The Comforts of Bath, Rowlandson, The Pump Room, 1798 In 1678 a single woman named Celia Fiennes journeyed to Bath and wrote in her journal: Please enjoy the reviews of Jane’s contemporaries and predecessors: In honor of Austenprose’s coverage of Northanger Abbey for the month of October, I have gathered observations about the Pump Room that were placed online from periodicals and journals of Jane Austen’s time. Gentle readers, before you continue please be aware that this post features a series of vignettes and memories from people who wrote their recollections about the historic Pump Room in Bath, so prominently mentioned in Northanger Abbey during Catherine Morland’s visits there with her benefactors, the Allens. Allen as they sat down near the great clock, after parading the room till they were tired “and how pleasant it would be if we had any acquaintance here.” Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey Chapter IV “What a delightful place Bath is,” said Mrs. Every creature in Bath, except himself, was to be seen in the room at different periods of the fashionable hours crowds of people were every moment passing in and out, up the steps and down people whom nobody cared about, and nobody wanted to see and he only was absent. Tilney there before the morning were over, and ready to meet him with a smile – but no smile was demanded – Mr. With more than usual eagerness did Catherine hasten to the Pump-room the next day, secure within herself of seeing Mr.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |