A barouche-landau is mentioned in
Emma, published in 1816 by
Jane Austen. It "combines the best features of a barouche and a
landau". An illustration of the expensive and more rarely seen vehicle, on account of the expense, is shown in a paper by Ed Ratcliffe, citing editor R. W. Chapman's collection of the works of Jane Austen, in the volume Minor Works, as noted in Ratcliffe's sources. In the novels by Jane Austen, "Lady Dalrymple, Mr. and Mrs. Palmer, and Henry Crawford owned barouches" in which other characters rode, and Jane Austen herself on at least one occasion in 1813 rode in a barouche. Henry Crawford was a character in
Mansfield Park and his barouche was the topic of two important scenes of the novel; Lady Dalrymple was in
Persuasion, while Mr and Mrs Palmer were characters in
Sense and Sensibility. Additionally, Lady Catherine de Bourgh mentions taking Elizabeth to town in her Barouche box "
Pride and Prejudice" Barouche driving is mentioned as a fashionable pastime in Nice, Italy, in chapter 37 of
Little Women by
Louisa May Alcott. Chichikov, the main character of
Nikolai Gogol's "
Dead Souls", is frequently driven around in his own barouche by his servant Selifan and is also involved in a crash with another carriage. ==Gallery==