Book description
About Patronage: She set out to write an adventurous soap opera
about the trails and fortunes of two neighbouring families in Regency
England. She ended with a searing critique of corruption within
British public and private life and a rare insight into the
opportunities available for young men making their way in Regency
society. Praised as both entertaining and profound (Jeremy Bentham
called it admirable...instilling the love of justice and veracity')
Patronage is an engrossing, page-turner of a read which chimes with
these recessionary times. Maria Edgeworth's epic tale reflects the
liberal views of her father. She may have influenced Sir Walter Scott
and Ivan Turgenev, and been a high-profile activist for the
famine-stricken Irish during her lifetime, but Maria Edgeworth has
since lost ground to her contemporary Jane Austen. Patronage was first
published in 1814, a year after Pride and Prejudice, when Edgeworth
was far more renowned (and well-paid) than her rival, and this
sprawling narrative offers plenty of scope for Colin Firth to turn up
in a wet shirt and beget an Edgeworth revival. The novel centres
around the Percy family, an upstanding bunch whose good humour is
undented even by the shipwreck, the house fire and the devastating
machinations of an evil relation which befall them within quick
succession. Their moral fibre and naive optimism don't drive great
drama, so fortunately they are contrasted with their more scheming
cousins, the Falconers. Between them, the two families demonstrate the
various aspects of patronage, the Percy patriarch being opposed to the
"ruinous system" of achieving professional or personal
status by any means other than merit, despite the Falconers'
contrasting approach having more immediate advantages. Alongside the
familiar element of daughters finding suitably
lovable/wealthy/powerful husbands, Edgeworth pays equal attention to
the problem of dispensing of sons, whose careers and social standing
require as much underhand strategy as marriages. The author's father,
the politician and author Richard Lovell Edgeworth, held progressive
views about women's role in society and right to be educated, which
are reflected in the liberal attitude pervading the story. Aspects of
the tome have inevitably dated in the near-200 years since its
original publication: the 19th-century punctuation gives much of the
text a frantic air, and there's a certain lack of verbal economy; but
at the same time there's that satisfying feeling that by the end, no
ends will be left untied, and right will reign.