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
resonated with issues of domesticity, the family, and the body. The
questions raised by these royal squabbles recurred so regularly from
as early as 1795 on that they can be understood as one event that, like
the King’s madness, was subject to periodic outbreaks.
Taken together, these events highlight a shift not so much in
modes of representation as in what gets represented. Although sub-
ject to variants throughout the period, the modes remain largely the
same. The focus of representation, however, shifts from events that
were known—that is, acknowledged as public—through those that
were unknown (but verifiable), to rest eventually in a teasing preoccu-
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pation with what is unknowable. The behavior of the Prince of Wales
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falls into the categories of what is known or at least knowable: the
romantic exploits of “Florizel” and “Perdita”; the extravagances of
Carlton House; and the Prince’s enormous debts were public events.
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And while the factuality of his secret marriage to the Catholic widow
Maria Fitzherbert was subject to debate, it was still presumably know-
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able: witnesses could lie; rumors could be deliberately stirred up or
suppressed, but there was in theory an ascertainable event or non-
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event behind the speculation.
The King’s madness was a different matter. Doctors’ reports,
newspaper reports, gossip, and ephemera regularly represented his
malady in 1788 and early 1789. But its origin, extent, and progno-
sis remained mysteries, endlessly debated but referential to no facts
that could explain them and settle the crucial questions they raised.
There was plenty of misrepresentation—information suppressed or
shaded, rumors circulated, official stories offered and then under-
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cut. But information and misinformation alike pointed back to no
ascertainable facts. Was the King mad or simply ill? Was his condition
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permanent or an episode? Moreover, how was the dementia to be
interpreted? Was it, in the language of contemporary medical dis-
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course, the result of an overtaxed system—a stamp of kingship, per-
haps, but to that extent treatable? Or was it rather hereditary lunacy, a
family malady, equally significant of royalty but intractable? In either
case, was it to be understood as transformative, occasioning an abrupt
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change of government during a period of increasing national and
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international upheaval? Or did it simply indicate a corrupt, vitiated,
or defunct system—a diseased body politic?
The regency crisis was tabled when the King recovered almost as
suddenly as he had fallen ill, and the episode remained resistant to
definitive interpretation. When the dementia recurred in the first
decade of the nineteenth century, it was understood and resolved
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R o y a l R o m a n c e s
through the repetition of precedent, an implicit recognition of its
inexplicability. As a public enactment of a domestic catastrophe whose
consequences would shape ideology as well as policy, the first regency
crisis was a precursor to the events that came to be known collectively
as the Queen Caroline affair.5 Like the King’s madness, the behavior
of Princes Caroline, through her husband’s two attempts to divorce
her, resisted proof and allowed multiple and conflicting representa-
tions. In part this was because the case depended on such malleable
indicators as soiled bed linens and suborned testimony. Although the
new King no doubt hoped, in 1820, that repetition would once again
function as precedent, both iterations of the Queen Caroline affair
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proved that reputation was not evidence. If George III talked non-
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stop for twenty-four hours, sweated excessively, and was prone to sud-
den and violent attacks on members of his family, whatever this might
mean medically, it meant that he was not fit to govern. If the Princess
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of Wales dressed revealingly, held raucous and unchaperoned parties,
or bathed in the presence of her manservant, these behaviors were
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not, per se, indications that she was an unfaithful wife and therefore
guilty of treason. There was no way to provide documentation of infi-
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delity, short of illegitimate children, and these were not forthcoming.
Discursively, however, reputation constituted, if not evidence, then
imputation, and imputation could be appropriated and circulated.
Reputation was the unknowable, construed as the already known,
and was in this sense more useful than evidence because it rested on
behaviors that were open to multiple interpretations.
How much an event could be known structured how it was
represented. Caroline’s sexuality existed only in various modes of
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literary and semi-literary representation: in ephemera and in fic-
tionalized accounts. One of these was Thomas Ashe’s 1811
The
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Spirit of “the Book”; or, Memoirs of Caroline, Princess of Hasburgh:
A Political and Amatory Romance in one Volumes
, which Ashe mar-
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keted as an epistolary roman à clef that would provide the “true”
account of the royal marriage. The title comes from the report
of the 1806 royal commission set up to investigate allegations of
sexual misconduct by the Princess, and popularly known as the
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Book. Ashe’s claim in the title is that the territory of the novel lies
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in essence rather than in form: his novel, he promises, renders the
“spirit” behind the facts of the Book. This claim and its rambling
structure distinguish Ashe’s novel from the realistic fiction that
Austen was beginning to publish. Yet Austen’s
Pride and Prejudice
,
printed in the same month as the commission report,
takes up the
same questions of female sexual misbehavior and especially whether
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I n t r o d u c t i o n
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and when misbehavior signals actual sex.
