Planting Seeds
of Virtue
Sentimental
Fiction and the Moral Education of Women
Pam
Perkins
Part way through Frances Burney's
massive third novel, Camilla, the heroine's
father laments the difficulties he has encountered
in educating his daughters. '[T]he proper education
of a female', he proclaims miserably, 'either
for use or for happiness, is still to seek, still
a problem beyond human solution'. [1] The
problem of educating an eighteenth-century woman
might well have been beyond human solution, but
that did not prevent numerous writers, women as
well as men, from tackling it. Indeed, given the
subject of the standard sentimental novel of the
day-the social education of a young woman-one
could argue that most women writers of
that era raised the question of education in one
way or another. Nor were their discussions by
any means confined to conduct-book platitudes
about feminine modesty and decorum. While nobody
seemed inclined to deny that preserving-or inculcating-such
modest reserve was vitally important in any programme
of female education, there was a considerable
debate, especially among women writers, about
what, if anything, beyond such modesty constituted
feminine virtue and what sort of education was
best calculated to produce a virtuous young lady.
Of course, gendered ideas of virtue have attracted
a considerable degree of attention in studies
of eighteenth-century women's writing; frequently,
such ideas have been presented as more or less
thoroughly damaging. Yet given the pervasiveness
of feminine virtue as a subject in women's writing
at a time when increasing numbers of women were
publishing and therefore demonstrably not silenced
in any literal way, it might be worth exploring
in more detail the ways in which late-eighteenth-century
women could also use their culture's ideas about
decorous feminine modesty as the basis of their
own forays into the world of print. While the
conventional female virtues of chastity and modesty
were undoubtedly used as grounds from which to
argue against women's participation in the literary
world, it is possible that some ideas of virtue
could be used to provide an implicit justification
of women's participation in literary life.
It
is, of course, needless by now to point out the
dangers of a cultural idea of femininity that demanded
women be educated into modesty and passivity. When
Mary Poovey influentially argued that the figure
of the 'proper lady' hopelessly restricted the literary
work of most eighteenth-century women, or when Ruth
Bernard Yeazell demonstrated that what she has called
'fictions of modesty' painfully limited women's
social and intellectual worlds, they were both pointing
to the constricting effects of eighteenth-century
ideas of feminine virtue. [2]
There is no doubt that where concepts of virtue
differed for men and women, the results could be
very restrictive, implicitly undermining women's
claims to be the moral, if not the social, equals
of men. Such assumptions of inequality would have
received support from certain strands of eighteenth-century
thought; for example, as Mary Seidman Trouille has
recently argued, 'the scientific discourse of the
Enlightenment tended to perpetuate, rather than
to dispel, age-old prejudices against [women] and
to intensify the traditional association of difference
with inferiority'. [3]
More bluntly, Timothy Reiss claims that despite
the 'many voices [.] raised throughout the eighteenth
century in favour of educational opportunity for
women, the idea of Enlightened reason excluded what
it claimed as "female" '. [4]
While attacks on women's ability to reason did not
necessary imply that women were incapable of moral
development, such attacks tended to forestall any
role for women in speculations about morality, and
hence in the debate about their own education. The
bleakness of these observations is borne out by
a survey of the genre of the conduct book, in which
women are repeatedly enjoined to be chaste, submissive
and obedient, as well as by the numerous satires
of 'learned ladies' which appear throughout the
century. Yet on at least one level, neither the
advice nor the satires seemed to have much effect,
as however much Enlightenment thought might have
'intensif[ied]' perceptions of women's inferiority,
women had undeniably established themselves as participants
in British literary culture by the end of the eighteenth
century. Any charts of the publication rates for
British women show sharp rises and almost equally
sharp falls for the period from the civil war through
the mid-eighteenth century, but after mid century,
the rise is steep and steady. [5]
Jan Fergus has in fact argued that 'the opportunities
for women to publish had never been greater' than
they were in the late eighteenth century. [6]
Even as Fergus recognizes the disincentives that
continued to make publication difficult for women,
her comment might invite us to consider why that
society was increasingly willing to print and read
work that seemed, simply by the sex of the author,
to challenge some of the era's most basic assumptions
of gender roles.
There
are at least two familiar ways of solving the problem
of how women were able to write even as they internalized
their culture's restrictive concepts of feminine
virtue: in one case, they are seen as being engaged
in a lonely and probably doomed struggle against
both their society and their own internalized concepts
of modest feminine virtue; in the other, they are
timidly upholding the dominant discourse-hugging
their chains, in Mary Astell's scornful phrase-in
order to protect even the subordinate cultural space
allowed them. Mary Wollstonecraft is perhaps the
prime example of the former practice; a writer such
as Laetitia-Matilda Hawkins, in her plea that women
reject public competition with men, exemplifies
the latter. 'Let us then', she pleads, 'if we do
not love darkness, be very careful to do nothing
to provoke our superiors to take away the lamp they
had allowed us'. [7] Neither
picture is entirely attractive; in both cases, women
writers are presented as being trapped by, rather
than participating in, the cultural debates about
virtue and femininity swirling around them, and
so such approaches risk making their work interesting
mainly as documents in the history of social oppression.
Yet trapped or not, such women at the very least
found justification for their own publications in
exploring the very concepts of virtue that supposedly
denied them a serious voice in their culture. One
can go farther, however, and argue that even many
of the more conservative women, whose ideas were
closer to Hawkins's than to Wollstonecraft's, did
not see themselves as accepting, unproblematically,
entirely restrictive ideas of female modesty. There
are thus a number of bases on which women writers
opposed the simple equation of feminine virtue with
chastity and hence insisted upon the need for something
more than a restricted education designed mainly
to preserve modesty. The ideas of the radicals,
who argued strongly that women and men, however
different in body, were similar in mind and so would
respond to the same educational methods, are merely
the most amenable to later tastes. Yet even the
more conservative women, who were prepared to concede
some differences in mind as well as body between
the sexes, were no less inclined to insist that
there was, inevitably, some overlap in concepts
of virtue and to use that overlap to undermine attempts
to differentiate entirely between men's and women's
education and, in the process, to insist that women
had the right-indeed the duty-to participate in
literary culture.
The ways in which the radicals
justified their participation in debates about
virtue and education are by now very familiar.
Generally speaking, they insisted that the intellectual
capabilities of women were fundamentally the same
as men's and that similar educations would produce
similarly virtuous individuals-although even the
radicals usually added the caveat that an aspect
of such virtue involved recognizingrecognising
and accepting that the sexes had different roles
to play in society. A properly masculine
education, grounded in principles of virtue, would
not, in other words make masculine women. In part,
supporters of this idea argued the point by citing
famous women who were both well-educated and decorously
feminine, such as the bluestocking Elizabeth Carter,
who famously won Samuel Johnson's approval because
she could both translate Epictetus and make puddings-he,
presumably, could only do the former. Nor did
they rely only on their contemporaries for examples;
they also looked back to the Elizabethans for
models and found ample in the virtuously learned
aristocratic women of that period. For example,
many eighteenth-century writers cite an anecdote
in which Lady Jane Grey, found reading philosophy
in the original Greek while her parents are out
enjoying themselves at a hunt, protests that 'their
sports do not deserve the name, when compared
with the enjoyment furnished by Plato'. [8]
Even the young Jane Austen, in her History
of England, describes-admittedly, in a typically
flippant manner-Lady Jane as being 'famous for
reading Greek while other people were hunting'.
[9]
In general, however, Lady Jane's scholarly tastes
were admired not only by those writers who wanted
a learned education for women but also by those
more conservative thinkers who whole-heartedly
approved of women who chose domestic amusements-even
dauntingly scholarly ones-over public pleasure.
The
point of such anecdotes was thus not merely to show
that some exceptional women were capable of learning
the classics without damaging their femininity.
More importantly, they were also used to suggest
that domestic virtues could be strengthened in women
by the sort of education which was presumed to produce
rational men, thereby undercutting any absolute
separation between the sorts of education used to
inculcate virtue in men and in women. The Whig historian
Catharine Macaulay explains that because 'there
is but one rule of right for the conduct of all
rational beings' and so 'true virtue in one sex
must be equally so in the other' she has 'given
similar rules for male and female education'. [10]
Her younger, more famous contemporary, Mary Wollstonecraft,
who opens A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
(1792) with a tribute to Macaulay, bases
her recommendations for female education on similar
principles, although she is a little dubious about
the ability of most pupils, male or female, to follow
Macaulay's rigorous syllabus.
Yet
even these radical thinkers have not, according
to some readers, managed to avoid the constraints
of the gendered ideas of virtue they protest against.
The criticism of Wollstonecraft's feminism, in particular,
exemplifies such concerns. Numerous feminist readers,
especially in the 1980s and 90s, have analysed the
focus on restraint, on controlling the body, and
on limiting pleasure, which marks Wollstonecraft's
vision of how women are to make themselves virtuous
members of a larger social community. [11]
Ideas of chaste feminine innocence might directly
exclude women from intellectual society, but Wollstonecraft's
concepts of virtue, according to these critics,
'perpetuate [.] a patriarchal notion of rationality'
which makes a place for women only if they accept
the masculine discourse which excludes them in the
first place. [12]
This is an idea which Reiss, for example, has explored
in detail, seeing Wollstonecraft's work as a classic
example of the way in which 'the dominant discourse
of Enlightenment reason assimilated dissenting voices
and undermined their subversiveness'. [13] Such
arguments have their critics-Frances Ferguson, for
example, has vigorously attacked what she calls
the 'rampant "presentism" ' of Reiss's argument:
that is, the idea that we have access to a privileged
position because our ideas are more sophisticated
than those of the eighteenth century and that Wollstonecraft
'would have held our views [.] if she could have'. [14]
More generally, Virginia Sapiro has insisted that
Wollstonecraft's political views were not merely
'recuperate[d]' by a dominant order and that she
was in fact a major contributor to the critique
of the Enlightenment discourse which Reiss sees
as trapping her. [15]
Perhaps more to the point at the moment, however,
Reiss's argument-like other such critiques of Wollstonecraft-seems
to take for granted the idea that her work failed,
because ultimately she 'differed little from those
other women' of her day who ' "accepted the
old conventional idea of womanhood" ' and who
believed that 'no alternatives were available'.
[16] Yet
it is not entirely clear either that Wollstonecraft's
contemporaries were quite that simple-minded in
their absorption of the cultural discourse about
women and virtue, or that what Reiss has called
the 'constant subtle trap' of the dominant, masculine
discourse of feminine virtue was quite as nightmarishly
inescapable as his language implies.
