Showing posts with label Jane Austen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jane Austen. Show all posts

Edward Taylor of Bifrons: Jane Austen’s First Love

by Syrie James

Who was the first young man to steal Jane Austen’s heart? People often assume that it was the Irishman Tom Lefroy, with whom Austen enjoyed a brief flirtation at age twenty—but in fact, Jane was infatuated years earlier with another, truly extraordinary young man named Edward Taylor.

How do we know this? Because in a letter to her sister Cassandra in September 1796, while Jane was in Kent visiting their brother Edward Austen, Jane wrote, “We went by Bifrons and I contemplated with a melancholy pleasure the abode of Him, on whom I once fondly doated.” This single sentence is full of information, and an excellent clue to a relationship that, until now, was not very well-known to Austen biographers and enthusiasts.

When Jane wrote that letter in 1796, her flirtation with Lefroy had ended some seven months prior. She was reminiscing with wistful longing about a young man she’d met many years earlier. Scholars have long since identified the “Him” as Edward Taylor, and the “abode,” Bifrons Park, as the estate in Kent which he would one day inherit. Little else, however, was known about him. Biographer Deirdre Le Faye, in Jane Austen: A Family Record (1989) simply states, “Jane met and briefly cherished a girlish passion for young Mr. Edward Taylor of Bifrons.” John Halperin, in The Life of Jane Austen (1984), refers to Edward Taylor as “her old beau” and “the most shadowy of her possible early ‘suitors.’”

I was intrigued by this young man upon whom Jane Austen had “once fondly doated.” Her choice of words, by definition, infer a great deal about her feelings. To “doat”—an old-fashioned spelling of “dote”—means “to express and demonstrate great love and fondness for somebody” or “to love to an excessive or foolish degree.” We know so little about Austen’s romantic life, yet here was a reference, in her own words, to a young man with whom she was once clearly smitten, and was still thinking about years later. Indeed, Jane continued to think about Edward Taylor in the years that followed, mentioning him again in letters in 1800 and 1802 with similar fondness.


Determined to learn as much as I could about Edward Taylor, I devoted myself to researching him. Eventually, through a variety of sources, I uncovered a great deal of information about Edward Taylor himself, his family, his ancestors, and his ancestral estate, Bifrons. The most exciting and revealing source was a rather obscure find: The Taylor Papers (1913), the memoirs and letters of Edward Taylor’s brother, Lieutenant General Sir Herbert Taylor, published many years after his death. This work reveals Edward Taylor to be a member of an extraordinary, well-traveled, and highly accomplished family.

Edward Taylor, I discovered, was a year and a half older than Jane Austen. Born on 24 June, 1774, he was the eldest son of the Reverend Edward Taylor and Margaret Payler of county Kent, both of whom came from distinguished families. Nathaniel Taylour, Esq., represented the county Bedford in Parliament and was the recorder of Colchester during the usurpation of Oliver Cromwell; the Paylers were descended from an officer of King Henry VIII’s household. The Rev. Edward Taylor was educated at St. John’s College, Cambridge and succeeded to the livings of Patricksbourne and Bridges in Kent. In November 1767, at age 33, he inherited the family estate, Bifrons Park, after his elder brother died.

Jan van der Vaardt, 1647–1721
Bifrons Park, Kent, 1695-1705
Oil on Canvas
Yale Center for British Art

A large, impressive, Elizabethan red-brick manor home with magnificent grounds, Bifrons was named for its “two front wings.” The house was built in 1634 by John Bargrave, a writer, collector, and canon for the Canterbury cathedral, who spent much of his life travelling across the European continent. One of John Bargrave’s expeditions included the dangerous errand of ransoming English captives at Algiers after the Restoration, a mission which succeeded and netted him and his accomplice Archdeacon Selleck a ten thousand pound reward from the bishops and the clergy upon their return. Bargrave died at Canterbury in 1680. Fourteen years later, Bifrons was purchased by John Taylor, Esq., and handed down thereafter through the generations of the Taylor family.

