If you like the work I do, then you can support it here: www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=D8LSKGJP2NL4N Thank you for watching.
@katdenning65352 жыл бұрын
I always thought that maybe Lucy likely manipulated her way to Exeter (based on the expediency of their removal there from Portsmouth so quickly after Edward’s departure) to then find a way to Barton Park. I also thought when Edward was in a hurry to be gone from visiting at Barton a week, it was likely because he’d received a letter from Lucy indicating she was heading that direction. When Lucy shows correspondence with Edward to Elinor it makes sense that she’d show her the most recent communications, which she received “just before she left for Exeter” meaning her response to him was likely just before her departure or upon arrival in Exeter. Notably, he plans to go elsewhere (London or Norland) to escape the neighborhood. It is also possible that’s why Lucy suddenly “gave him a lock of my hair set in a ring when he was at Longstaple last” which seems an odd thing to do on a whim after 4 years of engagement (he gave her his picture 3 years prior). I’ve always re-read her as extremely manipulative.
@ritan22 жыл бұрын
I think that Lucy not only knew about Elinor and her relationship with Edward, she knew enough about Elinor's character to realize that entrusting her with the secret of their engagement was the best way to steer Elinor away from Edward. Any other woman could have and would have used that secret to destroy the engagement, but Elinor does not. Lucy knew just how to use Elinor's moral character as a weapon against her. Over the years, I have developed a grudging appreciation/admiration for the character of Lucy.
@annamillan2903 Жыл бұрын
Some women and gay men have a fascination for bitches. Lucy Steele is a bitch. But She is the right villain. Edward is such a coward. Fortunately he was desherited and She showed her true character and he finally got rid of her.
@kimberlee8567 Жыл бұрын
Yes.. Lucy Steele was just doing what a woman of "low societal rank" would do to ensure herself a comfortable future.. thinking with her head and nothing more.. where as the Dashwood girls are very inclined to be genuinely sincere in their feelings and emotions.. a sense of morality and pure hearts.. and not opportunistic like Lucy Steele was.. but.. it's hard to dislike her when we can't fault a person for practicing self-preservation
@MsJubjubbird Жыл бұрын
@@kimberlee8567 she's a foil for Elinor to make Elinor seem less cold hearted. On the one hadyou have Marianne clinging to everlasting true love. But Jane very much favours heart over head, so she writes from Elinor's perspective and is more critical of Marianne. Hwoever, she wants to make Elinor seem to have some level of humanity and compassion, so she brings in Lucy who is only guided by money and comes a cross as a bitch, even if she gets what she wants.
@norarivkis2513 Жыл бұрын
@@MsJubjubbirdI certainly never saw Elinor as lacking in compassion! Rigidly controlled about her own feelings, yes; but tender about those of others. She showed herself concerned with the feelings of her mother, of Marianne, of Colonel Brandon (when the younger people are ignoring or mocking him and she seeks him out to ask him to tell her about his travels, so he will feel valued), and even about Willoughby when he shows up suddenly, asking after Marianne during her illness.
Throughout the entire novel, Lucy shows herself to be quite adept at monitoring the reactions of others in order to manipulate the circumstances in her favor. She undoubtedly noticed Edward's feelings and took action to counter any threat.
@annika58932 жыл бұрын
Yes, and she reads Elinor very correctly to be an honorable woman who would put her own feelings aside rather than break up an engagement. Lucy was very clever to do it in the way of confiding in Elinor so that Elinor even becomes a champion for Lucy and Edward. The one person where Lucy very much miscalculated though, maybe because she succeeded so easily with Elinor first, was Fanny Dashwood. Although that mishap on her part didn't hinder her at all.
@elensilla12 жыл бұрын
@@annika5893yes, and that temporary reversal is hysterically funny, but even then Lucy manages to garner sympathy for herself!!
@angelicasmodel2 жыл бұрын
@@londongael414 I had not thought of that before!
@mausicute88042 жыл бұрын
Agree with you!!
@HRJohn19442 жыл бұрын
@@londongael414 This is interesting: I'm not sure that Lucy thinks she can get Fanny "on-side", or that it would make much difference to Mrs F if she did: but the invitation by Fanny, the pleasant treatment of Lucy and the snubbing of Elinor at that party give Lucy the opportunity to gloat over Elinor. Both know the real reason for all this occurring (ie that the family are worried that Edward is too interested in Elinor and wish to humiliate her in any way possible - whereas Mrs F doesn't see Lucy as a threat), but neither would say it out loud - Lucy because it would prevent her from gloating, and Elinor because it would seem to be like jealousy. Elinor's interest in Edward has not been admitted to Lucy at this stage, but Lucy knows of it, and Elinor is fully aware of this. One other point - Lucy has surely picked up on the reference to "Miss Morton", and so realises that this is a person whom the family might have in mind for Edward. Para 2 and 3: I doubt that Lucy had her eye on Robert - (a) she doesn't know that Mrs Ferrars is going to settle on Robert irrevocably, following the engagement coming out, (b) she knows nothing of Robert, so cannot know whether she would be able to "get off with" him anyway, (please forgive the colloquialism) and (c) the opportunity to "get" Robert (after the irrevocable settlement is made on R) arises because the lovely Ferrars family think that R might be able to persuade Lucy to dump Edward: she does - but not quite in the way that Mrs F., John and Fanny expect. I think that they rather deserve Lucy.
@nicolec35062 жыл бұрын
I think one of Jane Austen’s most consistent notes that I’ve noticed is to be wary of over sharers! Wickham in P&P and Lucy here are both guilty of dropping a ton of personal information to near strangers. It’s often done with nefarious ends... it reminds me of people saying not to trauma dump in the comments today
@tommyb31102 жыл бұрын
I have always assumed that Lucy arrived in Barton with the express intention of blocking any sort of relationship formation between Elenor and Edward. It was the only explanation I could think up as to why she was so intent on being friends with someone she didn’t know and who’s companionship would do little to elevate her status.
@DipityS2 жыл бұрын
Oh, Miss Lucy Steele definitely knew. I have been wrestling with my feelings about Lucy since I watched your video 'What does Jane Austen’s Lucy Steele tell us about Regency Society? SENSE AND SENSIBILITY analysis'. Your video made me think of her as being used as a foil to show the vapidity of the society she worked her way up into - which absolutely. However, honestly, I get incensed whenever I read the horribly awkward scene where Lucy is visiting Elinor, and Edward comes to visit, and Lucy won't go away - I'm entirely on Marianne's side of that argument. And her digs at Elinor make me want to stomp about in a huff, as I really do just adore Elinor. I know she's not perfect but I do like her so much and so I feel all fluffed up like an angry hen when Lucy's being cutting to Elinor.
@susanrobertson9842 жыл бұрын
What I remember about reading S&S is that there is a lot of text dedicated to how Lucy got herself invited to Barton. I came away with the impression that she worked very hard to work her social connections to get the invitation. I never realized that Edward had come directly from Lucy to Elinor before. I think my lack of knowledge of English geography hindered me there. Did she know about Elinor? Absolutely and she set straight to the task of protecting her investment in Edward.
@kahkah19862 жыл бұрын
I think Edward tried to break up with her before going to stay with Elinor, so that he could ask Elinor to marry him. He is no match for Lucy's machinations, he might not even know that's what they are.
@dominaevillae28 Жыл бұрын
No. Edward would never try to ditch Lucy having made his promise-even Fanny understands this about Edward.
