Read Royal Romances: Sex, Scandal, and Monarchy Online
Authors: Kristin Flieger Samuelian
Tags: #Europe, #Modern (16th-21st Centuries), #England, #0230616305, #18th Century, #2010, #Palgrave Macmillan, #History
ferred to the domain of the licit. If the Georgiana story makes Darcy
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more interesting, the Lydia story, in its unruly disruption (Galperin’s
term is irruption [132]) of the courtship narrative, refocuses the lov-
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ers’ attention away from the embarrassing gaffs that had seemed to
impede the progress of their courtship. The plot of Austen’s novel
tracks and partially performs the cultural mode that dominated pub-
lic reception of the royal family during the last years of George III’s
reign and the Regency. Interest in the marriage, behavior, sexual-
ity, and potential criminality of the King’s daughter-in-law, whether
that interest came from conservatives or liberal/radicals, was part of
a cultural management strategy. The illicit energies in the royal fam-
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ily could be consumed, appropriated, and retracked into culturally
normative modes, particularly in the consolidation of bourgeois con-
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sciousness at the start of the nineteenth century. Caroline’s behavior
can be judged; pitied; classed as a mark of a gender that is judged and
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pitied; subsumed under that of a hateful husband; and, finally, traced
to the ill-treatment by that husband, in a negotiation that both asserts
and nostalgically longs for the tory patriarchalism of the husband’s
now permanently incapacitated father.
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Caroline’s tactic won her a temporary increase of access to her
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daughter, but this did not last long. She was not invited to the public
drawing rooms to celebrate Charlotte’s engagement (also temporary)
to Prince William of Orange, and she soon after agreed to accept an
annuity offered to her on the condition that she leave the country
indefinitely. She did not return to England until the deaths of first
Princess Charlotte and then the King once again raised the question
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R o y a l R o m a n c e s
of the succession and her place within the royal family. In the inter-
vening years, print’s response to the royal family had shifted. One
could still read pseudo memoirs offering sympathetic treatments of
Caroline,54 but the public was increasingly likely to get information
about royal scandals from woodcut engravings, which were produced
in greater numbers between 1810 and 1820. Engravings, as they had
in the eighteenth century, offered immediate, aphoristic, and easily
digestible assessments of contemporary events. Prints focused atten-
tion on the bodies of those depicted, usually, although not always,
with damning effects. Their accompanying text, in the form of cap-
tions, mottoes, and verses, subverted this reductive simplicity with
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often-intertextual glosses that entered them into a wider discourse,
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crossing cultural and political lines. The prints of Caroline in 1820
and 1821 once again concentrated evolving domestic ideology in
the bodies of royalty. Both pro- and anti-Caroline engravings also
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intersected with versions of that ideology as they were worked out in
Byron’s poetry, in Austen’s fiction, and in the treatment of both in
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the periodical press.
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C h a p t e r F o u r
B ody D ou bl e s i n
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t h e Ne w Mon a rc h y
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A
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t the height of the Queen Caroline affair, from late summer of 1820
to late summer of 1821, more reproductions of the Queen’s image
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were available for sale than images of Mary Robinson were in the
early 1780s.1 The flood of prints was partly the result of technologi-
cal innovations. In
Radical Satire and Print Culture
, Marcus Wood
recounts that the practices of placarding and bill posting increased
in the second decade of the nineteenth century, in part because of
the introduction of “fat-face” and “Egy ptian” typefaces—larger
and heavier typefaces designed for use in ephemera such as advertis-
ing, pamphlets, and broadsheets (156). The radical press under the
operations of entrepreneurs such as Cobbett and William Hone ben-
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efited from this new technology. Hone’s 1820 pamphlet
The Queen’s
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Matrimonial Ladder
is a case in point. Illustrated by Cruikshank
and accompanied by a children’s toy ladder, the pamphlet chron-
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icled “with fourteen step-scenes” the royal marriage as a series of
wrongs suffered by the Queen.2 The penultimate rung of the ladder,
labeled “CORONATION,” has broken under the weight of the new
King, who lies sprawled on the ground, overlooked by a triumphant
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Caroline, seated at the top of the ladder. A similar toy ladder depict-
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ing the progress of a “discordant marriage,” which Hone apparently
saw in a shop window, provided the inspiration for the pamphlet
(Wood 174). Hone’s use of another text for the purpose of parodic
contrast illustrates the link between radical politics and bourgeois
domestic ideology that Thomas Laqueur and others have suggested
characterized public responses to the Queen Caroline affair.3 Hone
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R o y a l R o m a n c e s
presents Caroline as the victim of a corrupt monarchy, whose claim
to a moral high ground rests more on her vulnerability than on her
rectitude. By spring of 1821, satirical anti-Caroline engravings had
begun to dominate, although the Queen’s death in late summer pro-
duced a temporary resurgence of sympathetic ephemera. Whether
sympathetic or satiric, however, the engravings of 1820 and 1821,
like the written texts of the previous decade, concentrated pub-
lic attention on Caroline’s body as containing a range of political
meanings.
