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Lady Susan: A Vicious Jewel

July 16, 2008 by Vic

The reissue of the Oxford World’s Classic Northanger Abbey includes Jane Austen’s lesser known works: Lady Susan, The Watsons (a fragment), and Sanditon (Jane’s unfinished last work). As with Pride and Prejudice, this new publication comes with an introduction (excellently written by Claudia L. Johnson, but included in a previous edition) and a wealth of resources in the form of explanatory notes, source bibliography, and appendix. So much has been written about Northanger Abbey by experts whose knowledge of that excellent work eclipse mine, that I will concentrate on one of Jane’s more fascinating but lesser known earlier works, Lady Susan. This book was written around 1793-1794 (there are several date estimates) but it was not published until 1871 in Edward Austen-Leigh’s A Memoir of Jane Austen, almost a half century after Jane Austen’s death. While Jane recopied the book she did not revise it; it was evidently never meant for publication.

Author Joe Queenan included Lady Susan in his 2004 volume, The Malcontents: The Best Bitter, Cynical, and Satirical Writing in the World, Explaining why he chose this short work for his book, he writes:

Why did I choose Jane Austen’s less famous and somewhat atypical Lady Susan rather than an excerpt from Sense and Sensiblility, Emma, or Pride and Prejudice? Because as much as possible I wanted to use complete works rather than fragments, and because this little jewel is unbelievably vicious. Also , it is a superb example of the novel composed entirely of letters, and one can never have too many of those in a collection. – p 22.

If you have not read Lady Susan before, be prepared to encounter an anti-Jane heroine; a beautiful, manipulative, calculating, and self-indulgent widow; a woman so cold-hearted in her machinations that she puts her own interests ahead of her daughter’s, or anyone else’s for that matter. Having become accustomed to the innate goodness of Jane’s heroines, I had to read the following passage twice before I fully understood that Lady Susan was made of different stuff than Elizabeth Bennet or Anne Elliot:

I have been called an unkind mother, but it was the sacred impulse of maternal affection, it was the advantage of my daughter that led me on; and if that daughter were not the greatest simpleton on earth, I might have been rewarded for my exertions as I ought.

Sir James did make proposals to me for Frederica; but Frederica, who was born to be the torment of my life, chose to set herself so violently against the match that I thought it better to lay aside the scheme for the present. I have more than once repented that I did not marry him myself; and were he but one degree less contemptibly weak I certainly should: but I must own myself rather romantic in that respect, and that riches only will not satisfy me.

In this short passage Lady Susan reveals her true thoughts to her friend, Alicia Johnson, an equally cool and calculating character.  Lady Susan pretends to be a loving mother and friend, but her frank words belie her actions, and she clearly exults in her talent for manipulating a situation (or man) to suit her needs. She lies without compunction to her sister-in-law, Catherine, a woman she disliked so intensely that she tried to prevent her marriage to her brother. Catherine, no simpering fool, mistrusts her unwanted house guest, and in most situations sees right through her.

The cat and mouse games played by the main characters set up the emotional tension in this novel. Lady Susan believes she is fooling everyone, although she is not. Her brash plans quickly unravel as her equally savvy opponents outmaneuver her, but before her downfall, she collects victims along the way, in particular Mrs. Mainwaring, whose marriage is destroyed by Lady Susan’s flirtation with her husband. Reginald de Courcy, Catherine’s brother, arrives on the scene full of mistrust and dislike for the non-grieving widow. Lady Susan effortlessly wraps him around her little finger until he learns the truth about her.  In the end she marries Sir James, the young and foolish but rich young man she had chosen for her daughter.

As Jay Arnold Levine pointed out in ‘Lady Susan: Jane Austen’s Character of the Merry Widow, Lady Susan is reminiscent of the lascivious and hypocritical widows written about in 18th century Restoration literature, like Fielding’s Lady Booby and Tom Jones‘ Lady Bellaston.  “Dangerously endowed with experience and independence”, Lady Susan “must be regarded as the culmination of the earlier phase of literary burlesque.”

Susan Anthony’s point of view differs from Mr. Levine’s, although it is not incompatible with it. In ‘The Perfect Model of a Woman’: Femininity and Power in Lady Susan, she writes:

Imperceptibly, we are drawn into this sparser imaginative world. We become alert to the cross-play of purposes, aware of suspect motivation, hidden agendas, and the deceptiveness of Language. Lady Susan gradually exposes the politics of family life and the machinations of women in a conservative, restrictive, and male-dominated society, founded on inherited wealth and policed by gossip: the option of ‘the world.’…Lady Susan makes apparent that money, power, and the freedom to act independently are the prerogatives of men. For a woman, even wealth cannot empower: it serves simply to license any fortune-hunter she is foolish enough to marry.

