evidence in Jane’s letters. Her visits to Mrs Lance
could almost be scenes from her novels.
Thursday 8th January
1807 to Cassandra.
”to the Berties are to be added the
Lances, with whose cards we have been endowed, and whose visit Frank and I
returned yesterday. They live about a mile and three quarters from S. to the
right of the new road to Portsmouth, and
I believe their house is one of those which are to be seen almost anywhere
among the woods on the other side of the Itchen. It is a handsome building,
stands high, and in a very beautiful situation. We found only Mrs Lance at
home, and whether she boasts any offspring besides a grand pianoforte did not
appear. She was civil and chatty enough, and offered to introduce us to some
acquaintance in Southampton.”
At a later date Jane visited the Lances with
Martha Lloyd.
Friday 9th December 1808
to Cassandra.
“Martha and I made use of the very favourable
state of yesterday for walking to Chiswell- we found Mrs Lance at home and alone,
and sat out three other ladies who soon came in.- We went by the ferry and
returned by the bridge, and were scarcely at all fatigued.”
The same rules of etiquette apply
whether Mr Knightley is visiting Emma and Mr Woodhouse in Highbury or Darcy is
visiting the Bennetts or the Bertrams are visiting Mr and Mrs Grant in Mansfield Park. The same tensions, politeness’s and finally the
analysis and reaction and thoughts about the people visited.
Northam Bridge taking the Portsmouth Road over the River Itchen.
Any group wanting to visit the
England of Jane Austen would do very well if they based themselves in Southampton.
The Dolphin Hotel, where those balls were attended, is a Georgian building and a four star hotel.
From The Dolphin Hotel a walk
around Southampton might include, Castle Square and a pub lunch in The Juniper
Berry (Bosuns Locker), on the site of Jane's Southampton home.
" We hear that we are envied our House by many people and that the garden is the best in town."(22nd February 1807).
Another site mentioned in her letters is the theatre,
"Martha aught to see the inside of the Theatre once while she lives in Southampton..." (9th December 1808),
Other sites include the location of the beach where the Austens ice skated in the winter.The site and line of the beach is a curious bending path that bisects Green Park, opposite one of the docks in Southampton. The irregular course of the path is understood when you discover that it follows the shoreline that existed before the Southampton Docks were built on reclaimed land. The first docks opening in 1843. The expansion of the docks continued after that.
A short drive takes you to the site of the Lances estate at “Chiswell,” now known as Chessel, which is part of Bitterne, a suburb of Southampton. The gate house and the two pillars marking the entrance to the Lance estate are still remaining. Two roads are named after the Lances, Lances Hill and Little Lances Hill.
The River Itchen, creating a natural border to the east of Southampton, is the river Jane and her nephews Edward and George rowed from the Itchen Ferry up river to Northam Bridge, " where we landed, looked into the 74,and walked home." ( a "74," referring to a battleship of 74 guns.)
A trip, a few miles east, outside of Southampton to the beautiful setting of the ancient ruins of Netley Abbey would be an ideal spot for a picnic. Jane and her family had picnics at Netley.
"I shall think of you tonight as at Netley and tomorrow too..." ( 22nd June 1808)
Netley Abbey influenced the Gothic movement instigated by Horace Walpole. Jane's earlier stays in Southampton may have been times when she was introduced to Netley Abbey. Could Netley have been an influence on her writing of Northanger Abbey?
Near The Dolphin is Southampton pier where the ferry goes to the Isle of Wight. The Austens often took boat trips to the Island. The first mention is a letter dated 21st November 1800,
"Charles leaves us on Saturday, unless Henry should take us in his way to the Island, of which we have some hopes.."
" We hear that we are envied our House by many people and that the garden is the best in town."(22nd February 1807).
Another site mentioned in her letters is the theatre,
"Martha aught to see the inside of the Theatre once while she lives in Southampton..." (9th December 1808),
Other sites include the location of the beach where the Austens ice skated in the winter.The site and line of the beach is a curious bending path that bisects Green Park, opposite one of the docks in Southampton. The irregular course of the path is understood when you discover that it follows the shoreline that existed before the Southampton Docks were built on reclaimed land. The first docks opening in 1843. The expansion of the docks continued after that.
A short drive takes you to the site of the Lances estate at “Chiswell,” now known as Chessel, which is part of Bitterne, a suburb of Southampton. The gate house and the two pillars marking the entrance to the Lance estate are still remaining. Two roads are named after the Lances, Lances Hill and Little Lances Hill.
The River Itchen, creating a natural border to the east of Southampton, is the river Jane and her nephews Edward and George rowed from the Itchen Ferry up river to Northam Bridge, " where we landed, looked into the 74,and walked home." ( a "74," referring to a battleship of 74 guns.)
A trip, a few miles east, outside of Southampton to the beautiful setting of the ancient ruins of Netley Abbey would be an ideal spot for a picnic. Jane and her family had picnics at Netley.
"I shall think of you tonight as at Netley and tomorrow too..." ( 22nd June 1808)
Netley Abbey influenced the Gothic movement instigated by Horace Walpole. Jane's earlier stays in Southampton may have been times when she was introduced to Netley Abbey. Could Netley have been an influence on her writing of Northanger Abbey?
Near The Dolphin is Southampton pier where the ferry goes to the Isle of Wight. The Austens often took boat trips to the Island. The first mention is a letter dated 21st November 1800,
"Charles leaves us on Saturday, unless Henry should take us in his way to the Island, of which we have some hopes.."
Southampton is within short drives
of Winchester, Chawton, Steventon and Portsmouth with its Historic dockyard
which features Nelsons flag ship, The Victory. Bath and Lyme are each a day
trip away. London can be reached within an hour on the main line train from
Southampton Central Station.
Jane's grave in Winchester Cathedral.
The Tudor House Museum, Southampton.