It was Diane, not Diana,
who made that excellent initial catch, which opened the door to my
extrapolation.
Anielka:
“But I very much like Arnie's suggestion that Catherine is illegitimate and
that the
same
"three/ten" children formula
is repeated. Good catch! (Genuine sentiment, no
flattery
intended).”
Anielka,
I gladly accept your compliment, and, as you will see, below, I also heartily approve
of your further highly excellent extrapolation of Thorpes = Spanish royal family
of Ferdinand & Isabella. And…I will now reward you, as you rewarded me,
with a further extrapolation which supports both of our extrapolations, and
pulls it all tightly together!
To begin….I had originally
meant to add in my original reply to Diane, that the passages about large numbers of children in JA’s letter and
in NA were both also resonant with still another, famous passage in another JA
novel, which explicitly hints at a large number of illegitimate children:
“Emma found that she must
wait; and now it required little effort. She asked no more questions therefore,
merely employed her own fancy, and that soon pointed out to her the probability
of its being some money concern—something just come to light, of a disagreeable
nature in the circumstances of the family,—something which the late event at
Richmond had brought forward. Her fancy was very active. HALF A DOZEN NATURAL
CHILDREN, perhaps—and poor Frank cut off!—This, though very undesirable, would
be no matter of agony to her. It inspired little more than an animating
curiosity.”
Of course, this is the suspicion
that pops into Emma’s anxious mind while she is waiting to be told the dreadful
secret by Mrs. Weston—then Emma finds
out the actual (manufactured) secret (cover story), which is that Jane and
Frank had long been engaged.
I was also going to add,
without any awareness of Anielka’s latest catch, something I’ve believed for quite some time, i.e., that Emma’s
seemingly absurd Gothic imagining of Mr. Churchill as serial sower of wild oats
was actually Emma’s almost guessing the Gothic truth about her own father, Mr. Henry Woodhouse—which is that he is a representation
of Henry VIII, and that his “half
dozen natural children” are actually there right under Emma’s nose in the thick
of the action of the novel: i.e., the two Knightley brothers, Jane, Frank, Mr.
Elton and Harriet! Hence the old fool’s attempts, through his tertiary
syphilitic haze, to recall his sexual salad days via the filthy verbiage of
Garrick’s Riddle.
Plus, as you’ll recall, in
May 2011….
….I wrote the following
when you first posted your initial thoughts about Henry & Catherine as
having royal antecedents:
“Henry Tilney & Catherine
Morland as Representations of
Elizabethan Royals: I also spoke
(briefly) at the [2010 JASNA] AGM about Henry and Catherine as representations
of Henry VIII and Catherine,--again, giving credit to an earlier originator of
that interpretation---and here are the exact words I spoke in Portland, which
tie in directly with the Bluebeard theme I argued for, as mentioned above: "From
English history, Terry Robinson ["A mere skeleton of history’: Reading
Relics in JA’s Northanger Abbey.”
European Romantic Review, 17:2 (Apr 2006) 215-227] draws an intriguing parallel
between our Henry and Catherine and another even more famous Henry and
Catherine—of course, Henry VIII and his Catherines! Henry Tudor dissolved
monasteries like Northanger Abbey, and was the prototypical husband from hell.
Austen's /The History of England/ shows she knew all about him. She doesn’t
mention Henry’s sixth wife, Katherine Parr, who died after childbirth, but
Austen was aware that Henry was unique--a literal and metaphorical Bluebeard.
As Austen’s nephew noted, she called Henry an “embodied Blue Beard”. “Embodied”
as in women’s bodies?"
END QUOTE
So Terry Robinson, I and
then you had all glimpsed, via different clues, a Spanish royal connection in
NA. But now your firstrate extrapolation of that insight down to the level of
the Thorpe children is really the crowning touch, which makes it, as you say,
obvious—because what would be the odds of all those children’s names, in
correct birth order, arising by
accident? Zero.
But I’ve another gem to
add to that crown of allusion. It has been my sense that Catherine was actually
a Tilney for the past 4 years, based partly on my gut feeling—the way she seems
to almost be coming home to the Abbey, as a place she remembers, rather than
seeing it for the first time—and partly on what I noticed in 2009 in The Mysteries of Udolpho, when I first
delved into its shadowy subtext. I.e., I found it strongly hinted at in Radcliffe’s
tale that Emily was actually the natural daughter of the mystery mother with the
veil, etc! So it was only a short leap from that intuition, to seeing Catherine
as obsessed with Mrs. Tilney as Catherine’s search to find her own lost mother.
I.e., on some level, Catherine dimly remembered that she was not born a Morland,
and like many adopted children, she yearned to find her birth parents.
And now, armed with your catch,
I believe that Wikipedia has given me the information that shows that you are
correct, Anielka, about Catherine Morland being a Thorpe, but that I am also correct that Catherine is a Tilney,
too! Read this:
“Catherine was quite short
in stature with long red
hair, wide blue eyes, a round face, and a fair complexion. She was descended,
on her maternal side, from the English royal house; her great-grandmother
Catherine of Lancaster, after whom she was named, and her greatgreatgrandmother
Philippa of Lancaster were both daughters of John of Gaunt and granddaughters
of Edward III of England. Consequently she was third cousin of her
father-in-law, Henry VII of England, and fourth cousin of her mother-in-law
Elizabeth of York.”
So…if the Thorpes
represent the Spanish royal house, and the Tilneys the English royal house,
then this would explain why they are at odds throughout the novel, and it would
also show that we are both correct in
our sense of Catherine Morland’s biological ancestry!
But I’m not quite
done….as I was searching to find the passage in Emma about the half dozen natural children, the search function
brought me, of all places, to the long speech about apples by Miss Bates at the
end of the spectacle rivets scene in Chapter 27, which I now read with new eyes. I’ve known since
2005 (and I know you’ve also long recognized it, Anielka) that “apples” in Emma stand for something other than
literal fruit of a tree. I.e., I’ve seen them as representing “children”,
especially of the natural variety—hence the joke on “baking” them in “ovens”
three times (i.e., three trimesters). So, when you read the following in light
of the now-established motif of “half a dozen” as hinting at illegitimate children,
your mind will be as blown as mine just was at Miss Bates’s virtuosic
improvisations on the theme of repeated seasonal gifts of “apples” from Donwell
Abbey, which fits perfectly with the notion of natural children being scattered
around Highbury by Mr. Woodhouse on an annual basis:
“And when I brought out
the baked APPLES from the closet, and hoped OUR FRIENDS WOULD BE SO VERY
OBLIGING AS TO TAKE SOME, 'Oh!' said he directly, 'there is nothing in the way
of fruit half so good, and these are the finest-looking HOME-BAKED APPLES I
ever saw in my life.' That, you know, was so very.... And I am sure, by his
manner, it was no compliment. Indeed they are very delightful APPLES, and Mrs.
Wallis does them full justice—only we do not have them baked more than twice,
and Mr. Woodhouse made us promise to have them done THREE TIMES—but Miss
Woodhouse will be so good as not to mention it. The APPLES themselves are the
very finest sort for baking, beyond a doubt; all from Donwell—some of Mr.
Knightley's most liberal supply. He sends us a sack every year; and certainly
there never was such a keeping APPLE anywhere as one of his trees—I believe
there is two of them. My mother says the orchard was always FAMOUS IN HER
YOUNGER DAYS. But I was really quite shocked the other day—for Mr. Knightley
called one morning, and Jane was eating these APPLES, and we talked about them
and said how much she enjoyed them, and he asked whether we were not got to the
end of our stock. 'I am sure you must be,' said he, 'and I will send you
another supply; for I have a great many more than I can ever use. William
Larkins let me keep a larger quantity than usual this year. I will send you
some more, before they get good for nothing.' So I begged he would not—for
really as to ours being gone, I could not absolutely say that we had a great
many left—IT WAS BUT HALF A DOZEN INDEED; but they should be all kept for Jane;
and I could not at all bear that he should be sending us more, so liberal as he
had been already; and Jane said the same. And when he was gone, she almost
quarrelled with me—No, I should not say quarrelled, for we never had a quarrel
in our lives; but she was quite distressed that I had owned the APPLES were so
nearly gone; she wished I had made him believe we had a great many left. Oh,
said I, my dear, I did say as much as I could. However, the very same evening
William Larkins came over with a large basket of APPLES, THE SAME SORT OF APPLES,
a bushel at least, and I was very much obliged, and went down and spoke to
William Larkins and said every thing, as you may suppose. William Larkins is
such an old acquaintance! I am always glad to see him. But, however, I found
afterwards from Patty, that William said it was ALL THE APPLES OF THAT
SORT HIS MASTER HAD; he had brought them all—and now his master had not one
left to bake or boil. William did not seem to mind it himself, he was so
pleased to think his master had sold so many; for William, you know, thinks
more of his master's profit than any thing; but MRS. HODGES, he said, WAS QUITE
DISPLEASED AT THEIR BEING ALL SENT AWAY. SHE COULD NOT BEAR that her master
should not be able to have another APPLE-tart this spring. He told Patty this,
but bid her not mind it, and be sure not to say any thing to us about it, for
Mrs. Hodges would be cross sometimes, and as long as so many sacks were
sold, it did not signify who ate the remainder. And so Patty told me, and I was
excessively shocked indeed! I would not have Mr. Knightley know any thing about
it for the world! He would be so very.... I wanted to keep it from Jane's
knowledge; but, unluckily, I HAD MENTIONED IT BEFORE I WAS AWARE."
