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8 Marianne and Willoughby, Lucy and Colin

Betrayal, suffering, death and the poetic image

From the book She played and sang

  • Gillian Dooley

Abstract

Many of the song lyrics in Jane Austen’s personal music collection are couched in the sentimental poetic diction prevalent in the eighteenth century, with highly conventional pastoral settings and imagery. Particularly striking is a long ballad in seven parts titled ‘Colin and Lucy’, which is a 1783 setting by Tommaso Giordani of a 1725 poem by Thomas Tickell (1685–1740) describing the betrayal, death and revenge of a wronged woman. The printed music of this ballad is in a book inscribed by Jane Austen, and it seems likely that she was familiar with it and probably sang and played it herself. Several incidents included in the song are echoed and perhaps deliberately parodied in Austen’s novel Sense and sensibility (1811), although the rhetoric and imagery are strikingly different. The novel’s language, though often dramatic, is matter-of-fact and literal. This chapter discusses the ballad’s musical and lyrical rhetoric and how Austen alters and undercuts its poetic imagery in her treatment of similarly dramatic (though not fatal) events in the novel.

Keywords

Jane AustenThomas TickellTommaso Giordaniballadsrhetoricimagery
© 2024 Manchester University Press, Manchester
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