@julijakeit Жыл бұрын
@@kahkah1986 Edward had every possible means and reason to cut of his engagement to Lucy. The problem is the 'alternative' was hardly any better for his family. He also chose to keep his word because the society that day worked like this and breaking once's word could cost a dual and possibly death or disfigurement. Lucy will be protected from the same judgement as she's married Robert who is now the sole heir of the vast fortune and she found a way to ingratiate herself to Mrs Ferrars, the mother, and will probably be able to work her way with Fanny once Mrs Ferrars is dead.
@kahkah1986 Жыл бұрын
@julijakeit No, Lucy in theory had power of refusal, and presumably Edward appealed to her better nature (we were young and rash, we are adults now) without abruptly breaking it off, although given that his family urge him to do so, this would strongly imply that society did not in fact work that way I.e. he could break it off. While Brandon does fight a duel over Eliza, he is a soldier, an army colonel, and it is much less likely Lucy has a male relative to call Edward out; that would make him a coward if that was all he was frightened of. Edward's family is extremely wealthy; he could try and pay Lucy off should she try and blackmail him with a law suit, something that would be a little more likely.
@JacquelineViana2 жыл бұрын
Lucy is such a fascinating character. She might be cunning and even maybe a little bitchy, but I really love her hability to read the room, adapt to every other situation and manipulating without really doing it. She's a survivor, somehow, playing with the social cards she had and worked so well with them. What I really love about her arc in the story is that any other author by the time would have punished her for her ways, but Austen allows her to thrive.
@archervine80642 жыл бұрын
Well put. She’s certainly not presented as admirable, but good grief… what other options does she realistically have to not be living hand to mouth on charity? She doesn’t even seem to have the qualifications to be a governess ( too ‘low’ ) or enter one of the trades that did accept some women.
@angelicasmodel2 жыл бұрын
@@archervine8064 Agreed. I don't think she's a particularly nice person, but given her circumstances, I can't be too hard on her behaviour. The one thing I will fault her for was sending the misleading message to Elinor, suggesting that she had married Edward, not Robert. Given Lucy was now married to a wealthy husband, it wasn't necessary. I suppose that she'd schemed for so long, that she had become that person.
@ArtingFromScratch2 жыл бұрын
I think in this way she reminds me a bit of Mrs Bennett... she got a husband above herself in station.... possibly the same way
@claireconolly83552 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@moonw58142 жыл бұрын
@@ArtingFromScratch Lucy married 'above herself' like Mrs Bennet, but there I think the resemblance ends. Firstly, Mrs Bennet is not very clever, unlike Lucy Steele. Although she is certainly not above scheming, she is not subtle enough to bring it off succesfully. Secondly there is no hint in P&P that Mr Bennet was in any way ensnared by her. He was simply infatuated with her good looks and high spirits (and lived to regret it)
@studiogru36492 жыл бұрын
There's also that whole part of the later conversation between Lucy and Eleanor in which Eleanor herself thinks that Lucy says ("with meaning", if I'm remembering the text right) that "if he had spoken more about a certain person" (again, paraphrasing). It's one of the points in that conversation that Eleanor appears to pick up on as evidence for her conclusion that Lucy is aware that Edward wants to be released from the engagement. I've always read that particular line of text to mean that Edward DID talk about Eleanor while visiting Lucy at Plymouth, and that Lucy was feeling VERY threatened by Edward's feelings for Eleanor before she'd even visited Exeter.
@saltywench2 жыл бұрын
I've always felt that Lucy stampeded to Elinor using any possible means the moment she thought Edward might be looking at another woman. She says herself she's incredibly jealous and I think it's painfully obvious that statement is true. Edward is her ticket to a fancy life, and she's hanging on by her fingernails with a knife in her teeth. I've always been extremely disappointed there isn't a much more detailed recounting of exactly how she managed to connive her way onto Edward's brother the moment the money was his, and the fall out in the family of her getting the better of the mother in law that had gone to such drastic measures to get rid of her. I think a retelling of the story from Lucy's point of view into a movie could be absolutely hilarious if written right. Watching this charming and unsubtle Cinderella-/ Lolita-like gold-digger get her rich husband with the rest of Sense and Sensibility playing around her in the background of her machinations would be wonderful, I think.
@cubemissy Жыл бұрын
I like that idea! Instead of disliking Lucy in favor of Elinor, I find myself rooting for her and loving how much she actually gets away with. I want to see Fanny’s face when she realizes she’s stuck with Lucy, and the brother she prefers is going to be a country Vicar in a loving marriage.
@esotericexplorersmartinez493 Жыл бұрын
that sounds amazing!
@stoverboo Жыл бұрын
That's basically the plot of Vanity Fair.
@marshaproehl6667 Жыл бұрын
Lucy could be a Becky Sharpe character!!!
@allybangel10 ай бұрын
That would be a great movie
@jessica_jam43862 жыл бұрын
I’ve been hoping you would cover this topic! Lucy is such an interesting yet horrible person, but you can understand her fear of poverty in Regency England. Jane Austen was so good at coming up with interesting characters.
@kevinrussell11442 жыл бұрын
I don't think Lucy is at all horrible; she is very much the practical woman, and she always knows which side of the loaf is buttered. JA must have known quite a few like Lucy. Mrs. Ferrars, Miss Lucy Steele as was, is a cat with sharp claws and long teeth, but she sounds and looks so sweet. Just like Jezebel.
@jessica_jam43862 жыл бұрын
@@kevinrussell1144 Lucy Steele is definitely a product of her time, not denying that. But the way she immediately married Edwards brother right after they broke off their engagement is pretty cold hearted even for the time. She’s one of the types to smile in your face while stabbing you in the back. Now we can argue she may not have been this way if society would’ve been different in Regency England. Even with that being said, she’s not the kind of person I would want to be around much lol. (Edited for spelling errors)
@kevinrussell11442 жыл бұрын
@@jessica_jam4386 I'm guessing you can STEELE find lots of Lucys shopping in London even as we type. JA didn't fabricate the original out of thin air, and she (if with us today) would notice if the muslin gown on this new Lucy fit her ill or well.
@jmarie99972 жыл бұрын
@@jessica_jam4386 Well, she had to grab Robert while she still could. She couldn't count on him to hold on to an engagement.
@jessica_jam43862 жыл бұрын
@@kevinrussell1144 sure, there are still, or “Steele”😅 plenty of women with personalities similar to Lucy Steeles who exist today. I wouldn’t compare them exactly to her though, because Lucy or her real life counterparts, didn’t have the options women have now. And being poor in the that era was truly miserable and much worse then being poor in western countries today.
@387mqr4 ай бұрын
If I had been Edward visiting Lucy I would have taken great pains to conceal my feelings for Elinor. But Edward seems a bumbling sort of fellow and for a perceptive girl like Lucy, it might have been child’s play to extract those feelings without Edward even realizing it!
@larusafox2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the reading. It is always fascinating to witness over and over again the meticulous filigree with which Jane Austen paints a picture of a person using social conventions to influence their fate. I often think of this quote at the end that sums up Lucy’s character so well: “The whole of Lucy’s behaviour in the affair, and the prosperity which crowned it, therefore, may be held forth as a most encouraging instance of what an earnest, an unceasing attention to self-interest, however its progress may be apparently obstructed, will do in securing every advantage of fortune, with no other sacrifice than that of time and conscience. “ Once again, she nails it.
