Georgette Heyer Fans discussion
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The Unknown Ajax Group Read May 2017 Spoilers thread

Thank you Abigail, for sharing this info!
Very interesting!
When Abigail weighs in, expect to learn something!

Thanks for the recs. I will definitely try them. I was only vaguely aware that Heyer wrote mystery/ historical romance too. At least The Unknown Ajax is the first I've come across. To start with I railed against it a bit because I wanted another pure Romance. So I'm pleased that Heyer has a wider range.


Please keep us posted!

He is equally likely to be stuck in a peacetime billet in England (as was Hugo's father and Wickham from 'Pride & Prejudice')--where's the adventure in that?

Very good point! I guess India could be hopping.

The fault was with Lord Daracott. Richmond had grown up believing that there was nothing really wrong with smuggling and because everyone else ha..."
I agree. I think it went against the grain with Hugo somewhat to help a guilty person evade arrest, but I think he felt that Richmond's upbringing was a huge mitigating factor. I found Richmond to be an annoying brat, but I think Hugo felt that to punish him for his skewed perspective on smuggling would be unfair. It was Lord Darracott who should be taking the heat! I believe he also felt that Richmond was not beyond redemption, and that to ruin his life for his grandfather's negligence and wrong-headedness was pointless.


Sadly no, most of my family moved here from elsewhere (Mum is Scottish). I don't think there's much local memory about it at all. Hawkhurst is a large village, but not quite large enough to support a local history society or smuggling-based tourism. If you go further south, Hastings has a great 'Smugglers Caves'. You get a tour through some dramatically lit cliffside caves and some ghoulish waxworks of men being whipped or looking furtive with barrels.

He is equally likely to be stuck in a peacetime billet in England (as was Hugo's father and Wickham from 'Pride & Prejudice')--where's the adventure in that?"
I kind of hope that Richmond does get a peacetime billet. Pretty much all the rest of the British wars in the 19th Century were colonial adventures - and I don't really like the idea of Richmond being part of the Opium Wars, or putting down tribal insurrections. :(


Oh, I think it still happens - kid from a good home, probably just made a mistake, we'll back off. The kid doesn't have to be from a famous or very rich family.
The reverse happens, too - kid from a good home? Hasn't even got the excuse of poverty or neglect! Let's come down on him twice as hard!
Sometimes, though, I think the old method of sometimes letting things slide so long as the family gets the kid into the armed forces or someplace else he can use all his excess energy had something to be said for it. It isn't strict and even-handed justice, though.


I'm of the school of thought which says that any time a law is broken, society breaks down. But, on the other hand, it's pretty hard to imagine turning your own child over to the law, especially if it happened to be an offense that rested in your own culpability, and if no one "was hurt" specifically.
I remember years ago reading about a mother who hid her son in her trunk in order for him to escape a man-hunt. He was running from a double murder. And I thought that no matter how much I loved him, I couldn't have done what she did - because it was a heinous crime, and he wasn't safe to be left at-large in society. But, I wonder just where the line would be drawn for most people...

Smuggling was highly tolerated at all levels of British society because the import duties were viewed as unjust laws. The government was taxing everything in sight in order to pay for its wars (and for its ridiculously profligate prince and royal family in general). Many of the people felt that while defending against invasion by Napoleon was worthwhile, the majority of Britain’s military expenditures were devoted to supporting its colonialist efforts around the globe, and people saw less value in that. The import duties, along with the seizure of food and materials to support the army and navy, badly skewed the economy, leading to scarcity and ridiculously high prices for necessities. Many in the laboring class ate only cold food because they couldn’t even afford coals to light a fire. In that context, the smugglers were doing a service, making it possible for average people to buy basics at an affordable price.
BTW, I’m not sure Richmond would be sent to India. My grasp of Anglo-Indian history is not good, but didn’t the East India Company have its own private army?


East India Company ships would sail up to smuggling hot spots, offload about a quarter of their goods to the smugglers, and then pull in to port to report legally the rest of their cargo.
Flour was one of the most heavily manipulated items: there were controls on what could be imported even in years when the British harvest failed; requirements to sell higher-quality flour only to specific vendors (who sold to the military at lower prices, while lower-quality flour cost more for the people); price fixing; manipulation of supply; limits on where and how far you could transport your crop, etc. etc.
It was also a matter of income. A person carrying a load for smugglers could earn as much in one night as he could earn in an entire week as a farm laborer. So people could afford to feed their families if they participated in smuggling.
And I should get off my soapbox already!

No soap box, but a very concise look at the economic realities of the era. I am a little more familiar with the early post-Waterloo economy, with the vast unemployment due to the reduction in the military forces. Add to that the massive crop failures in 1816 (the year with no summer), and the country was in a world of hurts. The Luddite movement was spawned by the power loom technology that made Hugo's grandfather rich, but put many out of work. The enclosure movement was also picking up speed, displacing tenant farmers on those properties affected.
GH very rarely showed the gritty side--for that you need to read Carla Kelly.




Oh, I love them almost all of them. However, 'Mrs. Drew Plays Her Hand' is a top favorite as well as the connected stories --'Libbie's London Merchant' and 'One Good Turn'. Also 'The Wedding Journey'.





If you have not read these books, you don't know what you're missing! They immerse you in the culture while keeping you on the edge of your seat. Size-wise, they're pretty major door-stoppers, but worth the time investment. They have a permanent spot at the top of my favorites list. I was going to name my son after the main character in Pavilions, but Ashton didn't sound good with our last name, so I named him Alex after the main character in Shadow of the Moon instead!

Peers had a right to be tried by a jury of their peers - that is members of the House of lords. there is a scene in the film Kind hearts and Coronets where Dennis price is on trial and you see the lords saying one after another 'guilty, upon mine honour.'

That is very interesting. In The Talisman Ring we see how smuggling could be a lucrative local industry, with the gentry often sympathetic towards them.



That's a great comparison! They are both very self-confident, both mischievous, and neither hesitates to shamelessly prevaricate when it suits their purposes. They are also both successful at "setting things to rights," as well.

Both are also physically larger than average, though it is their personalities that make most of the difference.

Yes, what a wonderful comparison! They both come into families that are disfunctional because the head of the family is mismanaging everyone and bringing out the worst in people, and then they both fix it!


He's not my favorite, either!


I don't feel as badly for Ottershaw as I otherwise would because, as Hugo pointed out, he'd far overstepped his bounds and let his men shoot someone. Plus Hugo does mention to the family at the end that he'd told Ottershaw they would basically try to sweep everything under the rug, so hopefully this won't be much of a black mark on his career.
Vincent, I think, has some good qualities, but he's been warped by the family dynamics and his position. I like to think Hugo will figure out a way to set him on his own two feet and redeem himself.

All good points, and I do hope Hugo could help Vincent, he's such a miserable so-and-so!

When Lord Darracott dies, he won't be able to get money out of Hugo (who is already doing something very generous for Richmond)
His mother & father could well support him into politics. A nasty tongue & quick wit could be assets there.
Incidentally is it stated how much it will cost to buy Richmond a commission? I'm thinking it was ₤10k which gives an eyewatering sum when I put it through that currency converter!

I'm only about the halfway point so I don't know if it's mentioned in this book or not.


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I'm actually from Hawkhurst, so it was weirdly fun to rea..."
That's great - do any of your elderly relatives/neighbors know any local lore about smugglers?