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even
Emma grew tired at last of flattery and merriment, and wished
herself rather walking quietly about with any of the others,
or sitting almost alone, and quite unattended to, in tranquil
observation of the beautiful views beneath her.'
She
makes the journey home in tears. It is not known whether Jane
Austen ever met Fanny Bumey, though it is just conceivable.
Jane Austen, born in 1775, was several times a visitor to
Great Bookham, where her cousin Cassandra was married to the
rector Samuel Cooke. Whether or not they did meet, the younger
woman seems to have been an admirer of the older, for Jane
Austen's name appeared on the subscription list to Camilla.
Possibly too the title of her best-known novel Pride and Prejudice
was taken from the last paragraph of Camilla, where the words
are repeated three times in capital letters.
Fanny Burney
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'We
are now removed to a very small house in the suburbs of
a very small village called Bookham,' wrote Fanny Burney
to a friend about four months after her marriage to Alexandre
d'Arblay in 1793. 'Our views are not as beautiful as from
Phenice Farm [on nearby Bagdon Hill, where the newlyweds
had taken rooms for a time], but our situation is totally
free from neighbours and intrusion. We are about a mile
and a half from Norbury Park [home of her friend, William
Lock], and two miles from Mickleham. I am become already
so stout a walker, by use and with the help of a very
able supporter, that I go to those places and return home
on foot without fatigue, when the weather is kind.' Fanny
Burney now returned to writing in earnest, starting work
on her third novel, Camilla, in order to support herself
and her husband, who had no income, being cut off from
his property in France. Born in 1752, she had achieved
fame at quite a young age with her first novel, Evelina,
or a Young Lady's Entrance into the World, which in 1778
had taken London by storm. |
Dr
Johnson said that some passages might do honour to Samuel
Richardson. Sir Joshua Reynolds took the book to the dinner
table and was so absorbed that he had to be fed while reading,
after which both he and Edmund Burke sat up over it all night.
Her second novel, Cecilia (1782), enjoyed the same success
and even greater sales, though the publisher did rather better
from the profits than the author. Married existence in the
sleepy little
village of Great Bookham seems to have ; suited Fanny Burney.
'Here,' she wrote, 'we are tranquil, undisturbed, and undisturbing.
Men
of letters
I am every morning at the top of Box Hill - as its flower,
its bird, its prophet. I drop down the moon on one side, I
draw up the sun on t'other. I breathe fine air. I shout ha
ha to the gates of the world. Then I descend and know myself
a donkey for doing it. George Meredith Of all the many literary
figures associated with Box Hill, none had a better feel for
the place than the novelist and poet George Meredith. From
1867 until his death at the age of 81 in 1909, he lived in
a flint and brick house built off the Zig-Zag road at the
bottom of the hill. Nine years after he moved into Flint Cottage
Meredith added a small timber-boarded chalet high up in the
steep garden behind the house where he did much of his writing
and even sometimes slept. There was also a shed for Picnic,
the donkey. 'Anything grander than the days and nights in
my porch you will not find away from the Alps: for the dark
line of my hill runs up to the stars, the valley below is
a soundless gulf. There pace like a shipman before turning
in.
In the day with the south west blowing I have a brilliant
universe rolling up to me.' Meredith was a great lover of
country things and an energetic walker who rambled many miles
over the Surrey countryside. Even at the age of 61, he was
fit enough to join the Order of Sunday Tramps, an early rambling
club. He describes the downland vividly in one of his most
popular novels, Diana of the Crossways (1885): Through an
old gravel cutting a gateway led to the turf of the down,
spring turf, bordered on a long line, clear as a racecourse,
by golden gorse covers, and leftward over the gorse the dark
ridge of the fir and heath country ran companionably to the
south west, the valley between, with undulations of wood and
meadow sunned or shaded, clumps and mounds, promontories,
away to the broad spaces of tillage banked by wooded hills,
and dimmer beyond and farther, the faintest shadowiness of
heights, as a veil to the illimitable. Yews, junipers, radiant
beeches, and gleams of service-tree or the whitebeam, spotted
the semicircle of swelling green down black and silver.
After Meredith's death, J.M. Barrie (author of Peter Pan)
wrote a fanciful essay in which he imagined the old man sitting
on the crest of the hill which rises in front of Flint Cottage,
chuckling at the sight of his own funeral cortege solemnly
accompanying an empty coffin to the cemetery at Dorking. Barrie
himself is commemorated by Barrie's Bank, just outside Flint
Cottage, where the playwright is said to have sat before daring
to approach the great writer. Others who made the pilgrimage
to Flint Cottage included George Gissing and Henry James;
and the critic and caricaturist Max Beerbohm lived there for
a time during the Second World War. In 1878 and 1879, Robert
Louis Stevenson stayed at the Burford Bridge Hotel, at the
foot of Box Hill beside the River Mole. On the second visit
Meredith read him parts of his masterpiece The Egoist, and,
when Stevenson exclaimed that the character of Sir Willoughby
Patteme must have been modelled on himself, made his famous
reply: 'I've taken him from all of us, but principally from
myself.'
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