By
the middle of the century, there had of course been
decades of writing assuring women that their purpose
in society was to be the embodiment of benevolence
and sweet good nature, a role which didn't necessarily
involve the need for any education at all or anything
other than vacuous sweetness to reward virtue in
others. The poet James Thomson neatly sums up this
idea, as, in an often-quoted passage from Autumn
(1730), he exhorts women 'To raise the virtues,
animate the bliss [.] And sweeten all the toils
of human life' (ll. 607-08). Feminist writers then
and since have of course objected that tirelessly
sweetening other people's toils-not to mention being
altruistic exemplars of goodness-is neither an especially
rewarding nor fulfilling activity. Yet as some eighteenth-century
women suggested, an even more serious problem is
that the concept of sweetly blank virtue is unworkable
to begin with. Attacks on this concept often centre,
explicitly or not, around the work of Rousseau,
perhaps the most extreme proponent of this idea.
His Sophie is supposedly a model of pure womanhood,
all instinct and all innocence: 'she has taste without
deep study, talent without art, judgement without
learning [.]. What charming ignorance! Happy is
he who is destined to be her tutor'. [17]
Sophie's mind, no less that her body, is to be preserved
virginally immaculate for her husband's pleasure
and possession, an idea which predictably enough,
drove female contemporaries such as Mary Wollstonecraft
to furious attack. What is perhaps rather more surprising
is that at least some writers who appear to uphold
ideas of chaste domestic femininity are no less
inclined to criticise Rousseau's idea that one can
create virtuous women by a careful programme of
non-education.
Burney's
Camilla, for example, while never mentioning
Rousseau directly, can be read as a critique of
Sophie's education, as the heroine's father helplessly
tries to find a way to educate his daughters with
'as much simplicity as is compatible with instruction,
[and] as much docility for various life as may accord
with invariable principles' (p. 357), a programme
which, as Jane Spencer observes, attempts 'to reconcile
opposites: to create women of judgment, with their
personalities left blank'. [18]
Just in case any Rousseauvian-minded readers might
be inclined to sympathise with Mr Tyrold's plan,
Burney then devotes most of this massive novel-over
nine hundred pages in the World's Classics edition-to
showing just how completely it fails to work. Camilla
is a character who devotes herself to desperate
attempts to 'sweeten all the toils of human life'
for those around her, throwing herself wholehearted
into her responsibilities as daughter, sister, and
fiancée. Nonetheless, the choices she makes when
confronted by moral dilemmas endanger the happiness
of her entire family as well as nearly driving away
her devoted but stern lover, results which eventually
lead Camilla herself to a temporary, climactic bout
of madness. Camilla's hapless, well-meaning father
is not entirely unaware, as he watches her life
fall apart, that something has gone rather badly
wrong in his daughter's education, but he has no
idea what could have been done differently. Left
sweet and malleable, so that her future husband
can shape her to suit his tastes, poor Camilla has
natural abilities and ample good intentions but
not much else to guide her, and the result is narrowly-averted
tragedy rather than the smooth path to virtue and
happily-ever-after marriage which such an education
was supposed to produce. In a way, Camilla
offers a more complex and tragic version of the
comic story Burney presents in her better-known
Evelina, in which the heroine, a genuine
innocent in a society which prefers its ingénues
knowing enough to follow the highly stylised code
of behaviour it uses to signify 'innocence', stumbles
from one near-disaster to another.
Burney's
contemporary Maria Edgeworth was less grim in her
presentation of a girl who has been carefully trained
to be a virtuous blank for her husband but no less
critical. Indeed, she is even more direct in her
attacks on such ideas than Burney, perhaps in part
because of the influence of an eccentric family
friend, Thomas Day. He was an ardent follower of
Rousseau, had offered readers a solid, English yeoman
version of the rational, independent-minded Emile
in his History of Sandford and Merton (1783),
and was perhaps even more sceptical than Rousseau
himself about the idea that women might be rational
beings. Edgeworth had parodied some of Day's theories
about the education-or rather, non-education-of
women in her first publication, Letters for Literary
Ladies (1795); in her novel Belinda (1801)
she mocked his practice. Day, in a very literal-minded
response to the story of Sophie, had adopted two
orphan girls, planning to marry one of them after
he had, in the words of his biographer, educated
them in a manner which 'unite[d] the purity of female
virtue with the fortitude and hardiness of constitution
of a Spartan virgin'. [19]
Probably needless to say, the experiment was not
a success. One of the orphans, whom Day renamed
Lucretia, proved to have nothing remotely classical
about her except her name, and she was promptly
apprenticed off. The other, Sabrina, was perhaps
even less fortunate, as Day's techniques for producing
Spartan virgins in eighteenth-century England included
practices such as dropping hot sealing wax on Sabrina's
arms to see if she'd flinch or-on at least one occasion-firing
a pistol at her, apparently to test her nerves.
(It was unloaded, but she didn't know that.)
Edgeworth's
hero Clarence Hervey, while more gentle in his methods
than his model Day, is no more successful. Having
had the remarkable good luck to stumble across a
beautiful, orphaned adolescent, who has never yet
seen a man, while riding through the New Forest,
Clarence promptly and hopefully changes her name
from Rachel to Virginia St Pierre and sets out to
train her to be his wife. Unfortunately, sweet,
innocent, and virtuous as she is, she also, before
too long, starts to bore him silly. As Clarence
ruefully realises, his 'intellectual powers' and
'knowledge' are 'absolutely useless to him in her
company'. [20]
Even more to the point, as he realises after meeting
the no less virtuous but rational and independent-minded
Belinda, Virginia is 'so entirely unacquainted with
the world, that it was absolutely impossible she
could conduct herself with that discretion, which
must be the combined result of reasoning and experience'
(p. 379). In other words, her innocence means
that, at best, she can be a helpless dependent,
and at worst, that she will promptly be destroyed
by ordinary social life. This of course is not at
all what Clarence was hoping to find in a wife;
he was looking for intellectual companionship, or,
at the very least, intelligent devotion.
