Only
that small minority of Janeites who have reread Northanger Abbey many times will
hear in my Subject Line the distinct echoes of the following little-noticed passage
in Chapter 2, when the ironical narrator explains why Mrs. Morland does_ not_
warn Catherine about the perils to her from the predatory schemes of not so
noble men she might encounter upon leaving the “nest” at Fullerton for the
first time:
“Cautions
against the violence of such noblemen and baronets as delight in forcing young
ladies away to some remote farm-house, must, at such a moment, relieve the
fulness of her heart. Who would not think so? But Mrs. Morland knew so little
of lords and baronets, that she entertained no notion of their _general_ mischievousness, and was wholly unsuspicious
of danger to her daughter from their machinations.”
In
this post, I will suggest that, as usual with Jane Austen, the seemingly
trivial is almost always a mask for the serious and profound—the above passage
is only the opening salvo in a comprehensive alternative version of a climactic
scene in Chapter 28 of the novel, to wit: that during her final night at the
Abbey, Catherine Morland, immediately after she tearfully swears off all future
(supposedly excessive) Gothic imaginings will comes perilously close—_without_
realizing it-- to being the victim of the very sort of sexual assault described
so elliptically and off-handedly in Chapter 2!
And
here’s the best (or the worst) part of this alternative climax: the would-be
perpetrator—“the nobleman or baronet” --who is foiled _just_ in the nick of
time by an audacious intervention by a secret guardian angel of Catherine’s---is
_not_, as is commonly speculated by Austen scholars and readers alike, an opportunistic predatory stranger who chances
to observe her traveling alone back to Fullerton, but is none other than the
man who has, as the above passage suggests, brought Catherine away to his own
“remote farm-house”—a man whose hospitality (and _protection_) she believes she
has been enjoying for nearly a month…..of course, I am referring to the
“mischievous” General Tilney himself!
Sounds
completely crazy, right? Except….as has been the case with every single one of my
previous, major subtextual epiphanies about the shadow stories of Jane Austen’s
novels—such as Jane Fairfax’s concealed pregnancy in _Emma_, or Mrs. Tilney’s
death in childbirth in NA, ---Jane Austen has hidden hints about this major
alternative textual interpretation in plain sight all the way through the
novel, beginning with the above passage in Chapter 2, continuing through a
cavalcade of seemingly innocuous passages which reveal to us the General’s ill
temper and impatience, and reaching its climax in the scene in Chapter 28
which, upon my latest rereading, removed the scales from my eyes, and revealed
to me that General Tilney was the would-be domestic rapist of _Catherine_!
Let
me set the stage: in this climactic scene, Catherine and Eleanor have been enjoying
some quality face time in private (i.e., with only servants present) at the
Abbey, while General Tilney is away in London for the week on business, and
then Henry is suddenly called off to Woodston for a couple of days. As their
pleasant female intimacy stretches into the late evening hours, a visitor is
suddenly heard arriving by carriage, whom Eleanor first assumes to be brother
Captain Tilney but then, after checking, returns upstairs and informs Catherine
that it is actually the General himself, returned prematurely from his trip.
Here
is the fulcrum between the overt story and the shadow story of the novel. In
the overt story—the generally accepted interpretation of “what happens” in the
novel, which the passive reader takes at face value---Eleanor discovers that
the mysterious midnight visitor is actually General Tilney, who angrily demands that Eleanor send Catherine
packing the very next morning, instead of extending Catherine’s stay for
another month, as has just been agreed between the two young friends earlier
that same day. It is only in Chapter 30 that the cause of the General’s
inexplicable anger at Catherine is revealed—her “offense” is that the avaricious
General has heard that Catherine was not the rich heiress he wished his son to
marry. All very tidy—perhaps a little
too tidy, as many scholars have noted, but have then attributed to what they
see as JA’s reticence or even squeamishness about enacting too much romance in
her climaxes. No Austen scholar has, to the best of my knowledge after a pretty
diligent search over the past week, ever guessed that we may have read an
elaborate but completely fabricated cover story for another train of events
underlying Catherine’s summary eviction from the Abbey.
Open
your imagination, then, to an entirely _alternative_ version of fictional
reality---a second, parallel universe depicted in the very same words of the
novel, but read _against_ the grain instead of _with_ it, in which the order to
banish Catherine has _not_ been given by the General, but actually is a fake
order from the General “forged” by Eleanor Tilney in order to get Catherine out
of the Abbey as soon as possible. But why in the world would Eleanor do such a
thing?