@marinewauquier86302 жыл бұрын
"Sense & Sensibility (& Selfishness)"
@lydiakuekes5132 жыл бұрын
I loved this too. You can get ahead by being a selfish suck-up, if you don't mind selling your soul! 😆
@pooshkahnla60742 жыл бұрын
It's something I have considered before, but your close reading of Austen's style of exposition in the early novels makes it very clear...yes, I think she did. Lucy Steele is a fairly cunning person as she comes across in the text, and she'd be alert to how Edward spoke about another woman...and would then manoeuver to make the acquaintance of her 'rival' in any way she could.
@edsepe22582 жыл бұрын
Cunning Lucy, she kept her friends close, but her enemies even closer!
@andrewsmith84542 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this enjoyable analysis. That Lucy Steele must have found out about Elinor Dashwood from Edward Ferrars not only demonstrates Lucy's cunning and shrewdness, but also Edward's guilelessness.
@jmarie99972 жыл бұрын
Or his stupidity.
@anna_in_aotearoa31662 жыл бұрын
I'd go as far as saying "gormlessness", honestly...? 🤦🏻♀️ Edward was stuck in a truly difficult situation having been inveighled by Lucy into an early engagement (via his teen infatuation & her manipulativeness) before he really got to know her character - basically trapped and heading for a loveless marriage with a very scheming woman. But I'm not sure I can consider his subsequently spending so much time with Elinor to be a truly honorable course of action...? Surely he couldn't have been so oblivious as to not notice her growing affection for him, particularly given that he felt the same way, and even his relatives started noticing his partiality? He's honorable in not dumping Lucy (which could've destroyed her reputation) but per the mores of the time, the really honorable thing to do about Elinor would surely have been to start only meeting her socially, interacting with cordiality but more reserve, and definitely not keep going for cosy visits to their cottage? It's like he's trying to have his cake and eat it too - a more respectable version of his brother Robert's flexible morals! 🥴 The way Edward's written, he seems to lack the strict degree of self-control and personal honour that Elinor has, so I was always dubious about whether their eventual marriage would really have been a happy one?
@naegrant47222 жыл бұрын
@@anna_in_aotearoa3166 Excellent observations and I agree it reflects Edward's naivety but also his stunted emotional growth. His mother and his upbringing have kept him in a state of chronic low self-esteem and this lack of independence, as well as his genuinely guileless and good-hearted nature, make him slower to understand the implications of his behaviour. He's an interesting mirror to Marianne, another fundamentally honest but overly trusting personality. I also read Edward as often in a state of clinical depression and this contributes to his passivity and desperate reaching out for comfort from Elinor, without much thought for her feelings. I recall Austen indicates their marriage is a happy one because Edward's sources of misery (mother, brother and former fiance!) mostly recede from him and he relies more on Elinor's judgement going forward which is a great support to him with his shyness and lack of worldiness. They're both financially uncertain but free of the stifling obligations of their former lives so they can relax and enjoy the company of genuine people at last.
@claudiapadilla94602 жыл бұрын
I always thought Lucy knew about Elinor before Elinor met her, but this is a very good analysis and proof! :) Thank you for sharing.
@kristinewatson37022 жыл бұрын
With Edward's reserved nature he probably mentioned Eleanor and her entire family and as someone else commented, Lucy seems astute enough to pick up on his feelings. My feeling is Lucy kept questioning him to get more information while noting his reactions. She was a sly one.
@coloraturaElise2 жыл бұрын
Well, I was pretty sure Lucy knew about Elinor, but it had not occurred to me that she had gotten herself to Exeter in the hopes of meeting her somehow. Of course, it's just what Lucy would do! Great analysis, as always, Dr. Cox!
@alexandraalvarez7511 Жыл бұрын
That was a very well thought out video, as usual, and wonderfully entertaining to unpack more about such an interesting and complex character. It leads me to believe that Lucy is absolutely aware of Edward's disinterestedness in herself. She mentions that Edward left her 'looking ill' and attributes the reason - to Eleanor - to his being upset at having left her. But the fact that she even noticed him looking ill is, I believe, testament to the fact that she knows he's unhappily engaged.
@MsJubjubbird Жыл бұрын
absolutely. SHe knows they were young and dumb and he could probably back out of it if he tried.
@bonniebythepeak2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this delightful exploration of one of Austen's most dimensional of secondary characters. Lucy is indeed sharp and even if her knowledge of Elinor were not perfect, her intuition and instincts for self preservation guides her unerringly to eliminate her gravest threat.
@mamadeb19632 жыл бұрын
I think Lucy Steele is brilliant in the American sense - extremely bright as well as extremely ambitious. We see this as she realizes exactly how honorable Elinor is, and uses this to keep Elinor silent - if she hadn't taken her into confidence, Elinor could have ruined everything. We see this later as she first gains Richard's love and then his mother's - so that the woman who "forced" Mrs Ferrars to disown her eldest son became the favored child, in Austen's own words. Such a person would be more than capable of perceiving exactly how her betrothed felt for Elinor - and what sort of person Elinor was _ and make sure that she was silenced by the very act of taking Elinor into her confidence. Perhaps her only match in Austen would be William Elliot, except I think she really does love her sister.
@lizziebkennedy75052 жыл бұрын
And without a shred of actual empathy for how individuals might actually feel.
@momcatwoo2 жыл бұрын
She and Robert Ferrars deserve each other!
@jorr13344 ай бұрын
Who's Richard?
@christinaketabchi91972 жыл бұрын
I totally missed so much about Lucy’s character and all the subtext in their conversations. It’s amazing that JA can still surprise me
@Sheikahsheik90 Жыл бұрын
I always imagined that while visiting in Plymouth, and in his more depressed mood, Edward forgot himself and his company and let slip the attractiveness of the Dashwoods, or maybe Eleanor in particular. But Lucy being a woman on the alert to any threat to her engagement, enlarged and as you said, possibly used this compliment to gain a more intimate acquaintance with Eleanor. I love this discussion!
@sulaganabiswas Жыл бұрын
It's Elinor
@Spyder.55Ай бұрын
Thank you for navigating the subtle details leading to the meeting of Lucy and the dashwood sisters. Lucy certainly is a pivotal character in Elinor's story. Luckily I have a map.
@suehamstead30072 жыл бұрын
Thank you once again, Octavia. I hadn't previously picked up on the clues to Lucy's machinations in order to meet Elinor, but it certainly explains why she singled out Elinor for sharing her secret. It's easy to imagine Edward's warm words to Lucy about his new acquaintance and how they were interpreted by her.
@DrOctaviaCox2 жыл бұрын
Do you think Lucy Steele knew all about Elinor Dashwood before she came to Barton?
@melissapagonis59402 жыл бұрын
Yes, I do! Though I'd love to know what you think was going through her mind to make her decide that Fanny wouldn't react badly to her revealing her engagement. A close reading of that, I mean.
@ChanDeereGreen2 жыл бұрын
From Ch. 24: Lucy went on. “I am rather of a jealous temper too by nature, and from our different situations in life, from his being so much more in the world than me, and our continual separation, I was enough inclined for suspicion, to have found out the truth in an instant, if there had been the slightest alteration in his behaviour to me when we met, or any lowness of spirits that I could not account for, or if he had talked more of one lady than another, or seemed in any respect less happy at Longstaple than he used to be. I do not mean to say that I am particularly observant or quick-sighted in general, but in such a case I am sure I could not be deceived.” This has always seemed to me Lucy's clearest statement of "I do NOT like the way Edward spoke of you, Elinor Dashwood, nor how his behavior has changed since meeting you, so back away."
