The ending of Emma,
by Jane Austen, was very disappointing to me. I suspected from the beginning
the ties and relationships that were going to occur, and in the end, all of my
presumptions were correct. I do not enjoy knowing exactly what is going to
occur in a novel in the very beginning chapters of the first volume. Ms. Clinch
explained it to me though, that in every romantic comedy, no matter the time
period, a specific archetype is followed. There are almost always two people
that “shouldn’t” or do not want to be together, and then something climatic
happens, and in the end, the fall desperately in love with each other, ending
the novel or movie. This allowed me to view the ending of the novel in a better
light, and I was happier after today’s class.
The most obvious relationship was that of Frank
Churchill and Jane Fairfax. My first inclination came when they were discussing
that Jane and Mr. Churchill had met earlier. Jane quickly changed the topic and
did not discuss that matter further. This sparked my suspicion, and after that I
was on the lookout for facts that they were in a secret relationship. The next
suspicion came when Jane received the piano forte. This came from a secret
lover, which sparked everyone’s intrigue. Like Emma though, I began to consider
if maybe the secret lover was Mr.
Dixon, who was travelling in Ireland at the time. But then I realized that Mr.
Churchill was not present. He had departed from Highbury to London, and was not
present at the party at the Coles. Although this was not valid evidence, it
seemed questionable that he was not there and then suddenly this lovely piano
arrived.
The next hint was the largest for me that clinched
the fact that they were in a secret relationship. When Frank Churchill at the
gathering asked to play with the alphabet he only made one notable word for
Jane and that word was blunder. Before this part of the scene, Frank had
observed that Mr. Perry did not have a carriage and that he had thought that he
was planning on it. Mrs. Bates observes that this was true, but that it was
only told to them and it was to remain a secret. Only she and Jane knew about
it. He then says this to her in the form of one word later when they are
playing with the letters. Jane and Frank must have been in contact with one
another quite frequently for this to have arisen in their conversations. This
was not a formal letter, or else more important discussions would have taken
place. Because these letters must have been constant, small things were talked
about like whether or not Mr. Perry was going to pay for a carriage.
All of these facts were not as obvious to Emma
though, until she walked to the Weston’s’ house and was told of this
engagement. Although she believed that she was to have a relationship with
Frank (even though she wanted to remain an old maid), he showed many instances
of love for Jane, and although he flirted with Emma, he meant none of it.
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