I recently purchased a bounty of books from the wonderful Emily Hendrickson who is selling off some of her collection of research books. I have purchased MANY of them (Kalen, how many have you purchased?) and I refuse to tell you, my husband, or anybody how much I’ve spent! That’s between me and the IRS.
Of of the treasures I purchased is The Silver Fork Society: Fashionable Life and Literature from 1814 to 1840 by Alison Adburgham (Constable and Co, 1983). The term Silver Fork Society was given to the literature in the Regency that emphasized the glitter, elegance, and frivolity of the aristocratic classes. Like Lady Caroline Lamb’s Glenarvon, they were often written by those belonging to that society or on its fringes.
Another of the Silver Fork novelists was Marguerite, Countess of Blessington. What fascinated me about Marguerite was that her own life read like a novel. She was born the daughter of a drunken Irish squireen who sold her in marriage at age fifteen to a Captain Farmer, a violent and abusive man from whom she managed to escape after a few years. She returned to her parents, who did not want her, and accepted the “protection” of a Captain Jenkins, who took her home to live with his wife and sister. She blossomed both in beauty and in education in Jenkins’ home and it was there that she met an Irish earl, Lord Blessington. Blessington paid Jenkins ten thousand pounds to compensate for the years of care of Marguerite and he set about marrying her. Luckily, no divorce needed to be arranged from the abusive Capt. Farmer. He, drunk, fell to his death from a window in King’s Bench prison. Marguerite became the Countess of Blessington and, although she was never accepted by the highest rungs of society, she and her husband lived an extravagant lifestyle surrounded by the leading men in literary and political circles. They embarked on a grand tour during which Marguerite was befriended by Byron. After her husband’s death, Marguerite turned to writing in order to make money. She wrote a memoir of Byron, Conversations with Lord Byron, and a novel, The Repealers, and she edited annuals, such as The Book of Beauty and The Keepsake.
In our novels, we would probably make certain there was a happily ever after and Marguerite’s life was not quite so easy, but I thought it was interesting that a real-life woman of the Regency could rise so far above her scandalous youth.
Last night I watched the MTV Movie Awards, a show I would normally skip, but the movie 300 was up for Best Movie, Best Performance (Gerard Butler), Best Breakthrough Performance (Lena Heady) and Best Fight scene (Gerard Butler). Johnny Depp and Pirates of the Caribbean won best movie and best performance, but Gerry won for Best Fight Scene! Way to go Gerry!!
Did you know the story of Lady Blessington? (I didn’t)
Do you know any other real life Regency heroines whose lives are like a novel?
And did you see Gerry win his MTV award??
Photo of Lady Blessington from Wikipedia
Photo of Gerry from Gerard Butler Gals.
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Kalen, how many have you purchased?
May I plead the fifth? LOL! I’m not gonna tell you how much I spent last month, let’s just say I could be London right now (and that I need to buy new bookshelves!. And I didn’t stop with Emily’s books . . . I ordered Decency and Disorder: The Age of Cant from Amazon.uk. I bought Privilege and Scandal: The Remarkable Life of Harriet Spencer from Stacey’s Books (I’d gone in to buy a birthday present for someone else). And now I’m itching to own Hubbub, a book about the sounds of historical city life that was mentioned on Word Wenches today.
I think I need an intervention.
Diane, “The SIlver Fork Society” was one of the first research books my mom and I bought when we started writing Regencies twenty-some years ago. It’s a fascinating book (which I find myself referring back to frequently). That’s where I first leaned about Marguerite Blessington and so many other interesting people. (We had a fictional silver fork novelist as the heroine of our second Regency). I’ve also read some of the silver fork novels (the U.C. Berkeley library has a few). A treasure trove of research information.
I’m also fascinated by silver fork novels, Diane, and have been researching Margaret since I learned that she was the lady on the cover of The Slightest Provocation. The horrible Irish childhood is a fascination as well. And speaking of Silver Fork society — how about all the self-promotion and cross-promotion those writers did? Weird, isn’t it, that the Regency romance began to be written during the… Regency?
I think I need an intervention.
I doubt you’ll get one here, Kalen! 🙂
Diane, I think Lady Hamilton’s life is also clearly like a novel!
And sorry, I didn’t see Gerry win. I was busy doing very serious, highbrow activities like reading Spider-Man comics.
Cara
I think we all need interventions here… 🙂 Sadly, RR has just been an enabler for me!
BTW, is it just me or does Gerry look terribly puzzled by what his popcorn box trophy might be?
I wrote this looooong response and it disappeared!