@joannasmith47932 жыл бұрын
Absolutely. She knew . She came to have a chance at meeting her
@rufescens2 жыл бұрын
@@melissapagonis5940 I believe it was the elder Miss Steele, and not Lucy, who revealed the engagement.
@AD-hs2bq2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for commenting on this. I had not picked up on the history of Lucy’s fascination with meeting Eleanor. Since Austen brilliantly used effusive language in her characters’ conversations (so clever, amusing and also ridiculous), I had not considered she had really “longed for” knowing Eleanor. There is always something new to discover in Austen. Thank you.
@kellysanders33672 жыл бұрын
I wholeheartedly agree with the majority of the video (and have kicked myself a couple of times for not stopping to ask important questions when reading S&S!). But I will say that I don't think that Lucy would have needed to feed Sir John the line about :the most beautiful creatures in the world." I feel that this kind of hackneyed phrasing is something Sir John would have come up with on his own as soon as he heard that the Steele sisters were curious about the Dashwoods.
@angelicablue2 жыл бұрын
All I keep thinking, & couldn't put out of my mind after several readings of S&S, is how tragic for Eleanor to end up with 2 such sordid sisters-in-law! I'm sure their utter snobbiness would have kept them from their "poor relations" Edward & Elinor as often as possible, but how wretched for Elinor in particular to have to be related to those 2 insufferable women (3, if you count Mama Ferrars) by marriage.
@DestinyKiller2 жыл бұрын
Well, her being so far from them is probably a blessing, lol, she wouldn't have to deal with them much
@margaretpickett82962 жыл бұрын
i really appreciate this analysis. Like another commentator, not knowing the English geography probably hindered my understanding of some events. Lucy was so intent on telling Elinor about her engagement and then swearing her to secrecy, that my next question is whether Elinor understood how Lucy was manipulating the situation.
@naegrant47222 жыл бұрын
I think Elinor was suspicious from the beginning because Lucy was unsubtle about trying to rush her into a 'friendship' and piling on the praise so she could take her into her 'confidence' in the shortest amount of time. That love-bombing tactic works with some people in the novel but Elinor finds it odd and only continues to be civil to Lucy out of a sense of caution and personal ethics.
@sarahmwalsh2 жыл бұрын
Oooh!! This is an intriguing theory!! I definitely believed before that Lucy knew all about Elinor and the danger she presented to the engagement with Edward, but I had never thought about how deep this all went. The way Jane Austen writes it, it really just sounds like Lucy and Anne "happened" to be in Exeter and made the "delightful discovery" that their cousin Mrs. Jennings was there. What machinations would Lucy have had to go through to figure out that Mrs. Jennings was staying at Barton Park, and frequented Exeter, and would be there on a certain day?? I wouldn't put any of it past conniving Lucy!
@TheDisasterPuppy2 жыл бұрын
Yaaay! A new Dr Octavia Cox video! 👏
@hennybecca Жыл бұрын
Great commentary, and thank you so much for sharing your thoughts - I'm subscribed!!! Your commentary had me In agreement right up until you suggested that Lucy Steel's flattery planted in the mouth of Sor John would have had Eleanor Dashwood interested enough to meet up. My own interpretation of Eleanor's character has her rendered as someone who would not be bent or swayed by such flattery. Maybe mildly curious, but only as to meet a distant cousin. Perhaps that's the real reason Eleanor met Lucy, whatever Lucy's intentions and designs were?
@AthenaisC Жыл бұрын
The film made it clear they felt she knew. If that's good enough for Emma Thompson, it's good enough for me. Thank you for a well- reasoned discussion. ❤
@nastyaissor78252 жыл бұрын
It seems likely that she had suspected about her, that's why she was trying so hard to win her friendship and spoke about her secret engagement. It looks like she was trying to provok Eleanor with everything she said about Edward. She desperately wanted to see her reaction.
@TiffyVella12 жыл бұрын
She was so provoking too! I had seen that as a device to make Eleanor's suffering (under Sense) be thrown into sharper relief against her sister's suffering (under Sensibility).
@lisamckay50582 жыл бұрын
Oh, Lucy ABSOLUTELY knew about Elinor before she arrived. She knew there was a threat and she addressed that threat. Lucy didn't have a great life and she did what she had to do to make her situation better; she wouldn't have given that up for anything.
@apollonia6656 Жыл бұрын
PS: Sorry, forgot to say I am subscribing .....nice to have English spoken at a right pace as opposed to twenty (or more) to the dozen on some channels. We are not used to running speech as my nephew says. My 'O' Level had Pride and Prejudice but no Jane Austen in 'A' Level.
@beverlybenson9981 Жыл бұрын
My great-grandmother was from Devon. My grandmother was born in Plymouth. They came to America in 1906. They told us over the years so much about their life there. ❤️
@nickwilliams75472 жыл бұрын
Thank you Octavia, that was a very insightful analysis. I had always believed that Lucy must be aware of a possible affection between Edward and Elinor, but I'd assumed she'd just caught on to some vague, gossipy speculation from Sir John and/or Mrs Jennings. It had never occurred to me that the source may have been Edward, but your close reading is very persuasive that this is indeed the case. I can imagine Lucy asking her fiancé about his wider family, and Edward - who is nothing if not honest - being a little unguarded in his praise of Elinor. No wonder Lucy became suspicious and went to such lengths to engineer a meeting with the Dashwoods!
@annika58932 жыл бұрын
Of course Lucy Steele knew about Elinor and the possibility of her being a threat. And she wasn't so subtle as to fool Elinor when it came to her reasons of befriending and confiding in Elinor so quickly. Lucy had learned enough of Elinor's character (I think from Edward) to know she was nothing like Lucy herself, and so wouldn't resort to similar tactics as Lucy, but would conduct herself with honor and propriety instead.
@tamarafarnsworth50492 жыл бұрын
Absolutely she knew. After all, in her “Dear John” letter to Edward, she says (I paraphrase) that she refuses to marry a man who’s obviously long been in love with someone else, and thus, felt herself free to latch onto Robert.
@michaelodonnell8242 жыл бұрын
That's Lucy being Lucy - portray herself in the BEST possible light while portraying EVERYONE else as out to injure her!
@tamarafarnsworth50492 жыл бұрын
@@michaelodonnell824 Absolutely right! But still, she was nobody’s fool. Given her options in life, I have to (gag) reluctantly… almost… admire her. No, no, I can’t do it!
@kevinrussell11442 жыл бұрын
@@londongael414 Not too many here have much of anything to say in Lucy's favor, other than she was skillful in playing the game. Someone further up the string even gave her the greatest cut of all, implying she was behaving "like an American". I suppose I should be insulted, too, but I'm not. We don't understand her (Jane) or her characters as well as do our cousins across the pond, but we love her as deeply.
@harringt1002 жыл бұрын
@@londongael414 I have to say, I feel less like I can blame Lucy for pushing whatever advantage she had than John and Fanny or Willoughby. In the case of those people, they all stood to inherit plenty of wealth and advantages (Willoughby lost that opportunity, but only because he had been a complete dick to Eliza Williams.) Lucy really didn't have much hope of living a comfortable and independent-ish life without marrying well. That doesn't make her a good person; just a little more understandable. But I don't remember getting to read or hear of her "Dear John" letter. Is it in the book? (It's been a long time since I read it.)
@alanawarshaw99812 жыл бұрын
@@harringt100 A “dear John letter” is a figure of speech for a woman breaking up with a man, as Lucy does to Edward; there is no book/letter you are missing. :)
@annimagzombies2 жыл бұрын
I always look forward to your videos. They are so brilliant and get me to look at classic literature from all sorts of new angles. Thank you so much for making this channel!