Pride and Prejudice
is not
self-consciously allusive, but its preoccupations are historically local
in a way that Ashe’s are not, and it implicitly critiques both Ashe’s
representation of history and his presuppositions about the formal
structure of the novel.
These three different books—the commission report, Ashe’s novel,
and Austen’s—and the intersections among them, demonstrate that
Caroline’s reputation was constructed and managed through texts.
And these texts were explicable through their relation to other texts.
Woodcut engravings, which figured in public discourse throughout
the period and dominated the later decades, depended for their mean-
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ings on mottoes derived from other sources—from ballads, poems,
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and other engravings. Later prints evoked or imitated earlier ones, as
in Theodore Lane’s reworking of Gillray’s famous
Dido, in Despair!
Novelistic renderings such as Ashe’s depended on generic expecta-
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tions and on a system of allusion that both invoked and clouded
representation. Events like the secret marriage, on the other hand,
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or the King’s madness, established different representational strate-
gies. These events were documentable, and documentation is a privi-
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leged form of representation. Because of this, they set up a contest
between the “actual” or primary texts—letters, physicians’ reports,
registry records (documents that could of course always be shaded or
falsified)—and the popular or fictionalized texts on which their pub-
lic meanings depended. These events established a hierarchy in which
private renderings are seen to have a more stable relationship to the
truth than public renderings.
Popular writers and engravers rarely depicted the King’s madness
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directly, although they often focused on the extraordinary interest
with which his heir allegedly followed every step in the progression of
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his father’s illness. And, of course, the Prince’s various mistresses, his
relationship with Mrs. Fitzherbert, and his association with notorious
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Whigs like Charles James Fox were all fodder for pamphleteers and
printmakers. These texts relied for their authenticity on competing
claims of knowledge: was Fox lying when he declared in the House
of Commons that Mrs. Fitzherbert was not the Prince’s wife? Did
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he know himself whether he was lying? Unlike Ashe’s book, which
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claims to get to the heart of disputed events, but which exists pre-
cisely because there is no getting to the heart of them, these texts
presuppose that there is an accurate rendering of events, and position
themselves relative to that account. They are to this extent doing—
and claiming to do—the work of interpretation, not the work of
representation.
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R o y a l R o m a n c e s
History and Criticism
In recent years the figure of Caroline has been the focal point of
discussions about monarchy in public discourse, which have concen-
trated on how her shifting representations reflect struggles among
competing political interests. Caroline was equally available as an icon
of decadent royalty and wronged womanhood, making her, at varying
moments, a cause célèbre for radical anti-monarchists and the darling
of loyalists and tory radicals alike. For some, Caroline was a loutish
and louche foreigner, the poster child, or print child, for the unequal
distribution of privilege (unlike the Prince of Wales, whose detractors
accused him throughout his life of abusing his privilege, the anti-
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Caroline camp often saw her as someone who simply didn’t deserve
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to be royal, or even English). For others—and at other times—she
was a defrauded wife and mother, the idealized image of bourgeois
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femininity that cast into distasteful relief the excesses of her husband’s
court. S tudies such as Thomas Laqueur’s “The Queen Caroline
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Affair: Politics as Art in the Reign of George IV”; Leonore Davidoff
and Catherine Hall’s
Family Fortunes: Men and Women of the English
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Middle Class, 1780–1850
, and Anna Clark’s “Queen Caroline and the
Sexual Politics of Popular Culture” identify in the latter understand-
ing of Caroline the defining moment for an emerging class conscious-
ness. In popular responses to the Queen Caroline affair, both the
bourgeoisie and the working class came into their own as social and
political forces by identifying with a domestic ideology defined both
through and against monarchy.
The Queen Caroline affair framed Waterloo and Peterloo and
dominated the 1810s. For this reason it is often seen to inaugurate
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the nineteenth century as the moment when, as Davidoff and Hall
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put it, “the domestic had been imprinted on the monarchical” (152),
and thus to set the stage for the obsession with domestic monar-
chicalism that characterized the reign of Queen Victoria. But in
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1806 and again in 1820, no one knew that the monarchy in Britain
was going to stabilize middle-class domesticity, at least not in the