Opinions of Mansfield Park


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These comments on Mansfield Park were collected by Jane Austen, from family members and others, in the year or two after the novel's first publication in 1814.


F[rancis] W[illiam] A[usten]
"We certainly do not think it as a whole, equal to P. & P. -- but it has many & great beauties. Fanny is a delightful Character! and Aunt Norris is a great favourite of mine. The Characters are natural & well supported, & many of the Dialogues excellent. -- You need not fear the publication being considered as discreditable to the talents of it's Author."
Mr. K. [Edward Austen Knight] --
Not so clever as P. & P. -- but pleased with it altogether. Liked the character of Fanny. Admired the Portsmouth Scene. --
Edward & George [Knight]. --
Not liked it near so well as P. & P. -- Edward admired Fanny -- George disliked her. -- George interested by nobody but Mary Crawford. -- Edward pleased with Henry C[rawford] -- Edmund objected to, as cold & formal. -- Henry C[rawford]'s going off with Mrs. R[ushworth], at such a time, when so much in love with Fanny, thought unnatural by Edward. --
Fanny Knight. --
Liked it, in many parts, very much indeed, delighted with Fanny; -- but not satisfied with the end -- wanting more Love between her & Edmund -- & could not think it natural that Edmund should be so much attached to a woman without Principle like Mary C[rawford] -- or promote Fanny's marrying Henry. --
Anna [Lefroy]
liked it better than P. & P. -- but not so well as S. & S. -- could not bear Fanny. -- Delighted with Mrs. Norris, the scene at Portsmouth, & all the humourous parts. --
Mrs. James Austen,
very much pleased. Enjoyed Mrs. Norris particularly, & the scene at Portsmouth. Thought Henry Crawford's going off with Mrs. Rushworth very natural. --
Miss Clewes's objections much the same as Fanny's. --
Miss Lloyd
preferred it altogether to either of the others -- Delighted with Fanny. -- Hated Mrs. Norris. --
My Mother --
not liked it so well as P. & P. -- Thought Fanny insipid. -- Enjoyed Mrs. Norris. --
Cassandra --
thought it quite as clever, tho' not so brilliant, as P. & P. -- Fond of Fanny. -- Delighted much in Mr. Rushworth's stupidity. --
My Eldest Brother [James Austen] --
a warm admirer of it in general. -- Delighted with the Portsmouth Scene.
[James] Edward [Austen-Leigh] --
Much like his Father. -- Objected to Mrs. Rushworth's Elopement as unnatural.
Mr. B[enjamin] L[efroy] --
Highly pleased with Fanny Price -- & a warm admirer of the Portsmouth Scene. -- Angry with Edmund for not being in love with her, & hating Mrs. Norris for teazing her. --
Miss Burdett --
Did not like it so well as P. & P.
Mrs. James Tilson --
Liked it better than P. & P.
Fanny Cage --
did not much like it -- not to be compared to P. & P. -- nothing interesting in the Characters -- Language poor. -- Characters natural & well supported -- Improved as it went on. --
Mr. & Mrs. Cooke --
very much pleased with it -- particularly with the Manner in which the Clergy are treated. -- Mr. Cooke called it "the most sensible Novel he had ever read." -- Mrs. Cooke wished for a good Matronly Character. --
Mary Cooke --
quite as much pleased with it, as her Father & Mother; seemed to enter into Lady B[ertram]'s character, & enjoyed Mr. Rushworth's folly. Admired Fanny in general; but thought she ought to have been more determined on overcoming her own feelings, when she saw Edmund's attachment to Miss Crawford. --
Miss Burrel --
admired it very much -- particularly Mrs. Norris & Dr. Grant. --
Mrs. Bramstone --
much pleased with it; particularly with the character of Fanny, as being so very natural. Thought Lady Bertram like herself. -- Preferred it to either of the others -- but imagined that might be her want of Taste -- as she does not understand Wit. --
Mrs. Augusta Bramstone --
owned that she thought S. & S. -- and P. & P. downright nonsense, but expected to like M. P. better, & having finished the 1st vol. -- flattered herself she had got through the worst.
The families at Deane --
all pleased with it. -- Mrs. Anna Harwood delighted with Mrs. Norris & the green Curtain.
The Kintbury [Fowle] Family --
very much pleased with it; -- preferred it to either of the others. --
Mr. Egerton the Publisher --
praised it for it's Morality, & for being so equal a Composition. -- No weak parts.
Lady Robert Kerr wrote --