@marycrawford15942 жыл бұрын
Very interesting video. Thank you. It's clear in the book that Lucy Steele is an expert manipulator of people especially men. I agree that the thrust of the story is her managing to 'catch' Edward and then hold on to him at all costs - unless and until she jumps ship when she finds someone richer. However, there is I think something gratuitously spiteful in the way she treats Elinor that cannot just be explained by wanting to warn her off Edward. Elinor is at the receiving end of the spitefulness of three women: Fanny Dashwood, Mrs Ferrars and Lucy. Personally I interpret this as perhaps being because Elinor has a quality of character that they simply don't understand and therefore mistrust. I am sure Jane Austen deliberately doesn't tell us why they persecute her, just as she doesn't explain why Mrs Norris constantly picks on Fanny Price. Shakespeare does the same thing with some of his worst characters, such as Iago. He and Austen are both saying something profound.
@naegrant47222 жыл бұрын
@@londongael414 Yes, great comment. Such amazing characterisation to capture how bullies react to fear! Lucy has a streak of sadism in her which makes her despicable to us but also implies Robert and Mrs Ferrars will inevitably experience some suffering by being so close to her in the future. But they richly deserve it so perhaps there's some justice after all.
@conniesimons852114 күн бұрын
Actually I think it is very obvious why these women do not like Elinor - each of them is very determined that Elinor NOT marry Edward. I agree that they probably have no concept of Elinor's character; they cannot understand someone who has such an outllook on life, and they probably assume that she reacts as they would - that is, she will do all she can to marry such a rich young man as Edward. Hence Mrs Ferrars' promptly threatening to withhold his inheritance.
@DaisyNinjaGirl2 жыл бұрын
I think yes, she did know, for all the reasons you've given, plus some supporting evidence that: Lucy is shown, later in the book, to be very cruel in her speech to Elinor, and early on she 'confides' to Elinor that she's so very jealous, she certainly would have noticed if he'd spoken about any woman more than another. I think Edward did in fact speak quite a lot about Elinor, and Lucy is trying to be hurtful by saying the opposite.
@sarahmcilrath25172 жыл бұрын
Thank you, this answered a nagging question I've had ever since watching the Emma Thompson version back in 1995 (I've read the book too, but only once or twice decades ago). Having watched several dozens f your videos now and feeling a little better informed about Austen's style and the time period I think Lucy, a sharp savvy creature fighting for survival definitely perceived Elinor as at least a potential threat and she wanted to meet her to find out if she truly was or not. Women aren't stupid, they notice little things, and she knows Edward and the precariousness of her position. Lucy probably immediately felt a difference in Edward's affections/feelings toward her when he visits after meeting Elinore.
@ellie6982 жыл бұрын
Hi Dr Cox Would you do a close reading on the text of S&S about instances where tiny clues about plot involving Robert Ferrars and Lucy Steele are revealed? Like where he talks about her, if she talks about him at all. We don't see or hear directly about their whirlwind "romance" but we learn enough about each of them to surmise how it could have happened, Lucy the skilled sycophant and Robert the man who loves to think well of himself. It's incredible that so many characters fall for her blatant fawning!!
@jenadams25762 жыл бұрын
Fascinating video. I have wondered this but it has been a while since I read "Sense and Sensibility." I thought it was too convenient that Lucy managed to come meet them and happen to say the things that would be most hurtful/painful to Elinor (especially since she did not invite the confidence). I found this video and the texts you read convincing. It further demonstrates her ability to charm people to get what she wants, which we see later in her marriage to Robert Ferris. I love these videos. Thank you for making them. ❤️
@Girl-rj3qe Жыл бұрын
I know it was honorable of Edward to keep his engagement with Lucy, but at least he could have told Elinor himself he was engaged while he was at Norland with her? There’s not much detail in the book about how him and Elinor having a “sort of understanding as lovers” but I really feel like he led her on and gave her hopes for a relationship which might be impossible since he’ll not break his engagement to Lucy out of honor.
@Mixolixplosion9 ай бұрын
In the movie he was trying to tell Elinor about Lucy but Fanny interrupted their conversation and told him to leave for London immediately as he was needed by their mother. Not sure about the book though.
@Girl-rj3qe9 ай бұрын
@@Mixolixplosion Yes, that was in the movie only.
@vanderm4910 ай бұрын
There's also the statement Lucy made to Elinor upon hearing of Edward's mother's plan involving Miss Morton: "Miss Morton may be this or that, but it is ME Edward made his promise to; not Miss Morton. Or anyone else." Yes, Lucy knew.
@stannieholt87662 жыл бұрын
I hope at some point Dr. Cox will tackle the question in “Persuasion” that always puzzled me: Did Mary Musgrove know that Charles proposed to her older sister before he married her? The family all knows, so they can hardly have kept their knowledge from Mary’s ears (because they’re so tacky and indiscreet). But then, how would a whiner like Mary ever hold off from reproaching either her husband or her sister that he apparently preferred Anne at first? It doesn’t seem like her to not whip that out when she feels ill-used, even if she does basically love and respect her sister.
@jessica_jam43862 жыл бұрын
Oh yes! I would love to hear Dr. Cox’s thoughts on this! Honestly any videos on Persuasion would be welcome by me:)
@DaisyNinjaGirl2 жыл бұрын
That is an interesting point... Mary sure does like to feel ill used, but I don't think she mentions it at _all_. Hmm
@coloraturaElise2 жыл бұрын
Mary does say that she was away at school when Anne knew Cpt Wentworth, and she may still have been there when Charles proposed, so maybe she was too young to take much notice of it at the time.
@jmarie99972 жыл бұрын
I imagine she was thrilled at being the only married daughter, especially being the YOUNGEST daughter.
@annavonbuchenroder52472 жыл бұрын
Yes I would love to know this as well. I also want to know what happens to Mrs Clay's children, she seems to abandon them to go to Bath quite easily....
@loiswagner28712 жыл бұрын
I do not believe that Lucy knew "all" about Elinor, but I do believe she had her suspicions, based upon whatever conversations she must have had with Edward F. She turns out to be a quite wily girl, with visions of becoming "somebody" by marrying well, and she does not want that to be jeopardized. I think she worked very hard to find out whatever she could about Elinor, suspected Edward's affinity towards Elinor, and was determined to nip that in the bud. I loved your introspection upon it, as it gave me more clarity of how all that may have happened.
@kevinrosero97236 ай бұрын
I love these deep dives, thank you for this one. I've just reread S&S and this question about Lucy was very much on my mind.
@puck625832 жыл бұрын
Yes! Thank you for a whole Lucy Steele episode! You are amazing!
@julijakeit2 жыл бұрын
I always suspected that Lucy was aware of Edward's attachment to Elinor and my theory is that the time Lucy spend with Edward while he was taking lessons from her father (if I remember correctly) was the time she tried (and succeeded) in seducing him and succeeded in getting secretly engaged. Now, suspecting Elinor would apply the same tactics and knowing that Elinor stood closer to Edwards family than her, she ingratiated herself to whoever was able to provide an invitation for her to meet Elinor and investigate. We know for sure that Lucy is very cunning and observant yet lacks the morals that Charlotte Lucas had, as soon as Edward is disinherited, she sets her cap at his younger brother who is to inherit it all. Though she angered the Ferrarses at first, she managed to work her way to become 'closer than the real children' to Mrs Ferrars. That's how astute Lucy is.