Because,
I suggest, Eleanor knows, as no one else in the fictional world of NA can know,
that the General’s presence in the Abbey _without_ Henry’s being there, i.e.,
without another man in the place other than servants subservient to their
imperious master, constitutes an imminent and grave danger to Catherine--- that
if Catherine is still there in her room at the Abbey after the General awakens well
rested after his long trip back from London, it will the _General’s_ hand on the door to Catherine’s bedroom that
Catherine will hear, and not Eleanor’s, and when she opens the door, a fate
much worse than eviction from the Abbey will fall upon her!
But
how does Eleanor feel so confident that the General constitutes a danger to
Catherine? It’s not just because the keenly observant Eleanor has observed the
General paying extravagant attentions to Catherine on numerous occasions over
the previous month—attentions which have led many interpreters of the novel
(including the screenwriter of the 1987 film adaptation, Maggie Wadey, and also
myself) to conclude that General Tilney has been courting Catherine for his
_own_ marital account, and not that of his son Henry, whom the General actually
views as a rival.
No,
it ‘s even more than that. I also assert
that Eleanor has an even _more_ compelling, and awful, reason to recognize the
grave danger to Catherine---and that reason is that Eleanor has _herself_ been
the victim of the General’s unwelcome sexual advances for some time prior to
that fateful night at the Abbey, and so she can see, in the way the General had
been ignoring Eleanor and zeroing in on Catherine, the writing on the wall for
Catherine!
When
I address this point in my book, I will provide an extensive textual analysis
in which I will make a strong case that this radical alternative interpretation
was entirely intentional on Jane Austen’s part. Obviously, this blog post is
not the place for that analysis, but in the interim, I can promise you that if
you want to take an enjoyable “carriage ride” through the novel, in the safety
of your own home, with this alternative reading in mind, you will be able to
spot much of the evidence yourself, if you just keep your eyes and your mind
open. But, for now, let me add a few additional highlights.
First,
one major motif many astute Janeites will immediately connect to the above is the
way that John Thorpe’s “symbolic rape” (as Diane Reynolds recently put it very
succinctly) of Catherine during his brief attempt to, in effect, abduct
Catherine under pretense of taking her to see Blaize Castle, does not stand
alone, but is merely the more overt half of a rape subtext that unites Thorpe
to the General in this deeper, covert way, the same way they are united on the
surface by their unholy alliance in scoping out young vulnerable females to
prey upon in some fashion or other. We
can now see that Thorpe and the General are evil birds of a feather, and that
the gravest danger to young women was not from strange men, but from men they
knew and were entitled to trust!
And
of course this relates to my recent postings about how certain I am that Jane
Austen would have been utterly outraged at the likes of Todd Akin, Rick
Santorum, and all the other Neanderthals on the Far Right in the US, with their
slick casuistry about different kinds of rape. Seen in the light I have
outlined above, Northanger Abbey is a virtual covert manifesto about the
dangers of what we might call domestic rape.
And
in that regard, if you read Miriam
Rheingold Fuller’s excellent article, "'Let
me go, Mr. Thorpe; Isabella, do not hold me!': Northanger Abbey and the Domestic
Gothic." in the 2010 issue of _Persuasions_, you will read much that is in
harmony with my claims. Even though Miriam did not step outside the box far enough to make the
interpretive leap I have made, I am
confident that she will find my interpretation to be a valid extension of hers.
Consider
also that several scholarly commentators have pointed out the extremely
uncharacteristic over-the-top Gothicizing of Eleanor Tilney’s explanations to
Catherine in Chapter 28, for why the latter must leave the Abbey early the next
morning. It is ironic that those
commentators have taken as a given that Eleanor’s reaction is
disproportionately large, speaking in melodramatic tones as if she were casting
Catherine into a horribly dangerous circumstance. But under my interpretation, entirely
unknown to Catherine, Eleanor has actually been confronted with a situation
that Eleanor knows, from her own extensive personal experience, is extremely
dangerous to Catherine, so long as the latter _remains_ at the Abbey! So how
ironic that Eleanor’s seeming over-reaction in the overt story turns out to be
100% justified in the shadow story!
And,
finally, taking one step further back,
this latest realization on my part makes it clear to me that I have, for
the past 4 years, been engaged with only half of the feminist critique
contained in the shadow story of NA---while I remain certain that Mrs. Tilney
represents the married woman’s half of the feminist shadow story, with all the
“confinements” of women performed in the name of marriage, I realize now that
Catherine represents the _unmarried_ woman’s half of the story, with the
dangers of abduction and rape that constantly threaten _them._ And, JA being
the literary economist that she was, puts General Tilney to _two_ complementary
uses—as he turns out to be the primary villain on _both _ of those counts!
