I was writing to excellent reader Ann today, talking about the blog post I did on how we write about Regency-era slums and got to thinking about how I deal with 'class' in the books.
Do I consciously write about social class in these books?
Yep. I figger we all reveal our attitudes and beliefs unconsciously as we write ... so I might as well be aware I'm doing this and use it.
Take Lazarus.
Lazarus is motivated by resentment of the class that
ruined his servant-girl mother and drove her into prostitution. This is the
class to which his father belongs. The class Lazarus would enjoy if he'd been legitimate.
Lazarus runs an empire of violence and theft, in part, because
he figures his minions are entitled to take what they want. The rich do. Why shouldn't the poor? He's self-educated and brilliant. He can't help but see the inequity in the laws of England. He ends up with great sympathy for the French Republican cause.
In his private life, his special ire is
reserved for women of the privileged class who commit crimes that would
land a servant girl in jail or send her to the gallows. Again, class motivates his actions.
Adrian's life journey is shaped by a desire to become 'a
gentleman'. He walks, like Hans Christian Andersen's Little
Mermaid, on sharp knives every step of the way. He finds himself, like
Eliza Doolittle in
My Fair Lady, unable to go back to what he was and
yet unable to be comfortable with what he becomes.
He measures his
own success by his ability to pass as a member of the upper class. And yet, Adrian only
passes for a gentleman
; he never
becomes one. He watches, judges, and shrewdly assesses the rich and
powerful . . . as an outsider. He can never buy into their narrower
view of the world. He uses privilege, but doesn't believe in it.
Adrian originally admired the French Revolution, liking the leveling effect. Then ... an outtake from
Forbidden Rose has him watching a tumbril take a family with teenage girls to the
guillotine. We don't see the scene onstage, unfortunately, but that was a turning point of his life. It outraged him. He would never again be tempted by revolutionary violence. Years later, he rejects Napoleon as an
ambitious opportunist. By that time, by 1799, Adrian is wholly committed to
the British Service.
But he never rejects France's social reforms. Philosophically, Adrian is all for dismantling aristocratic privilege. He doesn't act on this because social equality is never
offered to him as a viable choice in the 1789 to 1818 timeframe.
One reason Adrian gets along with Justine is they have no basic philosophical disagreement.
Doyle is more sympathetic to the idea of an aristocracy.
He
plays at being a coachman or a laborer without assuming the interior
life of one. He's an aristocrat inside. Born one. Schooled and
trained as one.
More than that, Doyle's a practical man rather than an idealist. He believes a
hierarchical society is inevitable, so he aims for a humane and workable
system -- a fair, stable, well-run government with gradual change
toward equality and social mobility.
The discussion Adrian and Doyle have at the beginning of
Forbidden Rose is meant to show their different points of view. (This is prior to Hawker's disillusionment with the bloody side of revolution in France.)
[Doyle and Adrian approach the orangerie at the chateau. It's savagely destroyed.]
Hawker followed him, crunching glass into the gravel. “The boys in that stinking little village waited years to do this.”
“Did they?”
“They
dreamed of it. They’d sit in those pig houses in the village with the
shutters closed and the wind leaking in. They’d think about these fancy
weeds up here, being coddled, all warm and happy behind glass. Down
there,they were freezing in the dark. Up here, they were growing
flowers.”
“That’s fixed, then. No more flowers.”
Out of the corner of
his eye, he saw Hawker stoop and pick up a rock, draw back and throw.
Glass fell with a thin, silver discord. The heroic revolutionaries of
Voisemont had missed one pane. Destruction was now complete.
Justine is my most ideological character. In 1818 she's going
through a period of disillusion, as idealists will. She's seen Napoleon
fall. She's seen Paris turn away from the Revolution and accept the
Royalists back in power. It'll be a few years before she gets her
political fire back.
Justine saw her degradation and loss not
as a male/female issue -- not so much, 'men did this to me' -- as a class and power issue. 'The rich
can get away with anything.' "In a just society these things would not happen.' She responds to her hurt with a desire to right the wrongs of society. She becomes a political person.
Justine's journey is one of
rebuilding herself after absolute destruction. Part of this is reclaiming her place as an aristocrat. Though she's despised aristocrats, ironically, it's a measure of her complete
healing when she can say,
“I will come to live with you
in your great mansion and be a lady again. I will be a DeCabrillac,
and face down the world if they make accusations. I will shake out your haughty
mansion like an old rag and make it comfortable to live in.”
She becomes something she has fought against, because Adrian needs this from her. It's her gift to him.
Justine, too, is someone who doesn't buy into the class paradigm. She may claim her name and position, but I see her taking her aristocratic space cynically. She's gotten
subtle in the Police Secrète. Give her a few more years and she'll be
the Grande Dame of the Reform Movement, infiltrating the camp of the enemy, still fighting the good fight.