Wednesday, September 18, 2019
The Life of the Governess Rebecca Sharp :: Victorian Era
The Life of the Governess Vanity Fair Sets the Stage ââ¬Å"If Miss Rebecca Sharp had determined in her heart upon making the conquest of this big beau, I don't think, ladies, we have any right to blame herâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ (Thackery 27). The narrator of Vanity Fair encourages readers not to blame Rebecca Sharp for being determined to win Joseph Sedley's attentions and proposal in only ten days! After all, the narrator reminds us that she was motherless, and thus had no one to help her secure a husband. Yet, members of Vanity Fair rebuke Miss Sharp for her assertive efforts. Perhaps, though, one should sympathize and applaud Miss Sharp's labors because her destination after ten days was the life of a governess. A Governess-A Definition The position of a governess required that one act as a companion for her charges and teach them the accomplishments that would enable them to compete effectively in societyâ⬠¦ The required accomplishments were still one or two languages, preferably French and Italian, music, dancing, drawing and needleworkâ⬠¦ The eventual aim was the best possible marriage. --Alice Renton, 48 The governess was even often the heroine for writers focusing on domestic, educational and social issues (ââ¬Å"The Victorian Governessâ⬠). Yet, author and former governess Charlotte Brontà « wrote, ââ¬Å"it was better to be a housemaid or kitchen girl, rather than a baited, trampled, desolate, distracted governessâ⬠(Damrosch 1524). And Anna Jameson wrote, ââ¬Å"a woman who knows anything in the world would, if the choice be left to her, be anything in the world rather than be a governessâ⬠(Renton 59). Why the Negativity Regarding a Governess? As the cries of these governesses allude, life as a governess was not always glamorous, despite the literary regard. ââ¬Å"A governess who was capable of teaching more than the usual subjects was generally little valuedâ⬠(Renton 50). The pay a governess received often reflected the small value. ââ¬Å"Her wages could be as low as eight pounds a yearâ⬠¦ Charlotte Brontà « received twenty pounds per year (actually only sixteen since washing expenses were deducted at the source)â⬠(Allingham). Perhaps the Quarterly Review best put the institution of being a governess in perspective when the following was published, ââ¬Å"a being who is our equal in birth, manners, and education, but our inferior in worldly wealthâ⬠(Renton 96). Thus, governesses ââ¬Å"ranked with the superior servantsâ⬠(Altick 56) and ended up feeling broken and lonely as Jameson described (Renton 59). So Where Did Becky Fit In? Becky was obviously not the typical Victorian governess.
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