Anne and Harville have one of the most important exchanges in the novel. She was supposed to be going to see Lady Russell, but she much prefers to go and see the Musgroves. Captain Wentworth is there apparently writing a letter to Benwick about this business that Captain Harville had. And she makes some very sort of striking remarks about whether men or women are more constant in love. But then he has apparently finished his letter. Can you just give us a few bullet points from this conversation?
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss Jane Austen’s last complete novel, which was published just before Christmas in 1817, five months after her death. It is the story of Anne Elliot, now 27 and (so we are told), losing her bloom, and of her feelings for Captain Wentworth who she was engaged to, 8 years before – an engagement she broke off under pressure from her father and godmother. When Wentworth, by chance, comes back into Anne Elliot's life, he is still angry with her and neither she nor Austen's readers can know whether it is now too late for their thwarted love to have a second chance.
The image above is from a 1995 BBC adaptation of the novel, with Amanda Root and Ciarán Hinds
With
Karen O’Brien
Vice-Chancellor of Durham University
Fiona Stafford
Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Oxford
And
Paddy Bullard
Associate Professor of English Literature and Book History at the University of Reading
Producer: Simon Tillotson