By thus providing her Rousseauvian hero with a Sophie
of his very own, Edgeworth constructs a narrative
which suggests that a woman whose only virtue is
chastity would be the last woman in the world able
to create the sort of domestic bliss which Rousseau
celebrates at the end of Emile.
Sweet
virtue, in other words, is not much good in either
Burney's world or Edgeworth's without an accompanying
dose of stern rationality. This is a key point,
because as soon as questions of rationality are
introduced, it becomes impossible to sustain any
attempt to see women's virtue as being entirely
different from men's. This project of arguing for
educating women as well as men in rational virtue
was thus by no means the sole preserve of the more
radical writers. Almost all of the women writers
we now see as being conservative do the same thing,
although as they approach the topic in their supposedly
'feminine' genres of fiction or fictionalised letters,
they do so in a way very different from Wollstonecraft
or Macaulay. While Wollstonecraft builds her arguments-or
at least those in The Vindication-on the
radical political theories of the early years of
the French Revolution, her more conservative contemporaries
tended to draw their ideas from a hodgepodge of
intellectual sources: a little bit of Locke, some
Francis Hutcheson, a dash of David Hume, and all
of them, often as not, filtered through highly selective
readings of Rousseau. The arguments derived from
these theories are, admittedly, not necessarily
anything the original theorists would recognise,
much less accept. For example, a number of these
writers absorb, directly or indirectly, Rousseau's
idea that raising a child to be rationally virtuous
involves constant, carefully intelligent monitoring
on the part of the educator, almost from the moment
of the child's birth. Then, cheerfully ignoring
points such as Rousseau's suspicion of conventional
religious education-not to mention the hasty removal
of Emile from both mother and wet nurse-they insist
that the early moral and religious training provided
by the mother is vitally important to human development
and thus requires careful study and analysis by
all women.
This
interest in the theory and practice of early training
in virtue is of course, in many ways, not much of
a leap from traditional feminine roles, a point
which might explain why writers we now tend to see
as anti-feminist were so willing to embrace the
idea. After all, nobody in later-eighteenth-century
England ever seemed to doubt that women, or at least
women of the gentry and upper classes, had some
nominal responsibility as educators. It was taken
for granted that it was a mother's duty to provide
all of her children with their earliest instruction
and to continue training her daughters until they
were young women. The boys, of course, as soon as
they were old enough, would get their real education-their
intellectual training-with tutors or at school.
Yet especially towards the end of the century some
women criticised this sort of educational practice
not only for its obvious sexism but also by arguing
against the concepts underlying the system, insisting
that the most important part of education was not
the Latin and Greek grammar painfully drilled into
the boys and usually denied the girls. Rather, the
essential part of education was the early training,
which supposedly determined future character. While
writers arguing this point did not necessarily deny
the value of serious reading, they did insist that
all the classics in the world would not make a good
citizen of a child whose moral education had been
neglected. Hence, according to such arguments, educated
women and women as educators are the foundation
of a virtuous society.
Of
course, women making such claims would not have
found the slightest support for this idea in the
work of most eighteenth-century moral theorists.
Not only did Rousseau have no difficulty in omitting
women almost entirely from his plans for Emile,
but also other influential writers, who shared some
of Rousseau's premises even while expressing reservations
about Rousseau's ideas of women, continued to downplay
the seriousness of women's contributions to education.
Lord Kames, for example, insists, like Rousseau,
on the vital importance of the early inculcation
and reinforcement of moral principles in children-a
task which, as he points out, normally falls to
mothers. Yet Kames's response to this arrangement
is to praise providence for ensuring that it merely
requires instinct, not a trained intellect, to provide
such lessons. 'Hard indeed', he cries, 'were the
lot of the generality of the human race' were the
principles of education not intuitive, as most mothers
would otherwise simply be unable to provide necessary
instruction. [21]
Moreover, while the principles which must be inculcated
during early lessons in morality can be rationally
deduced, Kames argues, and their value proved by
logical argument, doing so is pointless, as those
who need such logical demonstration-mothers unsure
of their duties-would be unable to follow it. In
one neat step, in other words, Kames accepts as
a corollary of his moral theories that women have
a vital role to play in early education and simultaneously
denies that that role means that they have to have
any particular knowledge or education themselves.
In
making this argument, Kames was building on a tradition
of moral theory which asserted that ideas of morality
were distinct from and possibly antecedent to any
sort of intellectual development. In particular,
his older contemporary Francis Hutcheson had posited
a sort of moral sixth sense, by which uncorrupted
humanity was led naturally to prefer the good to
the bad. While careful to avoid the troubled question
of innate ideas, Hutcheson insists that benevolence
can exist independently of rationality or self-interest,
explicitly attacking thinkers such as Hobbes and
Mandeville as he does so. David Hume, in a similar
vein, although with a satiric edge lacking in Hutcheson,
points out with dry irony that humans seldom let
reason interfere with their passions, and so suggests
that as 'morals have influence on the actions and
affections [.] they cannot be derived from reason'.