@nancymcclymont28582 жыл бұрын
… and how desperate. I believe she had no other prospects for her own security than marriage, though you can see her building bridges to the children of well to do families (perhaps as a governess or nursemaid, as a backup plan.) She had no talents, no wealth, no status, no knowledge, and (really) no help of any kind. Like Charlotte, she’s being very pragmatic here, but unlike Charlotte she’s far less supported. At the end of the day, she had Anne (for awhile) to throw a bit of distraction in so her schemes were not quite so obvious…. she felt she HAD to find some agreeable person to help her gain an audience with Elinor and, in her mind, what better way to win her confidence than by flattery? Yes, her lies came out with Anne (& out went Anne with them) but think what would have happened if they didn’t (horrors!) Elinor & Edward would be parted forever and Lucy (+Anne, I daresay) would both be not only old maids (not so bad from our modern viewpoints) but also POOR and utterly without means of a more secure future. Charlotte, at least, would have had her well developed mind, her family, and her friends of good standing to ensure she did not end up in the gutter. What did the sisters Steele have? Also worth mentioning that I believe the primary vein of this plan goes way back to her school days. Without the means to be introduced properly to society and, therefore, her pool of potential husbands (certainly well off ones) was extremely limited… I can see how she saw her escape route and persisted in assuring herself a comfortable existence. It’s too bad she had such little self respect to go along with the microscopic opportunities afforded women at the time.
@mnomadvfx2 жыл бұрын
"and knowing that Elinor stood closer to Edwards family than her" Lol how much society has changed that this distinction would very much be a negative in Elinor's favor today 😅 "So wait, you are my half brother's brother in law?" "Yes?" "NOPE" 😂🤣
@mnomadvfx2 жыл бұрын
@@nancymcclymont2858 "She had no talents, no wealth, no status, no knowledge, and (really) no help of any kind" You see that doesn't fly at all on the knowledge side of things. Her father was a school master and the novel presents her as intelligent enough to manipulate events to her advantage. It doesn't strike me as likely that she would have learned nothing from such a father unless he was the most inattentive parent of the era.
@nancymcclymont28582 жыл бұрын
@@mnomadvfx Right, and being the daughter of a schoolmaster was no leg up in society, the marriage mart, and it in no way paid well. She did the most she could with that situation by manipulating Edward the way she did. I’m saying the same thing a different way. She felt she had to do these things because all she had was her ability to strategize, manipulate, etc.
@julijakeit2 жыл бұрын
@@nancymcclymont2858 In a way, Jane Austen used Lucy's character to show how the society treated (and still treats to this day) the flatters and the unscrupulous. They win even if they go over the heads and hearts of others. Had Elinor had more sense as to who Lucy was, she would have never accepted to be her confidante and would have ruined Lucy as she so cunningly was making Elinor suffer and boasting about her engagement, even gossiping about Marianne's situation. But Elinor has too many principles that would have ruined her if not Colonel Brandon while Lucy wins by dumping Edward the moment he's disinherited and going after his brother. I also always wondered, how was Robert Ferrars fall for Lucy so quickly? I suspect that Lucy played her tricks on him just to secure her position in a wealthy family while still being engaged to Edward, just in case.
@frankieb432 жыл бұрын
I truly believe that she did know about her, which is why she made such a beeline for her when they first met.
@fionatritton74552 жыл бұрын
In my mind Miss Steele is from the same mould as Vanity Fair's Miss Sharp. Two very determined young ladies who used their wits and charm, all they possessed, to improve their situation in life.
@keepdancingmaria3 ай бұрын
What an excellent point. I've thought so too, with the exception that Becky could have real affections for people, and I'm unable to find anything like that in Lucy. But both were calculating, and both could also miscalculate. Thackeray made Becky fall, and Austen allowed Lucy to thrive. Between the 2, I like Becky more. While Lucy was cunning, Becky was intelligent, and she could work (be a successful governess), and until ambition blinded her she actually was a team player with her husband.
@JudithKlinghoffer2 жыл бұрын
Listening to your analysis of the relationship between Edward and Lucy reminded me of a distinction Jane Austen make about two types of love in her letter to her niece Fanny. Fanny asks if she should marry Mr. Plumtree. Jane responds: "You like him well enough to marry, but not well enough to wait ... nothing can be compared to the misery of being bound without love, bound to one and preferring another." This describes Edward's misery. Fanny listened to her aunt. Do you think S&S was on their minds?
@DezMarivette2 жыл бұрын
I mean to me, it was never a question that she absolutely knew about Elinor! But I never had the text to support, and these passages are wonderful!
@cmark76032 жыл бұрын
Absolutely love your videos and insights! Always makes me want to re-read so many novels. I wish your videos were required “research” for Jane Austen movie adaptations!
@Andrea_of_AtLastCrochet2 жыл бұрын
You bet she knew about the Dashwoods, especially Elinor. Everything Lucy says implies how close she is to Edward, even though she thinly disguises the connection as friends, at first. Could she be anymore gloating than she was when she brought Elinor into her "secret" engagement? In Mansfield Park, Austen describes marriage as a maneuvering business. Lucy could have given Maria Bertram lessons in how to get what she wanted! The main difference being Lucy was less picky about the person she gained. If they could provide safety, comfort, and some status Lucy was satisfied. Too bad for Maria that she was unaware that Henry Crawford didn't love her, or even like her. Lucy was definitely more capable of understanding what motivated the people she was in contact with. She must have had a complicated score card of everything each person could do for her and how she could get them to give it to her willingly. Scary😏.
@unasperanza9803 Жыл бұрын
Henry is the villain there he actively pursued and pretended he loved Maria and ruined things for her!!
@Andrea_of_AtLastCrochet Жыл бұрын
@@unasperanza9803 He was the villain for Maria. He did disregard her feelings but she was hardly without fault. She did the same thing to Rushworth as Crawford did to her. It's not made forgivable because he wasn't very smart about people. Crawford and Maria are both wanting someone they don't understand and are only focused on themselves and whether or not they were happy. They couldn't understand why the other person wouldn't just agree to be what they wanted because they wanted them. The other person's needs or wants or feelings had no value to either of them.
@robintrevillian11962 жыл бұрын
I have always believed that Lucy knew about Elinor before her visit to Barton and got herself invited to meet the Dashwood sisters. I also like your interpretation that Lucy completely fabricated the comment about the sisters' beauty. To me, it seems inconsistent with Edward's character to say something their beauty, let alone something so over the top. Even if he weren't engaged to Lucy, that seems out of character. Love your videos, Dr. Cox. I've been reading and rereading Jane Austen my whole life and you've added so much depth in my understanding of her works. Thank you!
@O-Demi Жыл бұрын
Reading the novel I even questioned whether the Steeles are actually related to the Middletons, it all seemed sus. :D But I guess they had to name some common relative and show that they know what's going on in that family to appear related. And maybe the Steeles 'heard' about the Dashwood sisters' beauty only when Sir John himself mentioned that he has neighbors, his cousins, who are very beautiful young ladies of the same age as the Steeles. And Lucy Steele seems like she is perfectly able to scheme such an encounter. I remember Elinor thinking "it had Lucy written all over it" when their servant saw Lucy with her new husband who the Dashwoods first belived to be Edward. That encounter also seemed to be her scheme, even when Edward wasn't in the picture, she wanted Elinor to think it was him, as she didn't give the full name of her new husband.
@gabyv82 жыл бұрын
I really enjoy your Jane Austen videos. Could you do more please? P & P, S & S, and Emma please!