Just
as with the death in childbirth theme, JA’s narrator ostensibly seems to tell
us that death in childbirth will NOT be addressed in NA, but then, as I have
demonstrated a hundred different ways, she actually makes death in childbirth a
central theme of the shadow story of the novel.
Now I
see that JA has created an awesome shadowy symmetry, by also making rape of
unprotected young women an equally powerful theme. It’s not just the long
recognized menace to Catherine’s safety that many readers of NA have seen in
the bestial John Thorpe. It’s also the menace from the smooth, powerful, virile
General Tilney—beneath his attempts to project a cultured veneer, we are meant
to see that he too is a brute, and a
much more dangerous one than Thorpe.
And
there’s also the amazing symmetry of John Thorpe and General Tilney—Thorpe,
being a piranha, operates according to the ordinary rapist’s formula, and
Fuller addresses his tactics and goals pretty well in her article. But General
Tilney is a much more dangerous Orca, as he not only represents the dangerous
husband, he also represents the dangerous suitor as well!
And
finally, we have the extraordinary resourcefulness and heroism of Eleanor
Tilney, faced with a nightmarish crisis when her father turns up without
warning at the Abbey, no doubt having arranged, behind the scene—as the lord
and master over Woodston as well as the Abbey--for Henry to be suddenly called
away to Woodston….
“Henry
was not able to obey his father's injunction of remaining wholly at Northanger
in attendance on the ladies, during his absence in London, the engagements of
his curate at Woodston obliging him to leave them on Saturday for a couple of
nights.”
....Eleanor
must think _very_ fast when her father arrives at the Abbey and, no doubt, he instructs
Eleanor to be sure to have Catherine ready during the latter part of the
following morning for the General to take Catherine out for a private carriage
ride to show her the full breadth of his vast holdings. What is Eleanor to do,
with Henry not there to deal with this crisis together? If she openly defies
her father, he will impose quick and unmerciful discipline on her, to squelch
her revolt before it starts. She must realize that there is only one option---if
she takes all her own free cash (a stash she has perhaps put aside over the
years as a means of her own personal escape, if necessary), and uses it, while
her father sleeps off his long trip, to assure that Catherine will have a safe
and immediate trip back to the safety of Fullerton. Note that the narrator
explains to us later in Chapter 28 how it is that Catherine’s ride home to
Fullerton turns out to be so safe and non-eventful:
“She
met with nothing, however, to distress or frighten her. Her youth, civil
manners, and _liberal_ _pay_ procured her all the attention that a
traveller like herself could require…”
And
Eleanor knew she could then lie to the General in the morning and claim that
Catherine acted without Eleanor’s knowledge and left without warning—which would
account for the General’s anger upon awakening to find Catherine gone—the way a
predator would be angry if his prey suddenly vanished at the very moment he
expected to pounce.
And I
also infer that Eleanor also sent a very discreet message to Henry at Woodston
late that night, via a _trusted_ servant, to request that he return immediately
to the Abbey, to assist her. And this is when I believe the revolt against the
General’s tyranny finally occurs, as the brother and sister rise up in unity to
confront their abusive father, and demand, upon threat of their both exposing
his nefarious schemes, that he consent to the marriage of Henry to Catherine.
The
General being very concerned with his own self-interest, reluctantly accepts
their terms, and that is how the cover story recounted in Chapters 30 and 31
comes into being, so that Catherine never learns that she was much more accurate
about the General than has even been understood by generations of Janeites—it turns
out that Catherine was the cause of Henry’s awakening from the fitful slumber
of denial about his father, which is epitomized in his famous rant which
reduces her to tears—Catherine has lit a
fire under his butt, which mobilizes him to join his long-suffering sister to defend
the brave young woman he has come to love, and also to finally defend that very
same sister, and facilitate _her_ escape from from any further “machinations”
by his “mischievous” father.
And
there I will leave off, ready to return
with further explanation as and when people respond to this post.
Cheers,
ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode
on Twitter
I completely agree with you analyses of the General's motives. I'd like to say I'd filled in the details before reading this post, but it was more that I'd noticed the especially predatory behavior of the General, and allowed the suspicion to ferment while I analysed the more obvious John Thorpe (more recognizable to high school and college students, I think, but not giving the dangerous older man credit makes the situation even truer). Your idea about Eleanor took me by surprise, but I think it fits. Rereading NA with this subtext in mind will definitely be an interesting experience.
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ReplyDeleteCheers, ARNIE