[22]
If a sense of morality is instinctive and distinct
from any reasoning faculty, then Kames's idea that
women did not have to understand virtue in order
to teach it might seem sensible enough. Yet probably
needless to say, many of the women who wrote about
education were not contented with this idea that
they should be decorative embodiments of moral concepts
that they didn't need to understand. On the contrary,
they insisted that their lessons would be ineffectual
unless they understood the principles behind the
morals they were illustrating. Otherwise, all they
could do was behave well by accident and habit,
something that would not be sufficient if they were
confronted with a moral dilemma outside the range
of their previous experience-precisely what happens
to Burney's Camilla. Sarah Pennington, who wrote
an educational tract in the form of a letter to
her daughter, makes this point even more explicitly
than does Burney. While all her virtuous instincts
were confirmed and strengthened by her early education,
Pennington explains, as she summarises her own past
for the benefit of her daughter, that she unfortunately
also absorbed the idea that 'self-approbation' was
a sufficient mark of virtue long before 'reason
had gained sufficient strength to discover [the]
fallacy' of such a notion. [23]
As a result, while assured of her own virtuous intentions,
she is careless of her public reputation. And as
with Camilla, the results of such ungrounded virtue
are disastrous: Pennington is separated from her
husband and children and facing serious questions
about her reputation as she writes her open letter
to her daughter. In other words, because she was
trained in early childhood by people who had evidently
not taken the trouble to use their own reason to
deduce the value of reputation and then to inculcate
that idea in her, all her virtues are more or less
useless to her. As a child's earliest prejudices
and associations are absorbed before reason has
a chance to operate, the educator-presumably the
mother-must be able to reason about what associations
it is vital to encourage in order to reinforce the
blossoming virtuous instincts and train them in
the right direction.
This
is an idea which receives perhaps its fullest development
in the work of the Scottish writer Elizabeth Hamilton,
who apparently received part of her own education
from a more or less surreptitious reading of Lord
Kames. [24]
Working from the same principles as Kames in her
arguments about the importance of early education-indeed,
Kames's biographer, Lord Woodhouselee, called Hamilton
'one of the ablest of those writers [.] who have
treated the subject of education according to philosophical
principles'-she nonetheless disagreed vehemently
with his ideas about not needing to understand the
principles of morality to be able to teach them.
[25]
Nor was she hesitant about proclaiming that disagreement.
When Woodhouselee, gallantly hesitant to make a
public attack on a lady, offered to drop his criticism
of Hamilton's ideas, insofar as they differed from
Kames's, from the published version of his biography,
Hamilton no less politely declined the offer. In
private, she was less polite, commenting tartly
in a letter to friend that, in any case, 'It did
not appear to me that his arguments [against her]
were sufficiently strong to convince any one capable
of reason'. [26]
The
central disagreement between Hamilton and Kames
lies in the fact that Hamilton insists, Kames notwithstanding,
that it will take more than instinct and a little
good will to make women useful members of society.
If women want to be effective in educating young
children, she argues, they will need some acquaintance
with intellectual theory-beginning with a solid
understanding of John Locke's theories of the association
of ideas and moving on from there. In particular,
drawing on late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century
aesthetic theory, as developed by members of her
Edinburgh circle, Hamilton explores the implications
of their belief that the higher powers of the imagination
can be exercised only if controlled by a trained
judgment and a mind well-stocked with ideas. [27]
If women are to make proper use of their supposedly
'natural' tendencies towards imaginative sympathies-that
is, precisely those sympathies which enable them
to pursue virtuous lives-she suggests that they
need to be able develop their intellects. Hamilton
thus has the distinction of being probably the only
person ever to find a rationale for the intellectual
training of women in the aesthetic theories of critics
such as Dugald Stewart, [28]
Archibald Allison, and Francis Jeffrey. Perhaps
not entirely surprisingly, Hamilton's male contemporaries
thought she was being a little unnecessarily 'metaphysical'
in her approach to the problem of women's education.
Yet, throughout her career, in novels as well as
in essays and in her collections of educational
letters, Hamilton argues that head and heart must
work together to form a virtuous adult, man or woman.
Hamilton
thus insists, repeatedly and explicitly, that good
principles cannot exist without some intellectual
training. As she writes in Letters Addressed
to the Daughter of a Nobleman (1806), one of
the most solidly religious of her works, 'In the
formation of the principles, the heart and the understanding
unite'. [29]
Here, she differentiates the development of principles
from the formation of what she calls prejudices,
which are merely 'the work of the feelings and imagination'.
[30]
In her terminology, even 'a respect for the institutions
of the church' and a habit of 'repeat[ing one's]
creed and say[ing one's] prayers' (I, 129)
constitute mere prejudice unless they are based
on a solid, rational understanding of the purpose
of church and of prayer. To illustrate this point,
she tells the story of Lady N--, a beautiful young
widow who, as far as the world is concerned, is
'no less distinguished by exemplary virtue, than
by her exquisite beauty' (i, 126). Yet like Burney's
Camilla, Lady N--'s virtue lies only in obedience,
rather than in solid moral principle, as she 'accommodate[s]
herself to the inclinations of her parents, and
her husband' (I, 127). Left a widow, with children
of her own to educate, Lady N-- is helpless, and
without ever quite realising that she is doing anything
wrong, she abdicates-or, more accurately, remains
unaware of-her responsibilities. The disastrous
consequences which follow include the near death
of her son, the sapping of moral principle in her
daughter, and the viciously unjust treatment of
a orphaned tenant, who is 'left [.] to seek his
way through a world in which he saw hypocrisy and
falsehood triumph over innocence and truth [.] even
when justice and judgment lifted up the voice!'