Kalen, I would duel with you over who bought the most books, but A) That would mean divulging the amount and B) If you spent more, I’d wonder what you got that I missed! And then you have to mention MORE book titles! Arrck!!!
Tracy, I didn’t know about The Silver Fork book until recently. It was mentioned somewhere (you, perhaps?) and I actually went to abebooks.com to find it, only to discover that I have purchased it from Emily. I’m glad it is as good as it promised to be and I’m eager to read some of the Silver Fork Novels.
Pam, I KNEW I’d seen that portrait somewhere. DUH. It was on your cover!!
Cara, I, too, am intrigued by Lady Hamilton’s life! The one thing that seems in common is that the society controlled by women don’t ever seem to accept these survivors.
And I assure you I was doing high-brow things while watching the MTV awards (Hollywood at its silliest). I was playing my computer game of piquet.
Amanda, I agree about RR being enabling. Now I have to look up those books Kalen mentioned….
And Gerry did say “It is metal popcorn.” The presenter-that-wasn’t-Bruce-Willis said, “It’s pure gold.” Believe me, It wasn’t anyone’s finest hour. Gerry was as good as it got.
Diane (off to abebooks.com)
Ok, I was told that I’m by no mean’s Emily’s biggest buyer (which shocks and horrifies me; cause dang!). I’ve been snapping up a lot of the 18th century/Georgian stuff that I’m not sure the rest of the buyers are all that interested in. For example, I wouldn’t have asked for the Silver Fork book, as it’s too late for me and my focus (focus, woman, focus!).
I grabbed a bunch of books on the sporting life, since I seem to heavily favor Corinthian-types. I got garden books, cause I didn’t have anything about period gardens (shocking, I know!). I got stuff on travel (all those Grand Tour books). I have literally hundreds of books in my TBR pile now. *sigh*
You mean we’re supposed to have a focus???
No, just that I need focus. LOL! I’ve got groups of reenactor friends doing everything from Ancient Rome to Roaring 20s (Roman, Medieval, 16th century German, English Civil War, Georgian, Regency, Victorian [with subsets of Civil War, Wild West, Dickens Faire], Edwardian, and Roaring 20s). I’ve finally had to just start bowing out of events. I simply can’t spread myself this thin and still get any writing done.
So now I’m exclusively Georgian (which, since I like the British system best, includes the Regency).
I wonder who did purchase the most books from Emily. I haven’t purchased any. I went crazy a couple of months ago and bought something like 30 books in one evening online. I also broke a personal record for the most I was willing to spend on one book. I’ve tried to be a little more controlled since then.
I’ve heard of Lady Bessington – but did not remember the details – and the silver fork society is all new
Last night, I started reading Ben Wilson’s The Making of Victorian Values, decency & dissent in Britain: 1789 – 1837, and so far I love it – lots of information on how the regency period was an intellectual transition between the more Georgian earlier times and the later Victorian times.
-Michelle
Curse you! Stop adding books to my list.
Diane wrote:
Do you know any other real life Regency heroines whose lives are like a novel?
I guess my favorite example is Mary Somerville (née Fairfax in 1780). Her parents neglected her education for the most part (like that of many girls); she taught herself Greek and Latin, arithmetic, and then higher math. She was married off to a cousin, who died leaving her a comfortable inheritance; with her new-found independence she studied mathematics and astronomy and made herself a noted scientist and expositor of science. She and Caroline Herschel were the first two women admitted into the Royal Astronomical Society. Along the way she married a second time, for love, to a Naval Surgeon who supported her intellectual pursuits.
Those Silver Fork (why not spoon?) books sound quite intriguing. I will have to see if I can find convenient electronic versions online. I note that The Repealers is available as a PDF from Google Books.
Todd-who-was-born-with-a-silver-fork-in-his-ear
Oh, groan, Kalen. Maybe I was Emily’s biggest customer. Scary.
I did spend my own personal high price for one of her books, Michelle. Wow to hear about you buying 30 books online. That’s like binge eating. (and it sounds glorious)
I really must organize my collection…
Todd, Mary Somerville sounds fascinating! There is so much I don’t know about the Regency.
(Must buy more books!!!!!!)The Silver Fork Society was a name given to the period hearkening back to a contemptuous comment by William Hazlitt, who, talking about Theodore Hook, said, “Provided a few select persons eat fish with silver forks, he (Hook) considers it a circumstance of no consequence if a whole country starves…”
Diane (off to look for Michelle’s Victorian Values book!!!)
