Mr. Weston

Mr. Weston is a supporting character in Jane Austen's novel Emma, written in 1815. He marries the governess of the heroine, Emma Woodhouse, and it is the arrival of his son, Frank Churchill, in Highbury that sets the events of the plot in motion.

Mr Weston
Jane Austen character
In-universe information
Spouse1) Miss Churchill 2) Miss Taylor
ChildrenFrank Churchill
HomeRandalls

Background

Born into a local Highbury family, rising from trade into gentility – what Ronald Blythe called “the park-like nirvana...the comic idealization of the country gentleman state”[1] - Mr Weston used a small inheritance to seek an upwardly mobile short-cut, joining the militia as a Captain, and wooing and winning the daughter of a rich landed family, the Churchills. Unfortunately the pair were then disowned by the Churchills, and his wife's extravagance whittled away his fortune; until her death, and the handing over of their child to the Churchills, led him to join his brothers in trade in London.[2]

Some decades later, financial success enabled him both to purchase a small estate, and to maintain the gentry lifestyle – wife, servants, carriage, hospitality, and fine wines[3] - on the interest of his savings alone.

Character

A shrewd, cheerful, lively and hospitable figure,[4] Mr. Weston is liked by one and all in Highbury: the only reservations expressed about him relate to his preference for society in general over strong family ties,[5] and (on Emma's part) to a certain unrestricted sociability on his part.[6]

gollark: If you want more places to pirate things, just ask™!
gollark: It applies to potatOS, my potat os.
gollark: https://osmarks.tk/p3.html
gollark: The PotatOS privacy policy, while not a *book*, is better.
gollark: But seriously, the bible is not a very good example for "an accurate book".

See also

  • Cheeryble Brothers
  • Mr Weston's Good Wine

References

  1. R. Blythe ed, Jane Austen: Emma (Penguin 1973) Introduction, p. 17
  2. R. Blythe ed, Jane Austen: Emma (Penguin 1973) Ch 2 p. 46-7
  3. E. Copeland ed., The Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen (Cambridge 1997) p. 141 and p. 136
  4. R. Jenkyns, A Fine Brush on Ivory (Oxford 2007) p. 57 and 75
  5. R. Jenkyns, A Fine Brush on Ivory (Oxford 2007) p. 57
  6. R. Blythe ed, Jane Austen: Emma (Penguin 1973) Ch 38 p. 317-8
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.