"You may be assured I read every line with the greatest interest & am more delighted with it than my humble pen can express. The excellent delineation of Character, sound sense, Elegant Language & the pure morality with which it abounds, makes it a most desirable as well as useful work, & reflects the highest honour &c. &c. -- Universally admired in Edinburgh, by all the wise ones. -- Indeed, I have not heard a single fault given to it." --
Miss Sharpe --
"I think it excellent -- & of it's good sense & moral Tendency there can be no doubt. -- Your Characters are drawn to the Life -- so very, very natural & just -- but as you beg me to be perfectly honest, I must confess I prefer P. & P." --
Mrs. Carrick. --
"All who think deeply & feel much will give the Preference to Mansfield Park."
Mr. J. Plumptre. --
"I never read a novel which interested me so very much throughout, the characters are all so remarkably well kept up & so well drawn, & the plot is so well contrived that I had not an idea till the end which of the two would marry Fanny, H. C[rawford] or Edmund. Mrs. Norris amused me particularly, & Sir Thomas is very clever, & his conduct proves admirably the defects of the modern system of Education." -- Mr. J. P. made two objections, but only one of them was remembered, the want of some character more striking & interesting to the generality of Readers, than Fanny was likely to be. --
Sir James Langham & Mr. H. Sanford,
having been told that it was much inferior to P. & P. -- began it expecting to dislike it, but were very soon extremely pleased with it -- & I beleive, did not think it at all inferior. --
Alethea Bigg. --
"I have read M. P. & heard it very much talked of, very much praised. I like it myself & think it very good indeed, but as I never say what I do not think, I will add that, although it is superior in a great many points in my opinion to the other two Works, I think it has not the Spirit of P. & P., except perhaps the Price family at Portsmouth, & they are delightful in their way." --
Charles [Austen] --
did not like it near so well as P. & P. -- thought it wanted Incident. --
Mrs. Dickson. --
"I have bought M. P. -- but it is not equal to P. & P." --
Mrs. Lefroy --
liked it, but thought it a mere Novel. --
Mrs. Portal --
admired it very much -- objected cheifly to Edmund's not being brought more forward. --
Lady Gordon wrote
"In most novels you are amused for the time with a set of Ideal People whom you never think of afterwards or whom you the least expect to meet in common life, whereas in Miss A----'s works, & especially in M. P. you actually live with them, you fancy yourself one of the family; & the scenes are so exactly descriptive, so perfectly natural, that there is scarcely an Incident, or conversation, or a person, that you are not inclined to imagine you have at one time or other in your Life been a witness to, borne a part in, & been acquainted with."
Mrs. Pole wrote,
"There is a particular satisfaction in reading all Miss A----'s works -- they are so evidently written by a Gentlewoman -- most Novellists fail & betray themselves in attempting to describe familiar scenes in high Life; some little vulgarism escapes & shews that they are not experimentally acquainted with what they describe, but here it is quite different. Everything is natural, & the situations & incidents are told in a manner which clearly evinces the Writer to belong to the Society whose Manners she so ably delineates." Mrs. Pole also said that no Books had ever occasioned so much canvassing & doubt, & that everybody was desirous to attribute them to some of their own friends, or to some person of whom they thought highly. --
Admiral Foote --
surprised that I had the power of drawing the Portsmouth-Scenes so well. --
Mrs. Creed --
preferred S. & S. and P. & P. -- to Mansfield Park.

Notes

"Either of the others":
Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility were the only others that had been published by that time.
"Experimentally":
Through experience.


*Return to Jane Austen info page table of contents
*Return to Jane Austen's writings
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*Go to Passages from Mansfield Park that detail Fanny Price's endearing imperfections
*Go to discussion of Fanny Price as a source of controversy on the AUSTEN-L mailing list
*See also a concept illustration for another possible alternative ending to Mansfield Park (one that many people may find just as believable as Fanny getting together with Henry C.!)
*And What Fanny Price would have to do for some people not to find her "insipid"!


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