(I, 155). 
This
lesson about the results of a lack of rational judgment
in nominally virtuous women could, in terms of plot,
come from just about any eighteenth-century sentimental
novel, and it might be easy to overlook, in the
familiar style of melodramatic declamation, the
significance of what Hamilton is attempting to do.
She is very conscious about the advantages of fiction
as a tool in developing-in her terms-principles
rather than prejudice. As she explains to her young
correspondent, 'Truth, in order to render herself
pleasing to the youthful mind, must sometimes permit
herself to be arrayed by the hand of fancy' (I, 212).
Yet the advantages of fiction are not limited to
the pleasures it offers the imagination; more importantly,
it gives readers practice in 'exercising [their]
judgement' in determining whether the actions represented
'would naturally and inevitably lead to such and
such consequences' (I, 213). None of this is
to say, of course, either that Elizabeth Griffith's
The Delicate Distress (1769) or other such
novels of refined sentiment would necessarily have
won the approval of David Hume or Francis Hutcheson,
or that the writers pouring out sentimental fiction
did so merely from the disinterested goal of exercising
their readers' judgement and illustrating Enlightenment
moral theories. What it does suggest is that at
least some writers were not prepared to see the
'feminine' genre of the sentimental tale as being
entirely at odds with intellectual training and
so were implicitly claiming a place for women and
their writing in the cultural debates of the day.
This
point is further illustrated in the work of an even
more obscure Scottish writer named Jean Marishall,
who, according to a brief memoir which she published
in 1789, was a private teacher as well as a novelist
and failed playwright. [31]
Like Hamilton, Marishall published her ideas on
education in a collection of letters, supposedly
addressed to a former pupil; also like Hamilton,
she explicitly states in those letters that she
has been influenced by the ideas and practice of
the Scottish system of education. Yet Marishall
differs from Hamilton-and indeed from most of the
women educational writers of her era-in that she
chooses to address her work to a male pupil, implying
not only that, properly understood, female virtue
requires the support of 'masculine' rationality,
but also that such rationality might, in turn, need
the support of supposedly 'feminine' sentimental
virtue. While such a claim might seem to involve
a major leap in logic, it is a point which Marishall
insists upon, as she encourages her young pupil
Charles to learn from both her own very moral inset
tales, written especially for him, and from popular
sentimental fiction. For example, she advises Charles
to read Richardson in order to 'impress' in his
'young mind a love of virtue', assuring him that
he will find many men as honourable as Sir Charles
Grandison. [32]
This
apparently naive assurance is all the more striking
when one contrasts Marishall's treatment of the
idea of learning from sentimental fiction in general-and
from Richardson in particular-in her 1789 Series
of Letters with the amused manner in which she
had approached the topic nearly a quarter of a century
earlier in her first novel, The History of Miss
Clarinda Cathcart and Miss Fanny Renton (1766).
When Clarinda is, apparently inevitably, abducted
by a scheming aristocrat, it is a thorough familiarity
with romances that enables her confidante Nancy
to solve the mystery of her disappearance, while
everybody else is left helpless and bewildered.
Clarinda herself, who disdainfully greets her abductor's
housekeeper as 'Mrs. Jewkes', is also sufficiently
well-versed in fiction to know the proper precautions
to take while unwillingly under a dissolute gentleman's
roof. Yet if Marishall was at times prepared to
be light-hearted in her treatment of the educational
value of sentimental fiction, it is significant
that she is more flippant about the subject in her
own sentimental novels than in a book of practical
instruction for a young man, a point which might
suggest that she took the idea of training men
in sentiment very seriously indeed. Marishall was
of course fully aware that some would consider it
impossible for a woman to train a man in either
virtue or rationality. As she observes in the preface
to A Series of Letters, conventional-minded
readers will think she should 'not have presumed
to have found fault or pretend[ed] to instruct her
superiors, particularly that Lord-like creature
Man' (I, x-xi). 'But', she then continues, 'be this
as it may, as she can by no means think that this
kind of timidity [.] can at all contribute to the
general happiness of mankind, she [.] has boldly
ventured to give her simple opinion on subjects
which she sincerely wishes [.] people of more consequence
may exert their influence to enforce' (I, xi).

If
Burney and Edgeworth suggest shortcomings in treatments
of women's education which limit feminine virtue
to sweetness and chastity, and Elizabeth Hamilton
insists that women must have some intellectual understanding
to fulfil their duties, Marishall goes farther still
and implies that male writers-presumably, that is
who she means when she refers, seemingly ironically,
to 'people of more consequence'-are failing both
men and women by not fully recognising the connections
between training the mind and training the heart.
Feminine virtue can thus involve recognising and
filling the gaps left in men's education
in order to preserve a virtuous, functioning society.
I am insisting upon this point, perhaps a little
too strongly, because such details as the evocation
of a host of village Charles Grandisons blooming
unknown might make it tempting to dismiss Marishall's
writing as frivolous sentimental hackwork. Yet Marishall
is innovative not only in implying that women ought
to have a say in the training of young men, but,
perhaps rather more interestingly, in suggesting
that the education of men ought to be more like
that of women-thereby reversing the more usual feminist
practice of calling for a more solid, masculine
education for girls. Indeed, Marishall explicitly
blames the problems of contemporary British society
on the supposed fact that men are inadequately educated
for domestic life. For example, a letter in the
collection attributed to an unnamed male friend,
but probably written by Marishall herself, [33]
laments the fact that modern young men tend to be
bad husbands and then suggests that this is a problem
of national public interest, because 'From domestic
happiness [.] springs public tranquillity' (II, 145).