Rev. Edward Taylor & Mrs. Margaret Taylor of Bifrons Park

When the Rev. Edward Taylor inherited Bifrons, he seems to have been influenced by both the illustrious building career and sense of wanderlust of the gentleman who originally constructed the property. Upon taking possession, the Rev. Edward Taylor rebuilt Bifrons as an elegant Georgian mansion, an undertaking so massive that the “modern” renovated dwelling bore little if any resemblance to its Elizabethan predecessor. The Rev. Edward Taylor married two years later, and seven children followed in quick succession. Concerned about the cost of educating his family, the Rev. Edward Taylor moved his entire brood to the Continent, where private Masters could be hired for his children at a cheaper rate than in England. In April 1780, shortly after arriving in Brussels, his wife Margaret sadly died after giving birth to their eighth child, a daughter who was named after her. The Rev. Edward Taylor devoted his life to raising and educating his eight young children, and for the next eleven years they lived and traveled abroad.

It easy to understand why when Jane Austen met the teenaged Edward Taylor upon his return to England she fell head over heels for him. He had spent his youth travelling extensively throughout Europe. He’d been educated in all the classic subjects by private masters, and was extremely well-read and accomplished. He was fond of reading, and, like his siblings, he was fluent in German, French, Italian, and Spanish, could read and write in Latin and Greek, and was a proficient on a musical instrument. No doubt Edward was very much like his brother Herbert, who describes himself in his memoirs as an avid conversationalist with strong opinions— qualities which would have appealed to Austen. The Taylors were friends with people in the highest echelons of society, from princes and princesses to military, religious, and government leaders.

Interestingly, in spite of his position as eldest son and heir to Bifrons Park which guaranteed him a life of leisure and ease, Edward Taylor—like his brothers—aspired to a career in the military. He served in the army from 1795 - 1798, as Captain in The New Romney (or Duke of York’s own) Fencible Light Dragoons in Ireland but was obliged to quit at age 24 when his father suffered a stroke and died and Edward succeeded to the estate. While master of Bifrons, Edward Taylor continued his association with the military, serving in the Kent yeomanry for many years. He married, raised a family, and served as the Member of Parliament for Canterbury from 1807 to 1812.

Unfortunately, due to financial difficulties, Edward Taylor was obliged to sell Bifrons in 1830. Although the property had been in his family for many generations, Edward Taylor seems to have been relieved. Perhaps being master of a large estate and lands was a burden to him, rather than a privilege. Or perhaps Edward Taylor preferred to live on the continent after spending most of his youth there. Whatever the reason, he seems to have lived abroad quite happily for many years, counting foreign kings and queens among his closest friends.

Bifrons Park circa 1900
Sadly, Bifrons was demolished in 1948. It is one of England’s great lost country houses.

Looking back to the young Edward Taylor who Jane Austen met in Kent—an extraordinarily accomplished young man who had already led a fascinating life—it is easy to see why she was fond of him. He must have been exciting and very different from any other young man she had ever met. Although Austen never married, her famous novels of love and courtship convey such a deep understanding of human nature and the complexities of the heart, one can only surmise that she experienced the emotion herself—and it seems certain that she had deep romantic feelings for Edward Taylor.


My novel Jane Austen’s First Love brings that relationship to life. In a story inspired by actual events, the young, vivacious Jane Austen and the extraordinary Edward Taylor meet and fall in love over the event-filled, magical summer of 1791. It is a relationship from which Jane Austen learned a great deal, and which may have influenced the novels that made her famous.