The Unruly Queen in the Popular Press
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In March 1820, Robert Peel, the Tory MP and later Prime Minister,
wrote to John Wilson Croker, then Secretary of the Admiralty:
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Do you not think that the tone of England—of that great compound
of folly, weakness, prejudice, wrong feeling, right feeling, obstinacy,
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and newspaper paragraphs, which is called public opinion—is more
liberal—to use an odious but intelligible phrase—than the policy of
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the Government? (quoted in Fraser 365)
Although Peel’s rhetoric opposes national character to government
policy, his juxtaposition stresses their interdependence. He asserts that
public opinion, an overdetermined phrase that comprehends—and
collapses—the terms of psychology, moral philosophy, and print, in
being “more liberal” than the policy of the Government, is best con-
stituted to shape that policy. In this perspective, he anticipates both
the power and the manipulation of public opinion that characterized
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the end of the Regency and the beginning of the reign of George IV,
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and in particular, the popular reception of the highly public “royal
squabbles”4 between the new King and his estranged wife.
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In conjunction with his designation of “liberal” (by 1820, and
certainly in Peel’s usage, a code word for “Whig”) as an “odious”
phrase, the ordering of Peel’s list emphasizes his conservative alle-
giance. Despite the insertion of “right feeling” as a rhetorical bal-
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ance to “wrong feeling” the collection of “folly ,” “weakness,” and
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“prejudice” evokes a public hardly capable of sound decisions, equally
informed by wrong feeling as by right, and unable to distinguish
between them. This public is, therefore, vulnerable to manipulation
by “obstinacy, and newspaper paragraphs”; in other words, by radi-
cal journalists such as Cobbett, whose
Political Register
had been
until the 1815 Stamp Act one of the most widely read newspapers in
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circulation.5 Hence “liberal” is both intelligible and odious to Peel
and Croker, incorporating generosity of feeling and opposition to the
established government—what Peel with deliberate vagueness calls
“a feeling . . . in favour of some undefined change in the mode of gov-
erning the country” (Fraser 565). This connection between feeling
and opposition determined public championship of the “injured”
queen, whose cause anchored popular opinion during the formation
of the new monarchy in ways that were both contradictory and con-
stitutive of the complexity of party politics.
Davidoff and Hall have argued that the public’s response to George
IV’s final attempt to divorce his wife concentrated and extended the
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rhetoric of bourgeois domesticity within the English public imagi-
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nation. Criticism of the new King and sy mpathy for his estranged
wife merged with condemnation of the notorious extra-marital sexu-
ality of both parties (but especially of the King), helping to consoli-
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date nineteenth-century bourgeois ideology. Much of the attention
directed toward the Queen participated in a chivalrous discourse that
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saw her as an icon of wronged womanhood (
Family Fortunes
151–52).
In this understanding, Caroline was a tragic victim, who had been
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systematically excluded from participation not only in the public and
national duties of a queen and consort but in the private and domestic
duties of a wife and mother, and who had been forced to publicize
her wrongs as the only recourse of an un-enfranchised and unpro-
tected woman. In this and other ways her situation anticipated that
of another Caroline, Caroline Norton, whose publicized marital dif-
ficulties some twenty years later marked the beginning of agitation
for the Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Act.6 Queen Caroline’s slow
and intensely public progress to London in June 1820, to contest her
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husband’s erasure of her name from the liturgy and his intention to
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exclude her from the coronation, produced a kind of counter monar-