Indeed they tried to keep
it from “Jane” –but that’s another story entirely, about the
Austen family and ITS secrets!
ADDED AT Noon August 3, 2014:
ADDED AT Noon August 3, 2014:
"Thus wisely
fortifying her mind, as she proceeded upstairs, she was enabled, especially on
perceiving that Miss Tilney slept only TWO DOORS from her, to enter her room
with a tolerably stout heart; and her spirits were immediately assisted by the
cheerful blaze of a wood fire."
The above is the only
passage in all of JA's writing in which we read about "two doors" ---
so is it just a coincidence that this singular reference to "two
doors" occurs in a scene describing the floor plan of an Abbey which of
course would have been one of those confiscated from the Catholic Church by
Henry TUDOR aka Henry VIII?
Of course not! And it fits
particularly well with the idea of the House of Tilney as a veiled
representation of the House of the Tudors.
And let us not also forget
that there were historical Tilneys serving royal Tudors, as I sketched out
three years ago in this post:
Here is the most relevant excerpt
from that earlier post of mine:
"First I woke up
today speculating that there might be a connection between the real life
Elizabeth Tilney who was the daughter of Sir Frederick Tilney and the
granddaughter of Isabel Thorp, and the very famous Edmund Tilney, Queen
Elizabeth's Master of the Revels, who was
portrayed by Simon Callow
in Shakespeare in Love.
Here is Wikipedia detailing
how the famous Edmund Tilney was the only son of Elizabeth Tilney's cousin:
"Edmund Tilney was
the only son of Philip Tilney (d.1541), Usher of the Privy Chamber to King
Henry VIII, and Malyn Chambre. Edmund Tilney's father, Philip, was a younger
son of Sir Philip Tilney of Shelley (d.1533), treasurer during the Scottish
wars under the command of the Duke
of Norfolk. Norfolk's
first wife was Sir Philip Tilney's cousin, Elizabeth Tilney; after Elizabeth
died in 1547, Norfolk married Sir Philip Tilney's sister, Agnes, later Dowager
Duchess of Norfolk."
Why should a Janeite care
about these connections? Because the real life Edmund Tilney was not only QE1's
Master of the Revels, he was also the author of A Brief And Pleasaunt Discourse Of Duties in Mariage, a lively male/female
verbal joust about the rights of women in marriage, and their supposed duty of
obedience. As I explained in my talk at the JASNA AGM in November, 2010, there
is an unmistakable allusion to Edmund Tilney's famous Discourse in the witty
and profound banter between Henry Tilney and Catherine Morland riffing on the
metaphor between dance and marriage." END QUOTE FROM MY 2011 POST
Did you notice at the
beginning there the direct Elizabethan family connection between Tilneys and
Thorps? That only further pulls JA's virtuosic veiled allusion even more
tightly together.
So putting all of that
together with all of what I and Anielka have recently brought forward, maybe
when Catherine "meditated, by turns, on broken promises and broken arches,
phaetons and false hangings, Tilneys and trap-doors", JA meant for us to
also, upon rereading after having caught the pun on
Tudors/two doors, think of "Tilneys and Tudors"!
I, for one, am ready to
walk through those two doors of interpretation!
Cheers, ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode onTwitter
@JaneAustenCode onTwitter
Do you see a connection also between Kathryn Howard and Catherine Moreland? It brings to mind General Tilney as Henry viii, with the contrast to Catherine's youth. And Kathryn Howard was 'disposed of' when she proved to not live up to Henry's imagination; so too is Catherine cast out when the general becomes disillusioned about her value (and note how value, in terms of money, is entwined with notions of virtue!). I cannot recall who, in this senario, might be represented by John Thorpe.
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