Many thanks to the English Historical Fiction Authors for hosting me here today. I hope your readers enjoyed my research discoveries of one of Jane Austen’s beaus, Edward Taylor, his family and their estate in Kent. What were you most surprised to discover? Do you think that the remarkable Edward Taylor is similar to any of Jane Austen’s heroes? And, how much of her own life experiences might have influenced her novel writing?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Syrie James, hailed as “the queen of nineteenth century re-imaginings” by Los Angeles Magazine, is the bestselling author of nine critically acclaimed novels that have been translated into 18 languages. Her books have been awarded the Audio Book Association Audie, designated as Editor’s Picks by Library Journal, named a Discover Great New Writer’s Selection by Barnes and Noble, a Great Group Read by the Women’s National Book Association, and Best Book of the Year by The Romance Reviews and Suspense Magazine. Syrie is a member of the WGA and lives in Los Angeles. Please visit her at syriejames.com, Facebook or say hello on Twitter @SyrieJames.

Please join the 
Jane Austen’s First Love Holiday Blog Tour Nov 15 – Dec 14, 2014. The complete blog tour list and giveaway contest details can be found at Syrie’s website. Good luck!




Georgette Heyer, Jane Austen, and Religion in the Regency Era

By Rosanne E. Lortz

[T]aking Holy Orders and becoming a beneficed clergyman was generally an undemanding way of life which enabled many practitioners to continue to enjoy the popular activities of the period—riding, hunting, drinking and gaming—without censure, and, for those who wished to marry, a well-endowed living provided ample means for supporting a wife and family…. A desire to enter the Church did not necessarily have to spring from a strong religious conviction or a passion for the calling; for many younger sons it was position which could ensure a reasonable degree of comfort based on an income derived from one or more livings which were frequently made available from the family estates.
Jennifer Kloester’s book Georgette Heyer’s Regency World is billed as “the definitive guide for all fans of Georgette Heyer, Jane Austen, and the glittering Regency period.” The book is a well-researched compendium of the dress, dining, manners, customs, houses, and haunts of the time period. I have heard more than one historical novelist refer to it as the “Bible” that must be adhered to when writing Regencies.  I refer to it often and keep a special spot for it on my shelves.

Interestingly, the above quote, taken from Kloester’s book, is the single paragraph dealing with religion during the Regency in England. The lack of material on this subject (as well as the general tenor of this passage) gives the impression that religion, among the upper classes at least, was either nominal or peripheral.

But was religious belief, in particular Christianity, such an unimportant aspect of Regency society?

It is certainly true that religion does not figure much in Georgette Heyer’s books. However, it is equally true that Georgette Heyer’s Regency world is not the same world as that of the historical Regency era. Georgette Heyer was a historical novelist from the twentieth century who developed the genre of Regency romances as we know them today, and while many aspects of her books are well researched, there are other aspects that veer into the world of fairy tale (as romances in any time period are wont to do). The chance of meeting a wealthy, eligible, titled bachelor in Georgette Heyer’s Regency London, for example, is far greater than it would have been in real life....

Portrait of Jane Austen drawn by
her sister Cassandra
Jane Austen’s work, on the other hand, is far more realistic a picture of Regency life, for Austen did not simply write in the Regency world, she lived in it. Period sources show that she was the daughter of a clergyman who was much more devout than the description of clergymen given to us by Kloester at the beginning of this essay.

Peter Leithart, in his biography Jane Austen, examines primary source material and shows that that although Jane Austen was not demonstrative with her religious sentiments, she followed in her father’s footsteps as a believing Christian in the style of the period in which she lived. She attended church regularly, wrote her own prayers in the style of the Anglican prayer book, and encouraged her family members in moral living.

The most memorable clergymen in Austen’s books are the conceited Mr. Elton and the absurd Mr. Collins—Mr. Elton could certainly be the clergyman of nominal faith described in the paragraph from Kloester’s book. However, Leithart points out that all of Jane’s other clergymen are praiseworthy individuals. Edmund Bertram from Mansfield Park, despite temptation from the worldly Miss Crawford, is portrayed as taking right path to join the Church. And though Austen treats Mr. Elton with a good deal of ridicule, she also centers the whole book of Emma around the virtue of Christian charity.

