While looking about for a couple of useful Burney links, I came across this perturbing story. The scholar Ellen Moody some years ago started a number of online discussions of Burney’s novels. She is obviously a woman of fortitude; most of us would have given up, faced with the resulting torrent of flames, trivia and vicious pranks . But she and her colleagues hung in there long enough to get results. Sample threads are on her site.

Dr Moody concludes her page:

Since the existence of large fan communities generates money and favorable partisan coterie publicity, it is in the interest of anyone who works or becomes involved with any projects involving Austen and (lately increasingly) Burney to begin with an exaggerated respect; any sharp criticism must be presented in somewhat disguised forms.The phenomenon of the cult figure or group of texts is an important one in our era, and we need frank discussion of how different cults arise, what imagined characteristics cult figures are typically endowed with by their fans, what kinds of people become fervent fans of literary writers and their characters, and what is the effect of such cults on serious study of works of the imagination.

We could do all that. Or we could just tip-toe away. They’re making too much noise to notice.

 

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Norbury Park, Wednesday, November 3rd 1784

Nothing can be more truly pleasant than our present lives. I bury all disquietudes in immediate enjoyment; an enjoyment more fitted to my secret mind than any I had ever hoped to attain. We are so perfectly tranquil that not a particle of our whole frames seems ruffled or discomposed. Mr Locke is gayer and more sportive than I have ever seen him; his Fredy seems made up of happiness; and the two dear little girls are in spirits almost ecstatic; and all from that internal contentment which Norbury Park seems to have gathered from all corners of the world into its own sphere.

Our mornings, if fine, are to ourselves, as Mr Locke rides out; if bad, we assemble in the picture room. We have two books in public reading, Madame de Sevign?’s Letters and Cook’s last voyage. Mrs Locke reads the French, myself the English.

Our conversations, too, are such that I could almost wish to last for ever. Mr Locke has been all himself – all instruction, information and intelligence, – since we have been left alone; and the invariable sweetness, as well as judgment, of all he says, leaves, indeed, nothing to wish.

They will not let me go while I can stay, and I am now most willing to stay till I must go. The serenity of a life like this smooths the whole internal surface of the mind. My own, I assure you, begins to feel quite glossy ?

_The Famous Miss Burney: the Diaries and Letters of Fanny Burney, eds Barbara G. Schrank and David J. Supino, 1976.

1. Estimate the number of household servants required to support this idle lifestyle and the quantity of agony endured by them.

2. Comment on the phrase gathered from all corners of the world with particular attention to the plantation slaves of the West Indies.

3. Specify the ideological function of (a) Madame de Sevign? (b) Cook’s Voyages.

4. Which form of address is the more sexist, Fanny Burney or Miss Burney?

4. Stop sighing with helpless, hopeless longing.

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