Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Jane Austin and Myself on Our Respective Postal Systems

A Sketch of Jane Austen
I just finished reading Emma by Jane Austen.  Austen began writing Emma in 1813, and it was published in 1814.  While reading, I became exceptionally aware of certain comments on how great their postal service was in rural England.

It's mentioned in Austin's novel twice when a character not only states how fast and reliable it was, but how nice are the clerks in the post office.  This surprised me, because I wasn't aware that England had postal service back then.

When I first started reading Emma, I thought that when someone received a letter--something that happens often in this novel--that it probably had been delivered by the sender's servant on horseback, until I read the comments about the postal service, which take place in a conversation between two people.

In Austen's novels, letters often play a crucial role, as in Pride and Prejudice, in which a letter totally turns the story around.  Novelists often use letters as a literary device.  I did that myself in my own novel That Smooth-Faced Gentleman.  It's a convenient way to deliver information in a different way--adding variety.  It's also a way to change a character from the third person into the first person voice.  I've totally gotten off the subject here, which is supposedly the postal service, something that obviously has quite a history.  Did America adopt the English postal service as a model when we were starting out?  I wonder from when the USA postal service dates from.  I will have to Google this.

I don't see why we need post office delivery service on Saturdays.  I can't think of anything that has to be delivered on a Saturday that couldn't wait until Monday.  If something has to be delivered on a Saturday, the person could use a private delivery company.  The USPS needs to reduce real estate and workforce.    People who insist upon being a computer illiterate need to be encouraged to learn computer technology at least to the point of sending and receiving emails.  If the price of sending a letter skyrockets, perhaps that would encourage them.