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Arabella - Jan 2015 Group Read - Chapters 7 to 13
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Amy
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Jan 03, 2015 08:21PM

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Her strong moral compass is her most endearing quality, and while it shows up the shallow selfishness of the fashionable people around her, it also creates a serious inner conflict because of her own deception. One of Heyer's most interesting characters. I'm glad I'm getting acquainted with her again.

What an excellent analysis of Arabella !

She loves to have fun, but never at the expense of her conscience, and as she begins to realize that her deception does involve not only her own self but others, she really does have a "serious inner conflict"! I love how you put it!


A recurrent fantasy of mine is getting access to her trove historical research! What a shortcut that would be!

Arabella is quite a complex heroine. She appears to be a sweet ingenue, but she has a temper & also a compassionate side.



Exactly! & she is saving Robert from a life of boredom!

I really like the Bertram's friend (can't remember his name and I'm listening to an audiobook so I can't look it up) too. GH writes such a good "he's an idiot but overall a good guy" character.


I kept thinking of that crew also! My favorite cast of supporting misfits.
Since Mr. Beaumaris doesn't have a title but his grandmother does - does that mean his father wasn't of the aristocracy? Or could his father just have been a younger brother of a Lord and therefore no title? I know this might be a very complicated question I'm asking.

I think if Beaumaris were the younger brother of a lord, he would be the Honorable Mr. Beaumaris, so I doubt his family was titled. But the French-sounding (i.e., Norman) name implies that his family has been major landowning gentry for a very long time but stayed out of politics, which would make them less likely to have received a title. Kinda like Mr. Darcy in Pride and Prejudice.
Such families definitely existed (e.g., the Lee Steeres in Surrey) and may in some ways have been considered even more respectable than aristocrats, for having avoided wading into the dirt and vagaries of politics. The men would often marry daughters of aristocrats (and their daughters often married into the aristocracy) and they moved in the same circles, Eton, Oxbridge, the London Season.

Only GH could make Arabella's rescue of a climbing biy into a comical situation. It's truly magnificent and I admire Arabella for sticking to her guns and doing the right thing. I love how she even confronted old Grimsby on her own. Not a very 19th century ladylike thing to do but it made me like her even more.
The scene where Arabella and Beaumaris rescue the dog is my favorite. I would have done the same thing. Beaumaris reveals his true character by rushing in to help and being so kind and gentle with the dog. I do not believe that he would have drowned the dog if Arabella hadn't been there. I think he would have taken the dog home just as he does. He only thinks he's doing it to please Arabella. A dog always knows a sucker when they see one. They do not always know a rescuer means to be kind to them though so I think it shows that Beaumaris has a softer side he doesn't let show.
Bertram's friend Mr. Scunthorpe may be intellectually slow but he's smart about London ways. I predict Bertram is going to find himself in big trouble. He seems happy enough to see his sister though. I love how Beaumaris skillfully gets information out of Bertram about his hometown but nothing on Arabella. Bertram may be young and naive but at least he doessn't spill the beans.
I love the confrontation between Poodle Byng's poodle and Ulysses and the two owners. The only other writer who handles the comic animal scenes with nearly the same skill is Barbara Metzger.
By the end of this section, Beaumaris realizes he's in love with Arabella, but it might be too late because of his firtation. She's been warned against him so many times that even if she thought he was serious, I'm sure she'd say no.
There's a lot of snobbery in this novel: foreigners don't know how to manage children; Arabella may be from a trade background though she doesn't "smell of the shop."


A recurrent fantasy of mine is getting access to her trove historical research! ..."
Yes, I was very disappointed that the recent biography did not give much information about this, although I understand that Jennifer Kloester did have access to it. Her previous book, Georgette Heyer's Regency World, appeared to me to be based entirely on the published books.

Heyer is so clever in everything she does. It didn't hit me until after our hero had asked his grandmother if he would make a good husband that his surname basically meant that very thing! Beau maris = good/handsome husband.
The historical details are always staggering - and copious! It's hard to believe Heyer lived a full century after the Regency Era she so adroitly portrayed.
My very favorite Heyer moments must be when she lets us in on the emotional awakening of her often rather hardened heroes. I especially love it when there is an actual "aha!" moment for these stricken fellows as I believe was the case for Mr Beaumaris in chapter 9: "Mr . Beaumaris .... when confronted by the vision of Arabella fighting for the future of her unattractive protege, had undergone an enlightenment so blinding as almost to deprive him of his senses...."
He knows he's done for. It's so brilliantly written in subtle phrases, yet with blaring clarity and impact.
This passage had me grinning while I read.

Heyer is so clever in everything she does. It didn't hit me until after our hero had asked his gran..."
Well said, Trudy! I agree with all your excellent points.

Heyer is so clever in everything she does. It didn't hit me until after our hero had asked his gran..."
"He knows he's done for." That made me grin, Trudy!

another aha moment was in The Grand Sophie when Charles sees her selflessly caring for his sick little sister.

another aha moment was in The Grand Sophie when Charles sees her selflessly caring for his sick little sister."
Yes!! I absolutely love that one. The impact on Charles is profound and somewhat startling to him. It's one of the most moving scenes I've read in Heyer's work.
Thanks, HJ and Karlyne, for your replies. I just love it when a man 'is done for' over a woman. ;)

another aha moment was in The Grand Sophie when Charles sees her selflessly caring for his sick little sister."
Yes!! I absolutely love that one. The impact on Charles..."
This is one of the best scenes in Heyer's books, I think, when they're both in her room in the middle of the night and coax her to drink her milk out of the cup with roses on it.

another aha moment was in The Grand Sophie when Charles sees her selflessly caring for his sick little sister."
Yes!! I absolutely love that one. The ..."
From The Grand Sophy? I don't remember that specific part.

Then Sophy tells her a story of her time in the Pyrenees until she falls asleep. Sophy looks up and meets Charles's eyes.
"He was staring at her, as if a thought, blinding in its novelty, had occurred to him. Her gaze remained steady, a little questioning. He rose abruptly, half-stretched out his hand, but let it fall again, and, turning, went quickly out of the room."



Yep, Eugenia Wraxton. Gotta love the scene when Sophy drives her down St James's Street, because her credit is good enough to carry Sophy off when doing such an outrageous thing!

I kept thinking of that crew a..."
Amy wrote: "Abigail wrote: "RE: “idiot but overall a good guy” characters, there’s a hilarious crew of them in Friday’s Child. Had me in stitches the last time I read that one."
I kept thinking of that crew a..."
Mr. Beaumaris does not come from a titled family. His grandmother (the Dowager Duchess of Wiggen) mentions this fact, but she goes on to say that if his family hadn't been one of the best, she wouldn't have let Maria marry into it no matter what settlements the Beaumarises had offered for her hand.


MaryC wrote: "To go back to comment 22 and the next few, is anyone here familiar with Dorothy Dunnett's Lymond series? Anyone who is will probably know what I'm thinking of, but just in case, it's in The Ringed..."
I am, but haven't read it for a while so can't place what you're thinking of - can you explain a bit?
I am, but haven't read it for a while so can't place what you're thinking of - can you explain a bit?

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Books mentioned in this topic
Georgette Heyer's Regency World (other topics)Authors mentioned in this topic
Jennifer Kloester (other topics)Barbara Metzger (other topics)