She well deserved
her reputation. Her thoughts were good, her English was good, her
stories had the charm of sincerity, and her audience of children
was a genuine audience, less likely to be carried away by fashion
than more advanced critics might be. There is a curious
matter-of-fact element in all she wrote, combined with
extraordinary quickness and cleverness; and it must be remembered,
in trying to measure her place in literature, that in her day the
whole great school of English philosophical romance was in its
cradle; George Eliot was not in existence; my father was born in
the year in which THE ABSENTEE was published. Sir Walter Scott has
told us that it was Miss Edgeworth's writing which first suggested
to him the idea of writing about Scotland and its national life.
Tourgenieff in the same way says that it was after reading her
books on Ireland that he began to write of his own country and of
Russian peasants as he did. Miss Edgeworth was the creator of her
own special world of fiction, though the active Mr. Edgeworth
crossed the t's and dotted the i's, interpolated, expurgated, to
his own and Maria's satisfaction. She was essentially a modest
woman; she gratefully accepted his criticism and emendations. Mr.
Clark Russell quotes Sydney Smith, who declared that Mr. Edgeworth
must have written or burst. 'A discharge of ink was an evacuation
absolutely necessary to avoid fatal and plethoric congestion.' The
only wonder is that, considering all they went through, his
daughter's stories survived to tell their tale, and to tell it so
well, with directness and conviction, that best of salt in any
literary work. A letter Maria wrote to her cousin will be
remembered. 'I beg, dear Sophy,' she says, 'that you will not call
my stories by the sublime name of my works; I shall else be ashamed
when the little mouse comes forth.'
Maria's correspondence is delightful, and conveys us right away
into that bygone age. The figures rapidly move across her scene,
talking and unconsciously describing themselves as they go; you see
them all through the eyes of the observant little lady. She did not
go very deep; she seems to me to have made kindly acquaintance with
some, to have admired others with artless enthusiasm. I don't think
she troubled herself much about complication of feeling; she liked
people to make repartees, or to invent machines, to pay their
bills, and to do their duty in a commonplace and cheerfully stoical
fashion. But then Maria Edgeworth certainly did not belong to our
modern schools, sipping the emetic goblet to give flavour to daily
events, nor to that still more alarming and spreading clique of
DEGENERES who insist upon administering such doses to others to
relieve the tedium of the road of life.
Perhaps we in our time scarcely do justice to Miss Edgeworth's
extraordinary cleverness and brightness of apprehension. There is
more fun than humour in her work, and those were the days of good
rollicking jokes and laughter. Details change so quickly that it is
almost impossible to grasp entirely the aims and intentions of a
whole set of people just a little different from ourselves in every
single thing; who held their heads differently, who pointed their
toes differently, who addressed each other in a language just a
little unlike our own. The very meanings of the words shift from
one generation to another, and we are perhaps more really in
harmony with our great-great-grandfathers than with the more
immediate generations.
Her society was charming, so every one agrees; and her
acquaintance with all the most remarkable men of her time must not
be forgotten, nor the genuine regard with which she inspired all
who came across her path.
'In external appearance she is quite the fairy of our nursery
tale, the WHIPPETY STOURIE, if you remember such a sprite, who came
flying through the window to work all sorts of marvels,' writes Sir
Walter. 'I will never believe but what she has a wand in her
pocket, and pulls it out to conjure a little before she begins
those very striking pictures of manners.'
Among others Sir William Hamilton has left a pleasing
description of Miss Edgeworth. 'If you would study and admire her
as she deserves, you must see her at home,' says he, 'and hear her
talk. She knows an infinite number of anecdotes about interesting
places and persons, which she tells extremely well, and never
except when they arise naturally out of the subject. . . . To crown
her merits, she seemed to take a prodigious fancy to me, and
promised to be at home, and made me promise to be at Edgeworthstown
for a fortnight some time next vacation.' We owe to him also an
amusing sketch of some other collateral members of the family; the
fine animated old lady, who immediately gets him to explain the
reason why a concave mirror inverts while a convex mirror leaves
them erect; the young ladies, one of whom was particularly anxious
to persuade him that the roundness of the planets was produced by
friction, perhaps by their being shaken together like marbles in a
bag.
There is also an interesting letter from Sir W. Hamilton at
Edgeworthstown on 23rd September 1829. Wordsworth is also staying
there. 'After some persuasion Francis and I succeed in engaging Mr.
Wordsworth in many very interesting conversations. Miss Edgeworth
has had for some time a very serious illness, but she was able to
join us for dinner the day that I arrived, and she exhibited in her
conversations with Mr.
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