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The Absentee by Maria Edgeworth
Book, page 2 / 300


can learn more by reading it of Irish politics,' he said, 'than
from a thousand columns out of blue-books.'] Mrs. Edgeworth
tells us that much of it was written while Maria was suffering a
misery of toothache.

Miss Edgeworth's own letters all about this time are much more
concerned with sociabilities than with literature. We read of a
pleasant dance at Mrs. Burke's; of philosophers at sport in
Connemara; of cribbage, and company, and country houses, and Lord
Longford's merry anecdotes during her visit to him. Miss
Edgeworth, who scarcely mentions her own works, seems much
interested at this time in a book called MARY AND HER CAT, which
she is reading with some of the children.

Little scraps of news (I cannot resist quoting one or two of
them) come in oddly mixed with these personal records of work and
family talk. 'There is news of the Empress (Marie Louise), who
is liked not at all by the Parisians; she is too haughty, and
sits back in her carriage when she goes through the streets. 'Of
Josephine, who is living very happily, amusing herself with her
gardens and her shrubberies.' This ci-devant Empress and Kennedy
and Co., the seedsmen, are in partnership, says Miss Edgeworth.
And then among the lists of all the grand people Maria meets in
London in 1813 (Madame de Stael is mentioned as expected), she
gives an interesting account of an actual visitor, Peggy Langan,
who was grand-daughter to Thady in CASTLE RACKRENT. Peggy went
to England with Mrs. Beddoes, and was for thirty years in the
service of Mrs. Haldimand we are told, and was own sister to
Simple Susan.

The story of THE ABSENTEE is a very simple one, and concerns
Irish landlords living in England, who ignore their natural
duties and station in life, and whose chief ambition is to take
their place in the English fashionable world. The grand English
ladies are talking of Lady Clonbrony.

'"If you knew all she endures to look, speak, move, breathe like
an Englishwoman, you would pity her,' said Lady Langdale.

'"Yes, and you CAWNT conceive the PEENS she TEEKES to talk of the

 
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