This
argument, whatever its source, is reiterated throughout
the letters and underscores Marishall's insistence
upon the vital importance of domestic sentiment,
and, by extension, the role of virtuous women, in
the education of men. Arguing, in a long inset disquistion
on her political viewpoints, that trust and benevolence
are the necessary foundations of a just and rational
society, Marishall implies that more traditional
schemes for masculine education, which sideline
women, are recipes for the destruction of the social
order. Her main example to support this contention
is Chesterfield-the villain of her book. Of course,
Chesterfield is hardly a fair choice to exemplify
traditional modes of boys' education, but focusing
on him enables Marishall to make, with considerable
verve, her case that inculcating feminised ideas
of virtue in men, as well as women, is not merely
a nice, if unworldly, way to live; it is a solidly
practical means to temporal advantage. After all,
given the choice between doing business with Sir
Charles Grandison and with a disciple of Chesterfield,
there can't be many people who would knowingly choose
the latter. While Marishall's arguments about the
links between sentimental virtue and social education
do not possess-and do not aim to possess-the careful
intellectual subtleties of the moral philosophers,
or even the rigour which one finds in Hamilton's
essays, her work is still noteworthy for its unusually
explicit insistence upon women's roles in teaching
and reinforcing the idea that some of the conventionally
'feminine' values might be necessary in the training
of virtuous men. When, near the end of her collection
of letters, Marishall describes her task as that
of 'plant[ing] [.] seeds of virtue' in her young
pupil's mind, she is thus simultaneously stating
a rather trite commonplace and providing a quiet
justification for her own intervention in a very
large and important cultural debate.
Of
course, neither Hamilton's nor Marishall's work
undercuts the feminist critique of eighteenth-century
cultural concepts about gendered ideas of virtue.
Yet their writing, conservative as it might appear,
helps show that ideas which state that women either
mindlessly accepted a system of gendered virtue
which oppressed them, or, at best, blindly criticised
that system in the terms of a masculine idea of
rationality which inevitably left them trapped,
silenced, and ineffectual, might underestimate the
complexity of eighteenth-century women's contributions
to debates about virtue and education. In other
words, oppressive as they could be, interconnected
concepts of morality and virtue also enabled women,
at the time, to express a range of ideas about their
own education-even if those ideas are not necessarily
all that ideologically appealing to readers today.
It is an obvious and indisputable fact that the
dominant ideology of the eighteenth century discouraged
women's participation in literary culture, but it
is, increasingly, an equally obvious fact that large
numbers of women participated in that culture anyway.
If we want to understand why they did so, we need
to do more than simply explore the ways in which
contemporary discourses of virtue and rationality
silenced women; it is necessary as well to examine
some of the ways in which 'virtue' could mean something
rather more complex to at least some women writers
than we might be inclined to recognise today.
Notes
1. Camilla,
or a Picture of Youth, ed. Edward and Lillian Bloom
(1796; Oxford: OUP, 1996), p. 357. Subsequent quotations
will be taken from this edition of the novel, and will
be included in the text.
2. See
Mary Poovey, The Proper Lady and the Woman Writer
(Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1984);
and Ruth Bernard Yeazall, Fictions of Modesty: Women
and Courtship in the English Novel (Chicago and London:
University of Chicago Press, 1991).
3. Sexual
Politics in the Enlightenment: Women Writers Read Rousseau
(Albany: SUNY Press, 1997), p. 43.
4. 'Revolution
in Bounds: Wollstonecraft, Women, and Reason', in Gender
and Theory: Dialogues in Feminist Criticism, ed. Linda
Kaufmann (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1989), p. 12.
5. See,
for example, the detailed studies done by Cheryl Turner,
in Living by the Pen: Women Writers in the Eighteenth
Century (London: Routledge, 1992).
6. Jane
Austen: A Literary Life (Basingstoke and London: Macmillan
Press, 1991; Macmillan Literary Lives series), p. ix.
7. Laetitia-Matilda
Hawkins, Letters on the Female Mind, its Powers and
Pursuits (London, 1793), Letter I (unpaginated).
8. Quoted
in Lady Anne Hamilton's anonymous Epics of the Ton;
or, the Glories of the Great World. A Poem in Two Books
(London, 1807), p. 50.
9. The
History of England by a Partial, Prejudiced, & Ignorant
Historian (Chapel Hill: Algonquin Books of Chapel
Hill, 1993), p. 10.
10.
Letters on Education (1790; rptd. in facsimile,
Oxford: Woodstock Books, 1994), p. 201.
11.
For examples of such criticism, see Cora Kaplan's
essay on Wollstonecraft, 'Wild Nights: Pleasure/Sexuality/
Feminism', in Sea Changes: Essays on Culture and Feminism
(London: Verso, 1986; Questions for Feminism series),
pp. 31-56; Susan Gubar's 'Feminist Misogyny: Mary Wollstonecraft
and the Paradox of "It Takes One to Know One" ',
Feminist Studies 20.3 (Fall 1994), 453-73; and
Zillah Eisenstein's The Radical Future of Liberal Feminism
(Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1993).
12.
Kauffman, 'Introduction' to Gender and Theory,
p. 3.
13. Kauffman,
p. 9: these words are Kauffman's paraphrase of Reiss's
argument in her introduction to his essay.
14. 'Wollstonecraft
our Contemporary', in Gender and Theory, p. 60.
15. A
Vindication of Political Virtue: The Political Theory
of Mary Wollstonecraft (Chicago and London: University
of Chicago Press, 1992).
16. Reiss,
p. 33. The phrase in double quotation marks is one which
Reiss quotes from Erna Reiss's Rights and Duties of
an Englishwoman: A Study in Law and Public Opinion
(Manchester: Sherratt and Hughes, 1934).
17. Jean-Jacques
Rousseau, Émile, trans. by Barbara Foxley, with
introd. by P. D. Jimack (1762; London: J. M. Dent,
1974), p. 360.
18.
The Rise of the Woman Novelist from Aphra Behn
to Jane Austen (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1986), p.
164.
19. James
Keir, Account of the Life and Writing of Thomas Day
(1791; rptd. New York: Garland UP, 1970), p. 27.
20.
Belinda, ed. Kathryn Kirkpatrick (1801; Oxford:
Oxford UP, 1994), p. 378. Subsequent references will be
from this edition of the novel, and will be given parenthetically
in the text.
21. Lord
A. F. T. Woodhouselee, Memoirs of the Life and Writings
of the Honourable Henry Home of Kames, 2 vols (Edinburgh:
W. Creech, 1807), I, 207.
22. A
Treatise of Human Nature (1739-40; Harmondsworth:
Penguin, 1984), p. 509.
23.
'An Unfortunate Mother's Advice to her Daughter',
in The Lady's Pocket Library, ed. Vivien Jones
(1790; Bristol: Thoemmes Press, 1995), p. 59.
24.
The anecdote in fact embodies all the clichés about
eighteenth-century women's education; Hamilton recalls
hiding the book when visitors arrived, as her aunt was
afraid she'd be taken for a bluestocking. Yet, as another
anecdote suggests, Kames seems to have been something
approaching required reading for clever Scottish girls
of that generation. Janet Schaw, accompanying a niece
(who would have been about Hamilton's age) to her father
in North Carolina in 1774, tells of being caught en route
in a terrifying storm. Taking up the nearest book, her
niece- assuming it to be a Bible- began reading aloud
for comfort but was so distracted that she did not notice
until some time later that she had in fact been reading
from The Elements of Criticism. As Schaw drily
observes, they were preparing for their deaths 'like philosophers
rather than Christians.' See her Journal of a Lady
of Quality (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1939).
25.
Woodhouselee, I, 207-08.
26.
Elizabeth Benger, Memoirs of the Late Mrs Elizabeth
Hamilton, 2 vols. (London: Longmans, 1818), II, 74.
27.
For the fullest development of this idea, see Hamilton's
A Series of Popular Essays, Illustrative of Principles
Essentially Connected with the Improvement of the Understanding,
the Imagination, and the Heart, 2 vols. (Edinburgh:
Manners and Miller, 1813).
28.
Stewart was a personal friend of Hamilton's, as
well as an intellectual influence. Her debt to him seems
to have been shared by many of her more famous younger
contemporaries; in his biography of Francis Jeffrey, Henry
Cockburn mentions the pervasiveness of Stewart's influence
on the generation who were young men in the 1790s-with
Jeffrey, because his father's Tory prejudices prevented
him from attending Stewart's lectures, a notable exception
[The Life of Lord Jeffrey, with a Selection from his
Correspondence, 2 vols. (Philadelphia: Lippincott,
Grambo, and Co., 1852), I, 45-46].
29.
Compare her comment in A Series of Popular Essays:
'Where the sympathies of the heart have not been encouraged
to expand, no cultivation of the understanding will have
the power to render the character eminently great or good'
(II, 257). While she is here approaching the issue
from the opposite direction, the principle remains the
same.
30.
Letters Addressed to the Daughter of a Nobleman,
2 vols. (London: Cadell and Davies, 1806), I, 129.
Subsequent references will be given parenthetically in
the text.
31.
A Series of Letters, 2 vols. (Edinburgh:
C. Elliot, 1789).
32.
Ibid., I, 191.
33.
Given Marishall's willingness to admit that she
fictionalized some of her letters, it is entirely possible
that she also wrote the ones attributed to other, anonymous
sources. There is certainly no stylistic reason to think
otherwise.
Copyright
Information
This article is copyright © 2001
Centre for Editorial and Intertextual Research,
and is the result of the independent labour of the
scholar or scholars credited with authorship. The
material contained in this document may be freely
distributed, as long as the origin of information
used has been properly credited in the appropriate
manner (e.g. through bibliographic citation, etc.).
Referring
to this Article
P. PERKINS. Planting Seeds of Virtue: Sentimental
Fiction and the Education of Women', Cardiff
Corvey: Reading the Romantic Text 6 (June 2001).
Online: Internet (date accessed): <http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/romtext/articles/
cc06_n02.html>.
Contributor
Details
Pam Perkins BA (Utah), MA, PhD (Dalhousie) is Assistant
Professor of English at the University of Manitoba.
Her research interests include eighteenth-century
popular fiction and women's writing, travel writing
and Scottish literature. She has published on a
number of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century writers,
including Mary Wollstonecraft, Jane Austen, Frances
Burney, Robert Bage, Elizabeth Hamilton, and Wilkie
Collins. Her current projects include a critical
edition of Robert Bage's Hermsprong and a study
of Scottish women writers from the 1760s to the
1830s.

Last modified
24 January, 2006
.
This document is maintained by Anthony Mandal
(Mandal@cf.ac.uk).
|