Christianity, it seems, was not just a peripheral matter in Jane Austen’s life. It affected her daily life as well as her writing. And while it would be foolhardy to take the single case of Jane Austen’s beliefs and make them representative of all the denizens of the Regency era, it would also perhaps be reasonable to wish that “The definitive guide for all fans of…Jane Austen…” had a little more than one paragraph about a matter which impacted her life in such a large way.
______________________

Rosanne E. Lortz is the author of I Serve: A Novel of the Black Prince, a historical adventure/romance set during the Hundred Years' War, and Road from the West: Book I of the Chronicles of Tancred, the beginning of a trilogy which takes place during the First Crusade. Her current WIP is a Regency era murder mystery.
______________________

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Kloester, Jennifer. Georgette Heyer's Regency World. Naperville, IL: Sourcebooks, Inc., 2010.

Leithart, Peter J. Jane Austen. Thomas Nelson, 2010.

Cheltenham Spa

by Lauren Gilbert

The location is excellent.   On the edge of the Cotswalds, in a valley with good arable land and water, it is surrounded by defensible hills.  Originally an agricultural settlement, the area has been occupied for hundreds of years, with the original settlement taken over by Romans, subsequently Saxon, Norman, etc.  Mentioned in the Domesday Book, the town was awarded a market charter in 1226 and was a royal gift for centuries. The excellence of the site was enhanced by the number of roads that went through the area. However, the town remained a fairly small town occupied by and visited by farmers and local gentry for markets and fairs.

Salt springs were discovered 1716. People drank the waters for health, found them good, and more came. After a while, the waters were sold. The original site was enclosed in 1721. Then Captain Henry Skillicone, owner of the spring, turned the spring into a well with an avenue of trees leading to the well, a pump room, and assembly rooms between  1738-1742. This is the beginning of the development of Cheltenham as a health center and the growth of the town to a thriving medical and social center.

In 1740 a book was written about the healthful qualities of the waters by a Doctor Short. More new spas were built in the area. Gradually the spas were visited by more upper crust and celebrities. Handel and Samuel Johnson visited. However, a visit by George III and the royal family for a month in the summer of 1788 put the town on the map and allowed the appellation “Royal Cheltenham Spa”.

Constitutional Club-satire shows
George III with a jug of Cheltenham Water,
Constitutional Restorer 

The Prince of Wales (later George IV) visited in 1806. He gave a ball attended by leading nobility and gentry, one of the largest and most elaborate gatherings. He visited again as George IV in 1821.  Other royalty visited. The Duke and Duchess of Angouleme (daughter and son-in-law of late King Louis XVI) visited in 1811 and 1813; Louis XVIII visited in 1813. Visits by aristocracy and royalty continued well into the Victorian era.

Education was always a major focus. The city’s motto is “Salubritas et Eruditio” (Health and Education). The Free Grammar School was established in 1574 by Richard Pates and endowed by Queen Elizabeth.

Richard Pate, later in
life by an unknown artist
Wikimedia Commons

Sunday School was established in 1787 at the parish church only 7 years after the first of the nation was established in Gloucester. The Duke of Wellington made donations to the National School and School of Industry during his visit in 1816.

During the Georgian/Regency era, the baths were the major draw.  The waters were supposedly good for skin ailments and scurvy.  The baths included salt baths and hot and cold baths. In 1803, a sulphur spring was discovered by Dr. Thomas Jameson and was supposedly good for jaundice and diseases of the liver, dyspepsia, and conditions resulting from living in a hot climate. The Duke of Wellington took the waters during his visits, and Jane Austen visited Cheltenham Spa for 2 weeks in 1816 with her sister Cassandra. Nearby spas included Montpellier Spa (about ½ mile away) and the Imperial Spa which opened in 1818.  Dr. Jenner (of vaccination fame) was a local practitioner for some years.