@lasalleman67924 ай бұрын
Very good analysis. Jane Austen makes us think and re-think the novel. Continuously. So just when you think you understand the novel, you find still another point of view. And something more or less hidden, is revealed.
@wickedminx50142 жыл бұрын
I always believed that Miss Lucy Steele was aware of Miss Elinor Dashwood and arranged to meet her to get the measure of her rival so that could scuttle any attachment to Mr. Edward Ferras in that quarter.
@Sara-lk2yr2 жыл бұрын
Everytime you open a stunning deeper comprehention on Austen's text... 😍 Thanks a lot! 😊🙏
@tomeikawalker90872 жыл бұрын
Thank you for another awesome lecture! I always wondered if Lucy was really indeed a relation of Mrs. Jennings. She was so good at reading people it made me think that maybe she attached herself to whomever Mrs. Jennings told her about in their initial meeting.
@jfederle1872 Жыл бұрын
Great video🌺 It makes Edward a more pitiable character to think he had probably realized just how sharp and conniving Lucy Steele was to have engineered such a meeting with the Dashwoods.
@mouseketeery2 жыл бұрын
Oh yes. I imagine that Edward wasn't as circumspect and guarded as he thought he'd been - perhaps mentioning Elinor a bit too often, or looking a bit 'fond' when he did so. Something like that. She seems not to have hung about before scooting off the Exeter and managing to wangle an invitation to Barton Park. It's a while since I read S&S, but I remember wondering whether the Steele girls really were related to Mrs Jennings. Unless I'm misremembering, she seems to have relied entirely on what the Steeles said for 'discovering' the connection.
@Evelyndiggs9190710 ай бұрын
Also note, that Elinor was not told Lucy's name by Edward even though, in Lucy's words, he talks of her [ Elinor ] "almost as a sister." Lucy must have known that if he only highly esteemed Elinor as a sister he would have trusted her to know of his engagement... unless he planned to mary her himself. As Elinor was talking to Lucy she said he had said he was staying with friends but did not know of her engagement. She positively must have known just then!
@skadi7132 жыл бұрын
It would be great if you could make a video about Edmund Bertram’s attitude towards Fanny. It is so strange and unclear… I would love to know your opinion
@beckawilk2 жыл бұрын
Me too. He never seems worth Fanny's adoration. He was the person who was nicest to her in a fairly narrow social circle but he never had too many competitors.
@jessica_jam43862 жыл бұрын
Honestly both Edmund Bertram and Edward Ferrers seem a bit unworthy of their heroines. Neither one are my favorite Jane Austen heroes, even if the books they’re in are great.
@sheilalopez39832 жыл бұрын
Lucy was a little schemer. As soon as Edward was disowned by his mother and stripped of his inheritance, she went with Robert the brother who got Edward's inheritance.
@julieletford56952 жыл бұрын
I am sure she knew. Probably why she brought up Edward. She wanted to see Elinor's reaction.
@catrionahall84352 жыл бұрын
This is such an interesting instance of the way Jane Austen constructs her support framework under pinning the events that propel her narratives. Critics often accuse her of relying on coincidences to forward the plots but instances like this show that to be much less the case. These structures can also be discovered in her other novels. The gentile population of the UK was very small at that time which makes coincidences so much more frequent in any case. I now live in a place where the population is rather small and coincidences happen all the time, in fact it is essential to be cautious in conversation as the connections between people can be very embarrassing. People who live in larger population areas may not be aware of this.
@Bei912 жыл бұрын
Your analysis makes so much sense.... definitely in line with Lucy's character as an avid orchestrator of her own social rise. She would be quite focused on Elinor as a rival, and would definitely go to such lengths to protect the social and economic opportunity of her marriage to Edward
@SUZABQ Жыл бұрын
I agree with your assessment. Lucy Steele was insecure and wanted to check out her competition of her affections for Mr Ferras. She knew, and rather cruelly manipulated the situation to her favor.
@evelyne7071 Жыл бұрын
It’s so nice to hear about the subtleties in Austen’s work that I had missed. Lucy sure was a piece of work.
@rubygallagher92892 жыл бұрын
Conniving Lucy.
@thepokeyrose54832 жыл бұрын
What I’d like to know is: why did Edward open his big mouth? If he spoke of Elinor in such a way as to put Lucy on her guard….why?! Or maybe it was more wheedling by Lucy, maybe she asked a ton of questions and got him to admit something he didn’t mean to. That seems more likely. 🤷🏻♀️
@athag12 жыл бұрын
When I first read the book,I thought that Lucy had gathered enough from Edward’s visit to make her uneasy that there was someone, in a general way, and only became seriously worried, when Mrs Jennings and Sir John were openly joking in front of her, calling Edward Ferrars Elinor’s lover, and that this was what made her take the decisive step of bringing Elinor into her confidence. However after watching this video, I am convinced that Lucy had been worried about Elinor beforehand, and had engineered her visit to friends in Exeter in order to “accidentally” meet up with her distant relations there. She might actually have known about her connection to Mrs Jennings and Lady Middleton and been the one to inform Mrs Jennings and Sir John of it when she “ran into them” in town. Lucy is such a great villain because on the one hand, she is a user who doesn’t care whose corpse she’ll step over on her way to success, and on the other, she’s a young woman in desperate circumstances. One might even say of her, as of Jane Fairfax, that “the world is not hers nor is the world’s law.” I think even Jane Austen had a grudging respect for Lucy.
@TiffyVella12 жыл бұрын
Interesting that you compare Lucy with Jane, two women with secret engagements. And yes, both are well-bred young women with no other assets who are fearful of poverty. I want to pay attention now to Jane's movements and how Miss Bates speaks of her. Did Jane distrust Emma and was she also working behind the scenes? I hadn't thought so but Jane plays her cards close to her heart, unlike Lucy.
@athag12 жыл бұрын
@@TiffyVella1 You might be interested in reading Jane Fairfax by Joan Aiken. It’s a retelling of Emma from the point of view of Jane Fairfax. I really enjoyed it.
@TiffyVella12 жыл бұрын
@@athag1 Thanks!
@DestinyKiller2 жыл бұрын
@@TiffyVella1 Jane is much more refined than Lucy, though, so u don't see her doing any behind the scenes shenanigans except voicing her (very reasonable) displeasure at Frank
@michellekeyser80857 ай бұрын
I expect that Mrs jenkins let it all out of the bag about Elinor and Edward immediately upon Lucy’s arrival. She and her son in law spent all their time making embarrassing jokes about it. If Lucy wasn’t sure before she got there she sure did was immediately after
@WalkawayyyRenee2 жыл бұрын
Sounds like a case of “mention-itis” maybe, on the part of Edward. I loved this video. Thank you for your wonderful work in putting your finger on the pulse of Austen!
@k.s.k.77212 жыл бұрын
I've felt for a while that the characters of Lucy Steele and Becky Sharp (Vanity Fair) have a lot in common. Published around 35 years after Sense and Sensibility, it seems to me as if Lucy was made a protagonist in her own novel, and how a woman of her abilities would do if dependent only on her wits to make a life. I'd love to see a comparison of these two.
@michaelsanders45509 ай бұрын
I only read the screen play; therefore I missed this whole meeting between Lycy and Elinor. I don't know if I would have reached the same conclusion you did but I think it would have given me pause. I have become a fan of Jane Austen. I thing Persuasion is my favorite story.
@beckawilk2 жыл бұрын
I love your channel and learning more about novels I have loved for years. I would love if you did more analysis on Wuthering Heights, you really made me see the novel through a different lens and appreciate it. Plus your hair and outfit are stunning today. You look so light and summery.
