“I cannot make speeches, Emma. If I loved you less, I might be able to talk about it more. But you know what I am.—You hear nothing but truth from me."
Today we are appreciating the close of Emma together. The close of this masterpiece, but certainly not the end of our loving engagement with Jane Austen.
In our discussion, we're meditating upon character change, guiding principles for happy relationships, friendship vs intimacy, romantic attraction in Regency England, how to know true love, and much more.
Timestamps:
0:00 spending more time in Highbury
2:00 repentance & transgression in society
4:00 Jane Austen’s satire of the clergy
6:00 who are the villains in Emma?
8:00 social faux pas as immorality
10:00 what does condescension mean?
12:00 Emma as first detective novel?
14:00 how to attract a regency gentleman
16:00 Jane Austen’s sublime minimalism
18:00 Emma Woodhouse & Frank Churchill
20:00 how we derive meaning from others
22:00 Jane Austen poking fun at balls
24:00 is all truly fair in love and war?
26:00 dance etiquette in Regency England
28:00 falling in love inevitably means loss
30:00 saying one thing & meaning another
32:00 who is the hero of this novel?
34:00 tragic illness & death of Austen
36:00 the Crown Inn ball is called off
38:00 how to know if you’re truly in love
40:00 Emma dreams of rejecting Frank
42:00 self-overhearing of great characters
44:00 character as the mark of great writers
46:00 Emma’s reflections on being in love
48:00 continued hindrance in Harriet’s life
50:00 Mr Elton returns with his new bride
52:00 everyone gets their perfect match
54:00 Hartfield estate vs Maple Grove
56:00 Emma Woodhouse vs Mrs Elton
58:00 ‘Knightley is quite the gentleman’
1:00:00 in defence of Emma Woodhouse
1:02:00 ‘I talk of nothing but Jane Fairfax’
1:04:00 analysing the character Mrs Elton
1:06:00 Knightley loves an open temper
1:08:00 dialogue of Mr Weston & Mrs Elton
1:10:00 what is distance to those of fortune?
1:12:00 the upstart pride of Mrs Churchill
1:14:00 are we the star or just a bit part?
1:16:00 order of dancing at regency balls
1:18:00 how to argue with the ones you love
1:20:00 Emma & Knightley at the dance
1:22:00 one of the most beautiful scenes
1:24:00 Mr Knightley vs Frank Churchill
1:26:00 Emma sympathises with Jane Fairfax
1:28:00 the set-piece episode at Box Hill
1:30:00 when Emma is rude to Miss Bates
1:32:00 Mr Knightley’s chastising of Emma
1:34:00 anagnorisis of Emma Woodhouse
1:36:00 the formative events in our lives
1:38:00 the gallows humour of Jane Austen
1:40:00 the mystery of the book is revealed
1:42:00 why I love rereading this story
1:44:00 Emma realises her love for Knightley
1:46:00 becoming a detective of the heart
1:48:00 how self-awareness can forgive all
1:50:00 Mr Knightley confesses his love
1:52:00 ‘I cannot make speeches, Emma’
1:54:00 ‘faultless in spite of all her faults’
1:56:00 receiving a gain that was always there
1:58:00 marriage of Emma & Mr Knightley
2:00:00 appreciating the ending of Emma
2:01:00 book club reading schedule for 2026
Recommended Resources:
World of Jane Austen: You can enjoy a tour of the last residence of Jane Austen, with the wonderful Lucy Worsley and Dan Snow as guides, via this video here. If you're keen to see Box Hill, the infamous scene of Emma's rudeness to Miss Bates, you can learn about it from the National Trust page here. If you're interested in seeing some of the books that inspired Jane Austen, then rare books expert Rebecca Romney has a superb little video here. There are first editions of Frances Burney's Camilla and the sonnets of Charlotte Smith, along with the memoir of Austen, by her nephew James Edward Austen-Leigh, which helped secure her reputation. If you find this as interesting as I do, you may enjoy Romney's book on the women writers who shaped her legacy: Jane Austen's Bookshelf.
Music Appreciation: With all this talk of pianofortes and dancing at balls, why not throw on some of Jane's very own favourite pieces of music? She loved the compositions of Ignaz Pleyel, Irish and Scottish folksongs arranged by Beethoven, the English canzonets of Haydn, piano concertos from Daniel Steibelt, Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice, and the music of Bach. The tune that we hear Jane Fairfax playing in Emma is called 'Robin Adair' by G. Kiallmark, which you can enjoy here.