“I’ve got groups of reenactor friends doing everything from Ancient Rome to Roaring 20s”
How interesting! I’ve never heard of 1920s reenacting before. What’s involved in that? (I love 1920s clothes!)
Amanda, face it. You love clothes of any era!!!
I’ve never heard of 1920s reenacting before. What’s involved in that? (I love 1920s clothes!)
A lot of gin. No really, it’s usually some kind of party at an exclusive speakeasy (either one we make up, or one that actually exists; yes, these have made a comeback). There’s music, and dancing, and a lot of gin and champagne. It’s fun. Very Thoroughly Modern Milly meets Some Like It Hot.
I’m pretty sure that The Making of Victorian Values and Decency and Disorder: The Age of Cant are the same books. They’re both written by Ben Wilson, who must be an intellectual phenom because he looks like he’s a teenager in his author photo, and this is his second book. I’m guessing the first title was considered much more marketable in the U.S. I certainly hope that the American publisher did not dumb down the U.S. version.
(And, Diane, you can borrow my copy when I’m done if you wish.)
The current, real-life regency miss who I think would make an interesting heroine in a novel is Lady Harriet Cavendish – later Viscountess Granville. Of course I may be trying to justify the fact that my new personal high in what I’m willing to spend on a book was set when I bought a copy of the Letters of Harry-O. (The next two volumes of her letters were much cheaper.) Harriet didn’t accomplish great things such as become a member of the Royal Astronomical Society, but she had really interesting relatives and moved in very high circles her whole life. She was a pretty good observer of people and her letters are very interesting.
-Michelle
“There’s music, and dancing, and a lot of gin and champagne. It’s fun. Very Thoroughly Modern Milly meets Some Like It Hot.”
I SO want to go there. 🙂
PamR wrote, “Weird, isn’t it, that the Regency romance began to be written during the… Regency?”
They were the contemps of their time, capturing the essence and trends of everyday culture.
Diane, I missed watching the MTV awards, because I didn’t know they were on. Watching Gerry would’ve been a real treat. What was with that weird metal popcorn award?
I was one of Dee’s buyers, too, though I was too slow in catching her e-mails and most of the time the books I wanted were already gone. At one point she sent me an exclusive, becase she had to see “sorry they’re gone” so many times. She’s such a dear!! Regardless of the lateness of my “bidding,” I did manage to acquire some essential books such as the one on maps, country houses, etc.
Kalen, regarding my TBR bookshelf? I’m afraid to even count how many I have in there.
“There’s music, and dancing, and a lot of gin and champagne. It’s fun. Very Thoroughly Modern Milly meets Some Like It Hot.”
I SO want to go there. 🙂
This reminds me of a party we went to, my son’s friend’s parents put it on. The boys (about age 11)went as ruffians; My daughter and her friend (13) went as vamps (complete with rented dresses. Jim was in an actual old tuxedo, but I…I wore a vintage dress – black, full length, spaghetti straps, and fringe from top to bottom! And I was nice and thin so I looked good!! I wish I’d have purchased that dress. It would have cost about $100.
Oh, Keira, I am sure MTV will repeat the show a zillion times. The popcorn IS the award. The show, I think, aspired to be young and hip, but instead it seemed like everybody acted as silly as they could. Gerry wasn’t so bad, neither was Johnny Depp, who seemed shy and uncomfortable, but all the others were AWFUL. Especially Will Farrell. Oh, Bruce Willis, a presenter, was his usual cool self.
oh ho, Keira, I’m sure I received lots of those books you missed.
Michelle, don’t tempt me! But I’d better not borrow a book in case it gets lost in the black hole that is my book room.
The letters of Lady Harriet sound like a treasure. She was the Duchess of Devonshire’s daughter, wasn’t she?
Oh ho, Diane. I’m so visiting Virginia. I may arrive with one, but may leave with two. I’m just saying…
Yes, Lady Harriett was the daughter of the 5th Duchess of Devonshire (Georgiana) and niece of the Harriet Spencer Kalen mentioned in the first remark. The last two letters in Letters of Harry-O are to her brother and to her governess informing them of her engagement to Granville and basically asking them if she was doing the right thing – fairly poignant. The 2nd volume makes it very clear very quickly that she has gone ga ga over her husband – the same man who had a long relationship and two kids with Harriet Spencer – and his appeal seems to elude any male historian who ever mentions him.
The Letters of Harry-O, I think, are very good at showing what an aristocratic young lady, knew, wanted to know, thought about, worried about, etc.
I like Lady Harriet, but I know some people find her judgmental, *itchy, etc.
-Michelle