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Beechen Cliff, the Arts, and Natural Surroundings

October 28, 2008 by Vic

Interested readers, my association with Austenprose’s month-long and comprehensive coverage of Northanger Abbey continues as I visit Beechen Cliff this week. The setting of this site includes some of Catherine Morland’s and Henry Tilney’s most interesting conversations. Here is where Catherine exhibits her wide-eyed naivete towards travel, and her lack of knowledge about art and the picturesque, and where Mr. Tilney’s wit shines:

Henry Tilney, however, is a genuinely witty character. But Jane Austen allows him to flirt with being defined by convention too. When he takes his sister and Catherine for a walk to Beechen Cliff above Bath, he expresses, if he does not actually hold, conventional attitudes toward women, suggesting that they have so much brain power that they seldom use half of it and showing why the narrator cautions a woman in a man’s society, “especially if she have the misfortune of knowing any thing,” to “conceal it as well as she can. – The Invention of Civility in Northanger Abbey, Joseph Wiesenfarth

To illustrate Jane Austen’s words, I will quote only a partial scene from Northanger Abbey, but you can find the entire conversation on The Republic of Pemberley.

Beechen Cliff Above Queen Square, photo by Rob Hardy

Beechen Cliff Above Queen Square, photo by Rob Hardy

They determined on walking round Beechen Cliff, that noble hill whose beautiful verdure and hanging coppice render it so striking an object from almost every opening in Bath.

“I never look at it,” said Catherine, as they walked along the side of the river, “without thinking of the south of France.”

“You have been abroad then?” said Henry, a little surprised.

“Oh! No, I only mean what I have read about. It always puts me in mind of the country that Emily and her father travelled through, in The Mysteries of Udolpho. – Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey

Jane Austen, a hardy walker, would have had no hesitation in writing a scene that had her heroine and hero walk from Bath’s center, follow a path along the eastern bank of the Avon River, and take a steep sloped path and a flight of steps (known as Jacob’s Ladder) up to Beechen Cliff, which sits 127 meters above sea level. As Ellen Moody writes on her blog: “Northanger Abbey had not conveyed how steep this hill really was. I had attributed Catherine Morland’s satisfaction on Beechen Cliff almost wholly to the lingering memory of a hard-won battle: to go on this country walk with her real friends she had had to fend off the pressure and deceits practised upon her by a brother and two false friends”

Beechen Cliff in relation to the old center of Bath

Beechen Cliff in relation to the old center of Bath

Click on the images for a clearer view. The area is still mostly an open public space and almost without development. The flat top of the hill is now known as Alexandra Park, a formal park opened in 1902, and the only extant building on the site is Beechen Cliff School.

Beechen Cliff is still wild today

Beechen Cliff is still wild today

Once Henry, Eleanor, and Catherine had attained the Cliff’s heights, they would have been rewarded with a breathtaking view.

It was on Beechen Cliff that Catherine Morland was walking with the Tilneys when Henry discoursed upon the picturesque in Nature – talking of “foregrounds, distances, second distances, side-screens and perspective, lights and shades, and Catherine was so hopeful a scholar, that when they gained the top of Beechen Cliff, she voluntarily rejected the whole city of Bath as unworthy to make part of a landscape.”- Constance Hill, Jane Austen: Her Homes and Her Friends, page 120

The slopes to the south and west are much shallower than the north face. One aspect that makes the view from Beechen Cliff so distinctive is the large expanse of uninterrupted sky. This is due to the hill being so high and quite separate from its neighbors.

(Click here to see a spectacular interactive panoramic view of Bath from Beechen Cliff.)

Panoramic view from Beechen Cliff

Panoramic view from Beechen Cliff

“The steep wooded slope of Beechen Cliff includes a number of well used walkways which are one of the main ways of experiencing the area and accessing the viewpoints.” (Land Use and Buildings, Beechen Cliff and Alexandra Park.) A series of wooden steps leads hikers up the wooded, wild garlic scented hill to the breathtaking views on top. One can see from this series of prints how rapidly Bath grew from 1735 (image below) to the early 19th century (2nd image). There are concerns about modern architectural projects that may mar the view in the future, and about the wild, unclipped bushes and trees that are obscuring the panorama today.

Beechen Cliff, 1734

Beechen Cliff, Harvey Wood, 1824

Beechen Cliff, Harvey Wood, 1824

View from Beechen Cliff, 1876

View from Beechen Cliff, 1876

Bath Abbey from Beechen Cliff today

Bath Abbey from Beechen Cliff today

More Links:

  • Jane Austen and Bath, Ellen and Jim Moody
  • Sabbatical: A Walk With Jane Austen, Rob Hardy
  • Beechen Cliff Roots, Bath Daily Photo
  • August in Regency Bath, Jane Austen Centre Online Magazine
  • The Invention of Civility in Northanger Abbey, Joseph Wiesenfarth
  • Politics and Pleasure Grounds: metaphors of the enclosures of Godwin, Holcroft, and Austen, Helena Kelly
  • Beechen Cliff and Alexandra Park
  • Why Are We Obscuring the City’s Best view?
  • Ashrare Books: Bath

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Posted in jane austen, Jane Austen Novels, Jane Austen's World, Northanger Abbey, Regency Life, Regency World | Tagged Beechen Cliff, Regency Bath | 9 Comments

9 Responses

  1. on October 28, 2008 at 13:47 Heather

    Sigh…I wish I was taking a walk along Beechen Cliff right now! Thanks for including the historical to contemporary images, I love seeing how places have developed through time.


  2. on October 28, 2008 at 17:24 Go Gothic with Northanger Abbey: Catherine Morland’s Experience in Bath Part 4 « Austenprose

    […] heroine Catherine Morland’s experience in Bath with her excellent and informative post, Beechen Cliff, the Arts, and Natural Surroundings, at her blog Jane Austen’s World. Learn why Henry Tilney chose this beautiful vantage to take […]


  3. on October 28, 2008 at 21:58 Sandra

    How ironic. I’m just writing about this scene and came online to find out a bit more about Beechen Cliff to see if Catherine’s reaction is merited. Thank you for including the images!


  4. on October 28, 2008 at 23:03 Ellen Moody

    Thank you for all the beautiful illustrations and photos. I particularly like the first: looking up at the cliff from below by Rob Hardy. The sunlight makes the scene so alluring — like the sunlight on the white stone of so much of Bath makes it such a cheering experience.

    These trips to places (in effect) are recreative — and enrichen our experience of Austen’s books.

    Ellen


  5. on October 30, 2008 at 08:01 Janeen

    It is supposed to rain today. My mind will be filled with images of rainy Bath too! Beautiful pictures!


  6. on April 7, 2009 at 20:17 PiterKokoniz

    Hello !!!! ^_^
    I am Piter Kokoniz. oOnly want to tell, that I’v found your blog very interesting
    And want to ask you: will you continue to post in this blog in future?
    Sorry for my bad english:)
    Tnx!
    Piter.


  7. on November 22, 2009 at 22:24 The Comforts of Bath, 1798: Thomas Rowlandson « Jane Austen's World

    […] Beechen Cliff, the Arts and Natural Surroundings […]


  8. on February 14, 2010 at 23:25 Northanger Abbey: Reviews « Jane Austen's World

    […] Beechen Cliffs and Natural Surroundings […]


  9. on August 25, 2010 at 23:23 Going to Bath with Jane Austen « Jane Austen's World

    […] Beechen Cliff, the Arts and Natural Surroundings […]



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