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Why Set Romances In The Regency?
by Stephanie Laurens
To someone unfamiliar with the genre, the question fairly leaps
to the eye--why, of all the time periods in history, is the
British Regency (1811-1820) and its flanking time periods so
frequently used as the setting for romances?
As a longtime reader of Regency romances, and as an author of 14
romances all set in the Regency, I have some inklings as to why
that might be so--why romance authors and readers both find the
Regency so rewarding.
First--and for a romance author
very definitely foremost--the concept of love as an appropriate,
useful, and perhaps even desirable element within marriage within
the upper echelons of society evolved and gained acceptance
during the Regency.
Prior to that time, while the concept of romantic love between a
man and a woman had been recognized for centuries, among the
upper classes, it had not been considered at all necessary in
marriage. Indeed, in the minds of many who had lived primarily in
Georgian times and were old in the Regency, the new-fangled
fashion for ladies to wear their hearts on their sleeves was
shocking. And even more shocking when the objects of their
affections were their own husbands!
While there were rebels to this prevailing view, both in Georgian
times and earlier, they were the exceptions, very definitely not
the norm. While much milder "affection" was considered
a felicitous circumstance within marriage and entirely
appropriate, love was something else again.
The attitude against love (as distinct from affection) in
marriage in all likelihood sprouted from the view that love was a
potentially dangerous force, one too powerful to be allowed to
influence such vital contracts as marriages then were. Marriages
were the primary means of merging and
furthering familial estates, many of which were huge, politically
powerful and wealthy. Divorce, and all the potential legal
difficulties which could arise, or any form of marital disruption
or instability, were to be avoided at all costs. Love being a
force not amenable to the control of men and
their laws, it was considered too dangerous to be allowed to
touch the institution of marriage. Marriage was, indeed, a civil
contract blessed by the church, and as such should not be subject
to emotional urges. Thus ran the prevailing wisdom.
Thus, until the Regency, marriage within the upper classes had
very little to do with love. It was not only not required, but
actively disapproved of. During the Regency, this changed.
What caused this fairly fundamental shift seems buried in the
mists of time. But the romantic poets certainly heard the bugle
call, and lent their strong and at the time highly influential
voices to the push for change.
The waning of French influence on British society was one factor
which not only contributed to, but was essential for, the
emergence of the acceptance of love within marriage. When it came
to love in marriage, the French were even stricter and more
disapproving than the English (that was where the attitude had
originally evolved from). While very strong during the Georgian
era prior to the French revolution, and in the years immediately
after, French influence on British society waned and then was
eclipsed during the Napoleonic years. During this time, English
fashions mirrored the change in English society, as it evolved
beyond centuries of French influence, into something distinctly
English.
So change came, but it came slowly--even in the 1820s and later,
it is likely the majority of marriages within the upper classes
were still arranged on the basis of other, unemotional criteria.
But love had become acceptable--and having been let into the
equation, as it were, love within
marriage was always destined to become the ideal. Very much along
the lines of monkey see, monkey like, monkey do.
It could be said that the Regency
is the first time we see love within marriage as we now know it,
and the very fact that this circumstance was unusual--not the
norm--makes it easier to highlight, easier to showcase its
desirable qualities.
One aspect useful to the romance author which directly derives
from this "newness" of love within marriage, is that
the characters know this is not the "required"
state--they could just as well marry without it. So there is also
an element of "choice"--at some point our Regency hero
and heroine
must actively choose to accept and pursue love, rather than do
without it. This is a natural consequence of the fact that in the
Regency, love was not an automatic given in marriage.
During the Regency, time was also on love's side. For a young
lady of good family, of course, there was no other desirable
career--anything less than marriage was considered a failure. So
young women were encouraged to spend all their waking hours
considering matrimony, and their entrance to that state. As for
the gentlemen, both within the ton, and in the wealthy families
in the shires, there were men aplenty who did not have to work
for a living, but could spend serious time pursuing the objects
of their desire--or their heart. Partly as a reflection of this,
the Regency was a
time when gallantry and elegance still held sway, and where such
characteristics remained the yardstick of gentlemanly behavior.
Furthermore, society considered it wise to spend time choosing
and negotiating the best matrimonial alliances--hence, there was
plenty of time to be legitimately devoted to courting rituals,
and a plethora of suitable social events at which eligible partis
could meet and explore their mutual situations. In the upper
classes during the Regency, marriage was a serious business,
pursued with due consideration.
By the dawn of the Regency, society itself had become distinctly
English in a highly recognizable way--rules abounded. It was an
extremely strictly-mannered society. At no other time in history,
before or after, were there so many things that were "simply
not done!"
Etiquette ruled. Period.
A lady's reputation could be destroyed through some simple and
harmless, quite inadvertent action. There were rules for this,
rules for that--even rules for the exact degree of depth of
curtsies, which varied according to who one was curtsying to. If
you got it wrong, either too deep or too shallow, you might very
well never see the inside of Almack's.
But, like all things English, for instance, the English language,
all the rules of the Regency had their exceptions.
So while there were countless rules about just about everything,
there were always exceptions--this creates a very dynamic
situation, where virtually every case has to be considered on its
merits. If a lady walks down a street alone, is this
reprehensible, or perfectly acceptable? It depends on the street,
on the lady, her age and station in life, her clothing, who was
potentially watching, on the time of day--and on a host of other
variables.
While such a rigid but exceedingly variable social structure
imposes and requires a great deal of care to be exercised by the
author, it simultaneously presents untold opportunities for all
sorts of situations guaranteed to a) bring our hero and heroine
together, b) put them in circumstances where they have to act, or
are impelled to act demonstrating their characters and c) to
create satisfyingly exciting scenarios through which they move as
their love develops and evolves into a grand passion.
Where, you ask, do the exciting scenarios come from?
Ah--that's the other side of the
Regency that makes it so beloved of romance authors. For beneath
the glitter and glamor of the ton's balls, behind the elegance
and wealth of the upper classes and their indolent and hedonistic
lifestyles, England was changing dramatically. It would never be
the same again. The Regency was one of those rare times in
history when an old order was being put aside, superseded, by a
new order--but it all happened peaceably.
The Regency was a time of social revolution, culminating in the
Great Reform Bill of 1832. This extended voting rights to the
majority of adult males and restructured representation in
Parliament in the most sweeping social reform of the century. It
changed Britain forever.
And it's seeds were sown and nurtured during the Regency.
It is beyond the scope of this
short essay to go into the depths and breadths of the social
changes, but the interested reader will find no better source
than J.B. Priestley's The Prince of Pleasure.
Suffice to say there was an awful lot happening during the
Regency. And it happened against a backdrop of war, victory, an
extravagant Prince Regent, a fabulously wealthy and powerful
elite, an emerging middle class and an upper echelon of society
who could waltz while the cannons rolled past. Indeed, as
Priestley intimates, throughout the Regency there was a sense of
waltzing while London burned--of living on the edge of great
upheaval--of living through times that were rapidly and
fundamentally changing, when the very ground of society
shifted--of living life to the limits, as if there was no
tomorrow.
All of this resonates with the here and now--and is, I believe,
deep down, one of the reasons the Regency continues to
fascinate--because, from nearly two hundred years' distance, it
holds up a mirror to our lives today.
Stephanie
AUTHORS
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