Within the first pages of Barchester
Towers, Anthony Trollope writes, in reference to Mrs. Eleanor Bold
that, “hers was one of those feminine hearts which cling to a husband, not with
idolatry, for worship can admit of no defect in its idol, but with the perfect
tenacity of ivy” (14). Trollope seems to be proclaiming that there is a common tendency
for a woman to cling to a man due to inherent feminine weakness and male
strength. This metaphor is key to the understanding of the female characters in
Barchester Towers, but perhaps not in
the way it appears on the surface, since, throughout the remainder of his
novel, his characters tear down this metaphor and rebuild it with an opposite
take on who fills the role of the ivy and who the stone to which it adheres. As
the plot of Barchester Towers comes
to an end, it becomes apparent that women, not men, are the characters with
agency and are not weak plants who cling to male presence and power.
Eleanor Bold, at the outset, seems
to be a perfect example of a woman who cannot operate positively without a man.
She is a widow reliant on the help of a nurse, and who seems to have entered
stasis since the death of her husband. She is presented as naïve, at best, and
oblivious to the workings of the men around her, at worst. Yet, Eleanor withstands
angry gossip and assumptions from her sister, her brother-in-law and father; does
battle with the Stanhope family’s manipulative interactions and machinations; and
repels two unwanted, and selfishly-motivated, marriage proposals. When the metaphor
of the ivy and the stone again surfaces in Chapter 49—the fourth from final—it
is in a very different tone and with a new meaning. As Mr. Arabin and Eleanor
embrace after professing their love to one another, Trollope writes:
When the ivy has founds its tower,
when the delicate creeper has found its strong wall, we know how the parasite
plants grow and prosper (239).
The metaphor is no longer one of ivy clinging to a stone but
of a “parasite plant” clinging to a “tower.” Trollope describes, just a few
sentences later, the engagement as a victory and asks, “What is the turret
without its ivy?” In this instance, after the events of the novel, Eleanor
seems to be situated as the turret herself and Mr. Arabin the ivy. Eleanor was
able to withstand a siege from both Mr. Slope, a character steeped in ambition
to conquer, and Bertie Stanhope, someone who seeks a wealthy wife to pay off
his debts. Further, Mrs. Bold is established as a key figure in the power
struggle of Barchester, similar to a fortress, since it is she who chooses the
winner in the fight between the low-church (Slope/Proudie) and the high-church
(Arabin/Grantly) philosophies when she chooses a husband.
Eleanor’s strength in repelling
these suitors stands in stark contrast to Mr. Arabin’s rather pitiful sulking after
his first misstep whe he poorly attempts to tell Eleanor of his love by asking her
about Mr. Slope. In his sadness, Arabin is drawn to the Signora Neroni because,
“he required charming in his present misery” (121). Thus, while Eleanor copes
with her own sorrow, Arabin looks to lean on the strength of others—or the illusion
such. Arabin even takes on some conventionally feminine traits when it is
customary for a man to take the lead, as when he is reluctant to be assertive
in his interactions with Eleanor for fear of rejection and when he confides in
the Signora about his desires for Eleanor.
Though Mrs. Bold is an excellent
example of the agency ascribed to Barchester
Towers’ female characters, she is not alone. Just as Eleanor is the most
impactful of the Harding family, so a woman controls each of the other major households
within Barchester. The Bishop, Dr. Proudie, is firmly in the hand of his wife,
Mrs. Proudie, while Charlotte and the Signora control the Stanhopes. Their
power is not just within their families: each accomplishes many of their goals in
the wider community. Mrs. Proudie twice delivers the news that Mr. Quiverful is
to become the new Warden of Hiram’s Hospital and even forces the Bishop to sign
the order to do so. Charlotte Stanhope actively negotiates with her father to
deal with her brother Bertie’s debt and persuades the latter to pursue
Eleanor’s hand in marriage—something he sours on yet continues out of fear of
her wrath.
Most telling is the Signora whose entire
existence seems to be framed around her ability to attract and destroy the men
around her. In behavior akin to a bug zapper, she seductively draws in Mr.
Slope and then publicly, and violently, rejects him, necessitating his need to
leave Barchester altogether. The Signora also pushes Mr. Arabin to continue his
pursuit of Eleanor and the latter to be receptive to this pursuit—which ends, fittingly,
with Eleanor calling back a retreating Mr. Arabin, and squeezing an engagement
out of him despite his desire to shy away from such a high-tension moment. The
Signora even shows incredible agency throughout Barchester despite a disability
that restricts her movement. While Mr. Slope often chooses to act through letters,
the Signora travels to Mrs. Proudie’s
party and Miss Thorne’s fete, despite her physical limitations. In scenes akin
to a queen holding court, she draws people to her at these events and her
family home,
A female presence in power is comparatively
absent in the home of Archdeacon Grantly.
Without the presence of a dominant woman, neither he nor Slope (who
breaks with Mrs. Proudie) is very effective in their endeavors: each is more
reminiscent of limp ivy rather than a strong turret upon which others can cling.
