General Tilney is surely one of the most unpleasant
characters Jane Austen ever created. He’s greedy, hypocritical and a bully. Yet is it through him that the naïve eighteen-year-old Catherine Morland, heroine of 'Northanger Abbey' learns some important lessons about human nature.
When Catherine Morland first sees him in the Assembly Rooms
she is standing beside Henry Tilney – a man she has recently met and finds very
attractive. She notices that she is being ‘earnestly
regarded by a gentleman…immediately behind her. He was a very handsome man, of
a commanding aspect, past the bloom, but not past the vigour, of life.’ He learns forward and whispers something to Mr
Tilney.
Catherine is embarrassed
by the gentleman whispering. Is there something wrong with her appearance? Then
Henry says: ‘That gentleman knows your
name and you have a right to know his. It is General Tilney, my father.’
It the first time that General Tilney’s attentions make
Catherine feel uncomfortable, but it won’t be the last. What she doesn’t know is
that the obnoxious John Thorpe, the brother of her friend Isabella, has been telling
the General lies about her: that she has a dowry of between £15-20,000, and she
is the heiress of the wealthy Allens, whose guest she is.
The General is immediately determined that Catherine will
marry his younger son, the Reverend Henry Tilney. He invites Catherine to stay
with them at Northanger Abbey.
His invitation (he goes on for twenty-three lines) is a
mixture of boasting and fulsome flattery. He tries to impress her with name-dropping;
he had hoped to see ‘the Marquess of
Longtown and General Courteney, some of my very old friends here’ and then asks
her if she could ‘be prevailed upon to
quit this scene of public triumph, and oblige your friend Eleanor (his
daughter) with your company in
Gloucestershire.’ He ends, with hypocritical modesty: his ‘mode
of living is plain and unpretending; yet no endeavour shall be wanting on our
side to make Northanger Abbey not wholly disagreeable.’
His use of litotes (‘not
wholly disagreeable’) is ironic, and makes it clear that, in fact, he rates
the attractions of Northanger Abbey very highly. The whole speech is way over
the top and, not unnaturally, Catherine is overwhelmed. ‘To receive so flattering an invitation! To have her company so warmly
solicited!’ She takes it all at face
value.
But, even as the carriage sets off for Northanger Abbey,
Catherine begins to feel uneasy about his constant attention. Is she
comfortable? He stops for lunch at an inn and bullies the waiters with
impossible demands. He’s very fussy about his food and the ‘short’ stop takes
over two hours. What would Catherine like to eat? He fears that he’s offered
her nothing to her taste, when she’s never seen such a variety of food in her
life before. In any case, they had a substantial breakfast before they set out
and she’s not hungry. He makes ‘it
impossible for her to forget for a moment that she is a visitor’.
The truth is that the general is a bully who manipulates
Catherine into praising everything she sees, whether she likes it or not. Jane
Austen leaves us in no doubt that General Tilney fails as a host because he’s
not interested in his guest’s comfort. He only wants to hear praise of himself
and his possessions.
It gets worse once they reach Northanger Abbey. Catherine,
whose passion is reading Gothic novels, is longing to see the ancient parts of
the abbey but the General, having offered her a choice of seeing the house or
grounds, says: ‘Yes, he could certainly
read in Miss Morland’s eyes a judicious desire of making use of the present
smiling weather. But when did she judge amiss? The Abbey would always be safe
and dry.’ He has manipulated her into doing what he wants.
Poor Catherine! ‘She
was all impatience to see the house, and had scarcely any curiosity to see the
grounds.’ She ‘put on her bonnet in
patient discontent.’ (A phrase which perfectly describes Catherine's feelings) The tour is a nightmare. The General hopes to learn
that the Allens’ estate is inferior to his own. All Catherine can say of what
she’s shown: ‘It was very noble – very
grand – very charming!’ over and over again. General Tilney supplies his
own praise.
One of the lessons Catherine must learn, both with regard to
her friend Isabella and with General Tilney is that people can say one thing
but mean something quite different. She has already been confused by Isabella falling
in love with her brother James, becoming engaged to him, and then encouraging
the attentions of Frederick Tilney, Henry’s older brother (a far better
marriage prospect). Duplicity isn’t in Catherine’s nature and she doesn’t
understand why people behave dishonestly.
When the General arranges for them to visit Henry’s home at
Woodston Parsonage, he insists: ‘You are
not to put yourself at all out of your way. Whatever you may happen to have in
the house will be enough. I think I can answer for the young ladies making
allowance for a bachelor’s table.’
Catherine believes him.
But Henry knows better, and leaves Northanger Abbey early in order to prepare
a suitably elaborate meal.
Catherine exclaims: ‘But
how can you think of such a thing after what the General said? When he so
particularly desired you not to give yourself any trouble, because anything would do.’
Henry smiles but still leaves early for Woodston.
After Henry has gone Catherine finds herself pondering on
the General’s inexplicability: That he
was very particular in his eating, she had, by her own unassisted observation,
already discovered; but why he should say one thing so positively; and mean
another all the while, was most unaccountable! How were people, at that rate,
to be understood?
What is interesting here is that, for the first time, Catherine
is discovering things ‘by her own
unassisted observation’. Not only has she has stopped taking everybody on
trust - Isabella has been using both
James and herself – she has stopped living in her Gothic fantasy world; General
Tilney has neither incarcerated his wife nor murdered her. And both of them
alter the truth to suit themselves.
Jane Austen after Cassandra Austen. National Portrait Gallery.
Catherine is beginning to judge people for herself; and she
is shortly going to need her new-found emotional intelligence. And, I would
argue, the obnoxious General Tilney is, perhaps, the most important instrument
of her maturation.
Elizabeth Hawksley.
4 comments:
Thanks - I'd sort of written off NA as a bit shallow, but there's clearly much more to it. Re-read scheduled!
Thank you for your comment, Georgie. I suspect NA is often seen as merely a take-off of the Gothic novels so popular at the time.
You might also enjoy Val McDermid's modern (2014) take on 'Northanger Abbey, which I thought was brilliant. It illuminates the original NA and gives Henry Tilney something of a back story. I did a post on it for the Historical Romance UK on January 5th, 2015, which you might enjoy.
It's part of the 'Austen Project' modern look at JA's books. The others, so far, are mere shadows of the originals, but Val McDermid's got rave reviews and is perceptive, cleverly handled and very funny.
Interesting insight into Catherine's growth. Hadn't looked at it from that angle.
I think Mrs. Norris is the worst villain because she does the most damage . She injures a young child pulled away from her home and bewildered at what was happening. Catherine is older and only subject to the General for a short stay.
Thank you for your perceptive comment, Anonymous. You have a very valid point; Mrs Norris is certainly a most unpleasant character. I'm not sure I'd say that she actually damages Fanny, though she does make her childhood unhappy. Fanny, for all her physical frailty and emotional sensibility, has a very strong soul and, don't forget, she has Edmund to love and guide her.
Still, I wouldn't wish Mrs Norris on anyone!
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