Georgette Heyer Fans discussion
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Age differences in Heyer books.


I thought we might find it useful to have it linked to here. :)
http://www.he..."
What an interesting list , thank you both

Yes, true for me too.




Mine too or more mature heroines like Frederica. I am not a fan of the silly teenager and older alpha male trope.

Lordy, I'd not even noticed that my favourite couples have huge age differences both, not just one as I'd believed.

I may be remembering this wrong , but is not that at least partly the reason Bab's first marriage was so awful, in An Infamous Army?


At least Fanny's elderly husband tried to be kind to her, but it was still hard for her.

At least Fanny's elderly husband tried to be kind to her, but it was still hard for her."
Yes, and it must have been difficult being friends with - and a bit in awe of - your husband's daughter . I tend to disagree with Jessica above (sorry) that age is just a number , I think it tended to figure as an actual feature quite often . In life too.

When Dominic and Mary marry the age gap is small yet their granddaughter Babs is married to an older dissolute man and it does not work. It leaves Babs very bitter and angry and this comes through in her relationship with Charles






problem is that since women generally live longer than men anyway, if your husband is significantly older than you you're likely to have a long widowhood. my late mother in law for instance was a widow for forty years, her husband being 25 years older than her.

Since men can carry on fathering children till their 90s and women (generally), are unable to do so past 50 - your prof's maths is erroneous!! Seems that piece of info had more to do with his dating targets!!

& welcome to our group, Judith!

That is in my book, too!

And I would bet anything in the entire world the author was male. Old pych. texts are staggeringly sexist as are old anthropology texts., And blithely unaware of being so - indeed, would indignantly claim to be scientific and 'objective' lol.

Oh, yes, when the students are adults. At my Uni, I saw some such liaisons. Personally, my objection was when that led to favouritism and grade inflation if the student was in the same class as the professor, but in the cases I saw the students were from other careers, and they never crossed paths with the professors, who were teaching in my field.

It has gone spectacularly wrong over here
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_...


i expect some of the students are quite keen to be taken advatage of.

Once those students are out of their classes and are unlikely ever to be in one again, it should be OK. I've known a few such cases that resulted in good, lasting marriages. None of them involved my psych professor, but the one I knew best involved my own parents! :)

Once those students are out of their classes and are unlikely ever to be in one again, it should be OK. I've known ..."
That is still a bit shocking to me! One hopes for the best in others, but I worry about those professors who would take advantage of awestruck students. I remember how I felt about those revered beings when I was in Uni!!



I would like another column on the chart estimating maturity level. The Grand Sophy is more mature at age 20 than many other women (including her aunt) will ever achieve, so she would be a match for any Heyer husband, whatever his age. I adore Mr. Beaumarie, but when Arabella says, "Is that what the book is about?" and he replies, "Yes, that is what it is about," I hear condescension and I worry. He falls in love with her for worthy reasons, but I don't see Arabella rising to his intellectual level over time.

Sadly, I agree. I've known too many highly educated people who saw their educations only a routes to prestigious or well-paying jobs and felt no need to acquire any accompanying graces or values. Still, I think they're in the minority!

mr beaumaris thinks himself superior to everyone. i daresay he would be condescending towards anyone he married. he doesn't want a wife on his intellectual level, he wants someone he can patronise.

Louise wrote: "mr beaumaris thinks himself superior to everyone. i daresay he would be condescending towards anyone he married. he doesn't want a wife on his intellectual level, he wants someone he can patronise. "
I think you're right - but the point about Arabella, and why he falls for her, is that she is actually his moral superior and has the capability to raise him to her level. They will probably become noted philanthropists, like Sir Waldo and Ancilla, and with any luck he will become less thoughtless and condescending.
Actually, we know nothing about Arabella's intellectual capabilities, because she's only had a 'girl's education': it's explicitly stated that with a limited income, it's the boys' education her parents have been concentrating on, and that her business is to get such a husband as will help her sisters up the matrimonial ladder as well. An interest in the classics would have got her labelled a bluestocking and fatally ruined her chances. As she gets older - she's only a school-leaver now, remember - her intelligence may well have a chance to shine.
I think you're right - but the point about Arabella, and why he falls for her, is that she is actually his moral superior and has the capability to raise him to her level. They will probably become noted philanthropists, like Sir Waldo and Ancilla, and with any luck he will become less thoughtless and condescending.
Actually, we know nothing about Arabella's intellectual capabilities, because she's only had a 'girl's education': it's explicitly stated that with a limited income, it's the boys' education her parents have been concentrating on, and that her business is to get such a husband as will help her sisters up the matrimonial ladder as well. An interest in the classics would have got her labelled a bluestocking and fatally ruined her chances. As she gets older - she's only a school-leaver now, remember - her intelligence may well have a chance to shine.

I always thought it a pity arabella couldn't have married waldo, they have similar interests and would have enjoyed being philanthropists together.
Arabella's father would probably have given her so,e classical education if she had shown an interest in it, I suspect she probably isn't that interested though.


I expect many men also didn't want to read such books - but they weren't allowed so much to admit it.

I expect there were some men who would happily admit to haaving no interest in such books - Freddy in Cotillion for example, I can just imagine what he would say if asked to read the History of Persia!

Exactly! And I do love Freddy for his kind heart.
But when it comes to the brazenly unbookish, The Reverend Henry Tallant ain't among 'em. He seems much more like Jane Austen's clergyman father, a gentleman scholar whose only extravagance was his library.


Howard, you must have been the kind of student every teacher loves to have!

Me too. And I'm still doing courses, and soon another degree, for the same reason.

How good to know that there are real people like that, and how lovely for you to have had one as your father.
I thought we might find it useful to have it linked to here. :)
http://www.heyerlist.org/ages.html