Jane’s epistolary novel is a remarkable and sophisticated achievement for a budding 20-year-old author. There are faults to be sure (Claudia Johnson calls Lady Susan’s world “cartoonish”), and the ending is abrupt and switches from the first-person letter to the third-person narrative, but one cannot mistake Jane Austen’s genius in telling this tale of a woman who “has the power to inflame” but not the power to direct her life. The book ends unhappily for our protagonist. As Susan Anthony observes, “Disappointment of a bad husband is Lady Susan’s fitting punishment,” but before that denouement, the reader has been taken on a splendid literary ride.

More Links:

  • Northanger Abbey: And Persuasion, Google Book
  • Lady Susan: Classic Reader: Free Text
  • Listen to Lady Susan at Librivox: Free Audio
  • Calendar for Lady Susan: Ellen Moody
  • The Malcontents: The Best Bitter, Cynical, and Satirical Writing in the World, Joe Queenan, 2004.
  • ‘Lady Susan: Jane Austen’s Character of the Merry Widow’, Jay Arnold Levine, Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900, Vol 1, No. 4, Nineteenth Century. (Autumn, 1961), pp. 23-34.
  • ‘The Perfect Model of a Woman’: Femininity and Power in Lady Susan, Susan Anthony, The Glasgow Review, Issue 2.
  • 300 Women who Changed the World: Jane Austen

Image: Henrietta Howard, Countess of Suffold, Mistress of George II, painted by Charles Jervas

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Posted in Book review, jane austen, Jane Austen Novels, Northanger Abbey | Tagged Lady Susan, Oxford World's Classics, Sanditon, The Watsons | 7 Comments

7 Responses

  1. on July 16, 2008 at 08:08 Oxford World’s Classics: Pride and Prejudice Revisited « Jane Austen’s World

    […] Click here for my review of Lady Susan: […]


  2. on July 16, 2008 at 17:19 Schoey C.

    I love Lady Susan; I think she is one of JA’s most interesting characters: her command of the language of society (compare the propiety of her letters to Alicia to Catherine!) is her mastery of its game.

    When I was researching a paper on Lady Susan, I read several essays on epistolarity (and the development of the ep. novel), which I vaguely remember suggested that whereas legal discourse and the market was the realm of men, letter-writing became the province of eighteenth century women because it provided a means of correspondence that could be secreted from the rest of the society – and so it didn’t have to totally abide by its rules. Lisa See writes of a similar phenomenon in /Snow Flower and the Secret Fan/: a secret written-language of women in nineteenth (or eighteenth) century China called “Nu Shu.”

    I see in Catherine (and especially the language in Susan’s letters to her – perfectly Nice, but I imagine strained and grit-toothed) her conforming correspondence to external social rules, whereas Lady S’s letters to Alicia just explode with, er, “freedom.”

    On the other hand, the other thing about ep. novels is that you never get that Free-Indirect look into the characters’ heads. I suspect Catherine is just as good at playing the game as Susan.


  3. on July 17, 2008 at 08:03 Vic (Ms. Place)

    Well put, Schoey C. I, too, think that Lady Susan is one of Jane’s more interesting characters. She seems like a modern, more complex woman than Jane’s heroines in general.


  4. on March 12, 2009 at 04:31 Preview - Lady Vernon and Her Daughter: A Jane Austen Novel, by Jane Rubino & Caitlen Rubion-Bradway « Austenprose

    […] from Crown Publishing Group, we will finally have a novel based on Austen’s brilliant and vicious jewel. Here is the description.  A delightful interpretation of Jane Austen’s early novella Lady […]


  5. on July 4, 2009 at 00:07 Lady Susan by Jane Austen « Jane Austen’s World

    […] If six Jane Austen novels have left you craving for more of her fine writing, and you have not yet read Lady Susan, perhaps now is the right time to read this unusual novel. Epistolary in form, the letters between Mrs. Vernon and her mother, and Lady Susan and her friend, Mrs. Johnson, reveal a calculating woman who will use her daughter and fool around with her friend’s husband in order to get what she wants. Early on the reader learns what an unnatural and unloving a mother Lady Susan is to her daughter, Frederica. Not once does the reader feel sympathy for this anti heroine. Read my review of the novel in this link, Lady Susan, A Vicious Jewel. […]


  6. on September 4, 2009 at 10:19 Seymour Street and Portman Square: Along the Fringes of Regency Society « Jane Austen’s World

    […] Lady Susan: A Vicious Jewel […]


  7. on September 4, 2009 at 12:38 Upper Seymour Street and Portman Square in Regency London « Jane Austen’s World

    […] Lady Susan: A Vicious Jewel […]



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