Mr. Slope is most powerful at his writing desk issuing letters and often
flounders when he attempts to accomplish his goals in person. The Archdeacon,
while he is often traveling, is also a man with only one conquering
maneuver—the discussion. While he can talk about many things, he is unable to persuade
others to agree. He fails directly to accomplish
any of his goals—neither convincing Mr. Harding to take the wardenship or become
the next Dean of Barchester, nor persuading Eleanor to stay away from Mr. Slope,
nor influencing the Bishop to act in accordance with his wishes.
The “ivy and tower” metaphor is
poignant for its simultaneous accuracy and inaccuracy in Barchester Towers. However, Trollope seems to employ this metaphor
as a playful acknowledgement of the pretense of Victorian life. While he, if
not entirely convincingly, writes that, “There is nothing so odious to man as a
virago,” he creates many female characters who act strongly and with fury to the
delight of the reader (247). Trollope seems to present two sides of most of the
events and characters of Barchester Towers, and succeeds in pointing out the
disconnect between the perceived idealism of the time and the reality. As the
narrator speaks admiringly about the clergy of the Church of England, the effectiveness
of the Countess De Courcy’s rude tactics at the Thorne breakfast, and of his
pity for Eleanor Bold, he presents the clergy acting in decidedly un-Christian
fashion, plainly admits that the De Courcy’s are “in the wrong” (108) in their
conduct in arriving at the Thorne’s party, and shows Eleanor gaining a loving
husband, and happiness against the odds. Trollope enjoys pointing to the conventions
of provincial Victorian life only to oppose those very conventions. The novel
suggests that if women are indeed the ivy of Barchester’s towers, then it
appears that the ivy is holding up the crumbling walls of the men of Barchester,
and not the reverse.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteYour post is definitely a provocative one; I come to this conclusion from the many moments I felt I disagreed with you (but I promise that’s a good thing). You offer a very strong reading of how Trollope razes the foundations of gender assumptions and offers a reversal of the perceived ivies and towers of Barchester. And yet, I wonder if Trollope sometimes offers a both/and portrait rather than one of either/or. For example, though you tellingly point out that Arabin could very much fit the ivy description and Eleanor the tower, some of Trollope’s own words may suggest that Eleanor—just as a typical gendered reading would assume—is the ivy. Just following the passage you quoted on page 239 (volume 2), Trollope writes that Eleanor “crept nearer to [Arabin’s] bosom, and felt more and more certain that there was her home” (240), echoing the use of “creeper” as synonym for “ivy” in the passage you quote. Trollope continues, “She had found the strong shield that should guard her from all wrongs, the trusty pilot that should henceforward guide her through the shoals and rocks. She would give up the heavy burden of her independence, and once more assume the position of a woman, and the duties of a trusting and loving wife” (240). Perhaps Trollope shows us that both Arabin and Eleanor can be ivy and tower, creeper and home.
ReplyDeleteIn a similar way, your reading of Slope’s use of letters as contrasted to the Signora’s centripetal force discounts the in-person encounters that Slope has (with Harding, Quiverful, and his [temporary] victory over Mrs. Proudie) and the reputation that the Signora’s letters have (“she was an indomitable writer, and her letters were worth the postage” [1.78] along with how easily Eleanor identifies the letter she receives as from the Signora [2.195–96]).
Just some extra food for your already well-developed thoughts.
I think we have a really interesting dialogue here. By way of continuing the discussion of gender-reversal and the possibility of a both/and narrative structure, it is interesting to think about what the form of *Barchester Towers* contributes to our understanding. How does la Signora become so important a character even though the "character-space" she inhabits is about equal (I think) to that devoted to Eleanor? Since there is no single protagonist in *Barchester Towers,* and still less a hero as such, how does the pluralization of households affect the development of this marriage plot (who will marry the Widow Bold?) in contrast, for example, to one of Austen's novels (where pluralized households and characters tend to inflect the one or two protagonist(s) whose bildungsroman (or maturation) is the clear telos of the story?
ReplyDeleteIt is interesting to think of la Signora in relation to the concept of "character-space." Despite the force of her presence, the the volume of her "character-space" is rather equivalent to that of other characters. What, perhaps, makes her appear to occupy so much more space in "Barchester Towers" is the way in which she acts as a catalyst, setting off chain reactions in the lives of Slope, Arabin, and Eleanor. Slope's association with her leads to a host of gossip about his degrading morality, which is but one contributing factor to his ultimate disfavor in - and dismissal from - Barchester. Likewise, it is la Signora who is able to draw forth Arabin, forcing him to confront his own character and own his love for Eleanor. He, lacking a great deal of self-awareness, can only fully recognize his desires through la Signora's probing lens. To a certain extent, Eleanor is also in need of a mirror. Trollope frequently references the degree to which she is unaware of others' perceptions about her behavior. And, as with Arabin, it is only through her interaction with la Signora that Eleanor comes to the full recognition of Arabin's feelings for her. Thus, while la Signora's "character-space" may equal that of other characters, she comes across as a more highly agentic force in the narrative.
ReplyDelete