Background
Living in genteel poverty with her ageing widow of a mother and only one servant, Miss Bates was nonetheless on visiting terms with the best in Highbury society. At the same time, she was dependent on her neighbours for much support – pork from Mr. Woodhouse, apples fromCharacteristics
Miss Bates has as her main characteristic an unending flow of trivial speech, freely associating from one unimportant event to another – something which was to make her an immediate comic success among Austen's first readership. Many of the clues to the book's intrigue are in fact artfully concealed and revealed within her verbose talk. Her speech is overtly a recognition of her grateful dependence on her neighbours, but it can also be seen, in its overwhelming impact on other characters, as almost tyrannical in its passive-aggressive self-assertion.Possible inspiration
Austen was, like Miss Bates, the unmarried daughter of a clergyman's widow, and, while she herself was notoriously silent in company, her letters by contrast have a rambling, inconsequential flow that has been compared to the speech of her creation, for example: “my coarse spot, I shall turn it into a petticoat very soon. - I wish you a Merry Christmas, but ''no'' compliments of the Season”. While she herself has thus been seen as a possible model for Miss Bates, another single spinster, Miss Milles, who “talked on...for half an hour, using such odd expressions & so foolishly minute that I could hardly keep my countenance”, has also been suggested as a possible external influence.Deirdre Le Faye ed, ''Jane Austen's Letters'' (Oxford 1995) p. 245, p. 332 and p. xSee also
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bates, Miss Emma characters Literary characters introduced in 1815 Female characters in literature