@onemercilessming13422 жыл бұрын
It's been almost 7 decades since I read Sense and Sensibility (most of 8th grade was spent with the English lady authors of the late 18th and early 19th century and a teacher who encouraged independent thought among her mostly female students). However. I remember that, when Lucy Steele met Eleanor Dashwood, she remarked that she had heard much of her, and not from Eleanor's neighbor, but a "completely different source" by whom she was praised. Then Lucy confides that she's secretly engaged to Eleanor's sister-in-law's brother. Does my memory serve me well?
@nicoleshan6410 Жыл бұрын
Actually, Edward was Fanny's (Elinor's sister in law) brother
@onemercilessming1342 Жыл бұрын
@@nicoleshan6410 That's exactly what I wrote.
@centuryflower2 жыл бұрын
I keep thinking about how all this works out for Elinor and Edward after their marriage- their relations with their “in-laws.” I wonder if the Farris family ever accepts them back on some level- just communication anyway-, and Lucy seems like the kind of person to strengthen or retain ties with the Dashwoods and with Elinor and Edward and with everyone, really, in order to take advantage of whatever goes on in any corner of the family and strengthen the family dynamics in general. Edward and Elinor wouldn’t turn their back on family either and would likely seek whatever reconciliation was possible, but how would Elinor and Edward endure the differences in money over time and the differences in opportunities they could offer their children versus what the cousins could be offered. It would be very painful in the years ahead, I would imagine.
@DestinyKiller2 жыл бұрын
I just listened to it and I believe it says that Mrs. Ferrars deigned to visit them once but did not insult them by pretending they were favorites. So I would assume a polite and civil relationship with them but not close. It also gives the impression that Lucy and Fanny fought often, often including their husbands
@yorkshirepudding98602 жыл бұрын
Loved the video. I think you are completely right, she seems to have had nothing else in mind other than warning Elinor off.
@sonitagovan2 жыл бұрын
I am always astonished at how complex and intricately detailed Jane Austen's characters are. My sister and I often find Austen characters in people we know . We know a Mr Collins, Mr Willoughby and indeed a Lucy Steele within our circle of acquaintances. I am very interested to hear your opinion on how well Austen books are adapted into series or movies. I was extremely disappointed by 2020 Emma and although I am looking forward to Persuasion I am disappointed by the look of Wentworth...he looks more like a pirate than a Captain.
@kattkatt7442 жыл бұрын
Had no idea there was a new Persuasion film coming. Looking at the trailer it looks like it is going to be horrible. Seems like they have totally misunderstood Anne Elliots personality and ended up making her more into an wannebe Emma or Elisabeth and crossed it with Fleabag storytelling. I'm sure it will be funny in itself, but if you love Anne Elliot for Anne Elliot I think it is going to be a hard watch.
@stephaniewilbur97482 жыл бұрын
I love your close readings of the text. Very enjoyable.
@jediping2 жыл бұрын
Wow. Makes perfect sense. Lucy is so …. argh!!!! To a point you can’t blame her. The society she’s in and the position she was born into mean she is not far from pretty grinding poverty. To marry well is her only way out of that being a possibility, and she knows she doesn’t have anything but herself to work with. So she works within the confines of the society to give herself the best shot at that that she sees, and she plans to protect that shot at all costs. When Edward is cut off, she knows exactly what sort of life they would have instead, as Mrs Jenkins anticipates. So she goes hard for Robert instead. She knows she’s pretty and that she can flatter, and she uses that to its max to get him. Gotta admire the grind I guess! But ugh, she is why I have a hard time te-reading this book, because she makes me so angry!
@windycityliz77112 жыл бұрын
Agree to a point - in the end, Edward is free, and Robert will thrive under Lucy's "tutelage".
@michaelodonnell8242 жыл бұрын
I can completely agree with you. In this novel, Austen ensures that the Villain WINS - Lucy got everything she wanted - Fortune, Position, Marriage - and, to an extent (though few critics appreciate it), this is an Austen trait - far from the moralizing of the Victorian period, where the "Good" thrive and the "Evil" get their eventual comeuppance, Austen often closes her novels NOT punishing the Villains. Look at "Lady Susan", for example, where a COMPLETELY ruthless woman succeeds in all her plans, eventually. Or even in S&S, Willoughby, who seduces and abandons the underage young Eliza, ends up in a wealthy marriage - no punishment for his many wrongs. There is little doubt that the Victorians would certainly have seen this novel as "Wicked"!
@jediping2 жыл бұрын
@@michaelodonnell824 I don’t know if the Victorians would have been against it really, but by the “villains” not ending up punished, Austen is actually making a more powerful statement against society than them getting some sort of comeuppance. She’s saying “Look at these people being successful and question if they are actually good people.” Pretty powerful message I think.
@jediping2 жыл бұрын
@@londongael414 I dunno, she’s able to dress well but is embarrassed by her sister’s free discussion of how she does it cheaply. They spend time with relatives with no indication of where their home is. Sure Ann is content with, say, a doctor, but even that life wouldn’t be guaranteed to be comfortable. Even the Dashwoods end up in a bad spot because of the caprice of an old man, despite having been related to someone so well off. Life was more precarious for women than for men. And at this time, the middle class was still fairly weak, not as robust as it would grow to in the Victorian times, so it would have been easier to fall out of it. To be clear, I still hate Lucy Steele with every fiber of my being. But I also get where she’s coming from.
@jediping2 жыл бұрын
@@londongael414 Thinking about it, it’s interesting that she also doesn’t give Eleanor the super rich happy ending that is common in a lot of other fiction. She loves Edward for who he is, and he reward for being good is him in his most authentic self. It’s a pretty powerful message that being good isn’t always rewarded with the 100% complete perfect happy ending, but instead with a personal happy ending. Even if she didn’t end up with Edward, she knew she didn’t have anything to regret in her conduct. And that’s part of what Marianne has to learn.
@ayhrielvisante13862 жыл бұрын
I want to say how much I appreciate your editing around the commercials. Thank you so much for having complete sentences and words! Some channels insert breaks in the middle of a word or to where it cuts into a sentence and it’s not a pleasant experience. So thank you for the intellectual stimulation, and the great editing, both!
@Amy-ky5wr2 жыл бұрын
Nice to see the seasons outside your window! The other day I was watching an older video of yours and it was trees without leaves... now I see them in full leaf, fresh and green!
@Lyrazel2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic analysis! I haven't thought about it myself but when you lay it all out like this it becomes clearly obvious!
@iria8712 жыл бұрын
Reading the book there was no doubt in my mind she knew about Elinor it's clear she was aware of Edward's feeling from the way he talked about Elinor Lucy is my favourite character I never understood why people hate her but love Edward
@indiraurazova5792 жыл бұрын
Lucy Steele's character reminds me of Becky Sharp from the Vanity Fair! I would love to see you compare them!
@ZackRekeSkjell2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the analysis! Reading Sense and Sensibility the first time was quite a wild ride and I can imagine it being a book worth rereading.
@ellie6982 жыл бұрын
Ooh, Lizzy Steele is even more devious than we thought!!!!
@shmickyshmoe Жыл бұрын
Of course she knew. She was intelligent enough to recognize signs and pick up on verbal cues from Edward’s visit to be alarmed. She felt a need to protect at all costs her prospects of marrying well and securing her future.
@claudiasisco-gn7xx Жыл бұрын
You're so much fun. I love your videos. Thank you.