YOUR ESSENTIAL GUIDE TO JANE AUSTEN’S ENGLAND UNREST AT HOME
While the novels of Jane Austen might suggest an endless schedule of middleand upper-class gaiety, disgruntlement was rumbling beneath the surface across the country – and, during this tail end of the Georgian era, it often erupted in violent, sometimes lethal protest. Not that Austen herself completely ignored what was happening in the country beyond Barton Cottage and Netherfield Park.
For instance, her fifth novel, , refers to the unrest erupting in England’s larger cities. Although she writes about a riot as imagined by one of the characters, the rather visceral description depicts: “a mob of three thousand men assembling in St George’s Fields, the Bank attacked, the Tower threatened, the streets of London flowing with blood”. Whether real or’s publication.