The inside of the rotunda
of Montpellier Spa
Wikimedia Commons

Of course, while taking the water people expected to be entertained, especially gentry, aristocracy, and royalty. Although never attaining the status of Bath for its social season, Cheltenham Spa certainly provided entertainment. There was a circulating library: Mr. Harward proprietor of a subscription service also let harpsichords, piano-forte’s, and other instruments and provided people to tune them. The social bustle became significant enough that there were elected masters of ceremonies to regulate amusements. The first one was Simon Moreau, Esq. who greeted George III at his visit and held the position until his death in 1810. He wrote the first guide to Cheltenham.

There were assembly rooms used for balls, card parties, and other entertainments.  The Long Room was the original and smallest of the rooms. The Upper and Lower Rooms opened in 1791. The Assembly Rooms were opened July 29, 1816, by the Duke and Duchess of Wellington with a ball attended by 1400 of the aristocracy.

There is a long history of drama in Cheltenham. The Manor Rolls contain an entry in 1612 regarding the production of a play at the Sign of the Crown. Cheltenham saw performances by Mrs. Siddons, Kemble, Kean, and others.  Dramas and tragedies seem to have been especially popular in Cheltenham, particularly works of Shakespeare.  The original theatre in the early 18th century was located in Coffee House Yard.

George III and his family attended the Cheltenham Theatre in 1788, and he constituted it a Theatre Royal by letters patent. Mrs. Jordan performed in “The Merry Wives of Windsor” during the King’s visit. Lord Byron also patronized the Cheltenham Theatre. Nightly performances were held. The professional troupe of actors was considered extremely proficient. Regular amateur performances also held. Could over-wrought amateur performances, especially if in plays or readings of works by local residents be the origin of the use of “a Cheltenham tragedy”?  The Sadler’s Wells Puppet Theatre was established in 1795 by Samuel Seward, who made automaton figures and marionettes.

Horse racing became established in 1815 with the first organized Flat race held on Notthingham Hill.  In 1818, races were held at Cleeve Hill, and the Gold Cup was established.  (Racing was extremely popular for the next ten years, until religious objections to the evils of horse racing resulted in the grandstand being burned to the ground, and the racecourse was relocated in 1831.)  Other events also were celebrated, such as a balloon ascension in 1813.

Cheltenham was known for its elegant buildings and the wide range and quality of its accommodations. Georgian crescents, houses, villas etc. were constructed. (It is today considered a Regency town). Royal Crescent was built between 1806-1810, and the Promenade (a tree-lined walk that was then developed) in 1818. In 1786, the Paving Commissioners were established to pave and light the streets and keep them clean. The Commissioners’ Act of 1786 allowed 120 oil lamps to be established in the streets. In 1818, gas lamps were put in to light the streets. Hotels and inns were constructed to accommodate increasing number of visitors (up to 15,000 during the season).

Cheltenham maintained its popularity as a spa well into the Victorian era supported by the growth of the railroad. The popularity of horseracing at the nearby track continued, and a music festival was established in 1902. Visitors continue to have a major impact on the town, thanks to the popularity of the music festival and racetrack.


British History On LineA Topographical Dictionary of England, Samuel Lewis, ed. Published 1848. Pages 562-569.

Internet ArchiveNorman's History of Cheltenham (with Eighty Illustrations) by John Goding.  1863. London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts & Green.  Cheltenham: Norman.

Medical Humanities website.  “Jane Austen’s lifelong health problems and Final Illness: New Evidence points to a fatal Hodgkin’s disease and excludes the widely accepted Addisons.”  By A. Upfal.  March 1, 2005.

Political cartoon from Wikimedia Commons

Images from the Library of Congress PD 1923
Files generated with WMUK equipmentContent media by years - Supported by Wikimedia UK - 2014

Picture of Richard Pate Wikimedia Commons


~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Lauren Gilbert is the author of HEYERWOOD: A Novel. She lives in Florida with her husband, and is working on another novel which is coming out soon.Visit her website HERE.
 

Copyright 2011 English History Fiction is proudly powered by blogger.com