Colonel Brandon

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Colonel Brandon
Jane Austen character
In-universe information
GenderMale
OccupationBritish Army colonel
FamilyDeceased
SpouseMarianne Dashwood
RelativesElder brother (deceased); Sister (in Avignon)
HomeDelaford
NationalityBritish

Colonel Brandon is a fictional character in Jane Austen's 1811 novel Sense and Sensibility. A quiet and reserved man, he forms an attachment to the middle Dashwood sister, Marianne whom he eventually marries happily.

Background

The younger son of a landed family in Dorsetshire, Brandon made a career in the army, until at the death of his brother he inherited Delaford. We are told that at that point the estate was encumbered by debt, but it appears that at the time of the book's action they had all been resolved: “His property here, his place, his house, - everything in such respectable and excellent condition!”.[1]

Character

In terms of activities and life experience, Colonel Brandon is perhaps the most Byronic among Austen's leading men.[2] He attempts to elope with his teenage cousin Eliza for whom he has a passionate attachment; he has the mortification of seeing her married-off for mercenary reasons to his elder brother at their father's behest; he serves his country abroad and returns to rescue the dying Eliza from a debtors' prison; he raises her illegitimate daughter, and fights a duel with her seducer; and he forms a second, passionate attachment to another vibrant seventeen-year-old girl, Marianne.[3] His very name links him to the rake in Richardson's Pamela – Mr B. of Brandon Hall – and his experiences are in many ways a benign retelling (rescuer, not seducer) of the latter's life.[4]

In social life and in courtship, the Colonel may be considered an uninteresting character. Unlike the traditional romantic suitor, the Colonel is melancholy, taciturn, cancels expeditions, intrudes at inconvenient moments, and speaks only to Elinor, not to Marianne.[5] He is set up in opposition to John Willoughby – the latter having all the romantic trappings and ways of speaking, and marries for money; while the outwardly dull Colonel marries for love.[6] Despite this, critical dissatisfaction with the starkness of the typology, and with the book's outcome, is pervasive.[7] The Colonel seemed to lack appeal to the 20th-century reader, making his eventual success in wooing seem unlikely.[8] For a figure closer to Jane Austen's time like Henry Austin Dobson, however, the marriage was a mark of her realism: “Every one does not get a Bingley or a Darcy (with a park); but...not a few enthusiasts like Marianne decline at last upon middle-aged colonels with flannel waistcoats”.[9]

Some scholars have seen parallels between Colonel Brandon and Warren Hastings, the first Governor-General of India. Hastings had been rumoured to be the biological father of Eliza de Feuillide, who was Jane Austen's cousin. Linda Robinson Walker argues that Hastings "haunts Sense and Sensibility in the character of Colonel Brandon": both left for India at age seventeen; both may have had illegitimate daughters named Eliza; both participated in a duel.[10]

Notable portrayals

See also

References

  1. ^ Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility (London 1932) p. 61 and p. 337
  2. ^ R. Jenkyns, A Fine Brush of Ivory (Oxford 2007) p. 188
  3. ^ R. Jenkyns, A Fine Brush of ivory (Oxford 2007) p. 188
  4. ^ J. Harris, Jane Austen's Art of Memory (2003) p. 37 and 49
  5. ^ G. B. Stern Talking of Jane Austen (London 1946) p. 139-144
  6. ^ E. Auerbach, Searching for Jane Austen (2004) p. 113
  7. ^ R. Jenkyns, A Fine Brush of Ivory (Oxford 2007) p. 191-2
  8. ^ G. B. Stern Talking of Jane Austen (London 1946) p. 144-5
  9. ^ A. Dobson, 'Introduction', Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility (London 1932 [1895]) p. xii
  10. ^ Walker, Linda Robinson (2013). "Jane Austen, the Second Anglo-Mysore War, and Colonel Brandon's Forcible Circumcision: A Rereading of Sense and Sensibility". Persuasions On-Line. 34 (1). Jane Austen Society of North America. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  11. ^ Parrill, Sue (2002). Jane Austen on Film and Television: A Critical Study of the Adaptations. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. p. 37. ISBN 9780786413492.
  12. ^ Wootton, Sarah (2016). Byronic Heroes in Nineteenth-Century Women’s Writing and Screen Adaptation. New York, NY: Palgrave MacMillan. p. 55. ISBN 9781349555376.
  13. ^ McHodgkins, Angelique Melitta. INDIAN FILMMAKERS AND THE NINETEENTH-CENTURY NOVEL:REWRITING THE ENGLISH CANON THROUGH FILM.
  14. ^ "New Year's Day: Sense And Sensibility (BBC1)". Manchester Evening News. 21 December 2007. Retrieved 8 March 2019.

Further reading

  • E. Godfrey, The January–May Marriage in Nineteenth-Century British Fiction (2009)