Poetry Appreciation: Here's a great 'hack', if you like, for broadening one's reading horizons: make an attempt to source and appreciate the literary allusions and references you discover in your current read. In Emma, we saw Mr Knightley thinking of a line from the William Cowper poem 'The Task' ('myself creating what I saw'). We noted that Mrs Elton misquoted Thomas Gray's 'Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard' ('Full many a gem of purest ray serene, / The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear: / Full many a flow'r is born to blush unseen, / And waste its sweetness on the desert air). Indeed, this might throw you back to our reading of Thomas Hardy's Far from the Madding Crowd. We also noted that our wry narrator referred to an Oliver Goldsmith poem, 'When a Lovely Woman Stoops to Folly' ('And finds too late that men betray, / What charm can sooth her melancholy, / What art can wash her guilt away? / The only art her guilt to cover, / To hide her shame from every eye, / To give repentance to her lover, / And wring his bosom—is to die.')
More Austen: Like with Dickens and Shakespeare, I love reading Jane Austen every single year. She's my go-to writer when I need some emotional healing. If Emma has left you wanting more of Austen's world and characters, then check out our previous readings and lectures for Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion. If you've read those, then you could have a little taste test for her other works, like Sense and Sensibility, Mansfield Park, Northanger Abbey, not to mention her wonderful unpublished, unfinished, or shorter works, to see which one piques your curiosity next.
Film Appreciation: If you've been saving your chosen adaptation of Emma for when you've finished the novel, now is the time to treat yourself to a screening. If you want to watch my favourite adaptation, then check out the 2009 four-part television serial starring Romola Garai, Johnny Lee Miller, and Michael Gambon, which is available on BBC iPlayer here, and you'll see the actors who have become my Emma and Mr Knightley. For films, the 1996 film starring Gwyneth Paltrow and the 2020 film starring Anya Taylor-Joy have both proven to be very popular. There's also the 1996 TV film starring Kate Beckinsale and the 1972 miniseries starring Doran Godwin. If you're in the mood for a loose modern retelling, you might enjoy Clueless from 1995 starring Alicia Silverstone. Let us know what you make of your chosen adaptation and how you would transfer Jane Austen from the page to the stage or screen. For fun, enjoy this fan-made compilation of clips showing Emma and Mr Knightley being chaotic.
Our Next Great Story: Congratulations on bringing yourself so powerfully to Jane Austen's delightful romance. I hope you're now in the mood for our festive read and keen to curl up with a thick Charles Dickens masterpiece by the fire. This coming weekend, we will be revealing the book club reading programme for next year with our 2026 announcement video. I'm so excited to map out all the great books we're going to journey through together on the next leg of our deep reading adventure. The weekend after that, first week of December, we will have a lecture on Bleak House covering the events of chapters one to twenty-two. Thank you so much for having made this reading year such an intensely special experience. You mean the absolute world to me and I am grateful you're here keeping great literature alive by reading these books with so much passion, curiosity, and love.
Questions for You:
1) What will you remember most from your time spent with Emma?
2) What area connected with Jane Austen are you now most keen to explore?
3) What did you make of the ending of the novel?
4) How would you persuade another to read Emma? And what advice would you give to facilitate a meaningful reading experience?
And please do share with us your impressions and favourite passages from the end of Emma and your thoughts on the character arc of Miss Woodhouse, the happy union with Mr Knightley, and any insights that have leapt out to you.
Congratulations on reading Jane Austen's Emma, everybody!
Judith klinghoffer
2025-12-26 21:07:49 +0000 UTCMegan
2025-12-21 18:02:44 +0000 UTCHelen Lyons
2025-12-19 08:31:13 +0000 UTCJane Knights
2025-12-16 11:32:06 +0000 UTCDorothy Watson
2025-12-14 21:01:54 +0000 UTCDaryl
2025-12-13 12:11:05 +0000 UTCCanadian Darlene
2025-12-11 21:38:00 +0000 UTCCanadian Darlene
2025-12-11 20:58:41 +0000 UTCCanadian Darlene
2025-12-11 19:53:03 +0000 UTCFozy
2025-12-10 20:11:05 +0000 UTCDayna
2025-12-07 20:46:24 +0000 UTC