In the “Trollopian Form” cluster Lauren
Goodlad builds off John Carlos Rowe’s work to suggest that “‘Finediscriminations’ offers an interesting perspective on Trollope in formal as
well as characterological terms” (851). For example, Carolyn Dever’s “Trollope,Seriality, and the ‘Dullness’ of Form” suggests that fine discriminations are
“embedded in the narration of contingencies” (Goodlad 852). She argues that Trollope
utilizes “narratively-fascinating, counterfactural, ‘embryo’ plots” to create
suspense by “situating narrative tension within individual psyches that are
tested by the uncertain expectations of social modernity” (863). I’d like to
suggest that another formal fine discrimination is Trollope’s revised mock-up
of the omniscient narrator.
Unlike readers and the characters they recount,
omniscient narrators are not subject to the rules of time. While species and
languages are “fundamentally temporal processes, capable only of retrospective”
analysis, if omniscient narrators so wish they may foreshadow the coming events
in the narrative, or explicitly reference them (Grosz 27). For example, in
detailing one of Mr. Slope and Eleanor’s first meetings Trollope’s narrator notes
that although at first Slope genuinely “ingratiated himself” to Mrs. Bold to
win favor with the ladies of the town and not to woo her, “He subsequently
amended his error; but it was not till after the interview between him and Mr.
Harding” (124). Such “prospective” details make sense within the generic conventions
of realism, which tend to narrate a
fictive story that took place in the recent past (Grosz 27). From this
perspective it is not surprising that Trollope’s narrator could disclose the
ending of the Eleanor-Slope-Stanhope “embryo” plot from its very conception,
asserting that he “would not for the value of this chapter have it believed by
a single reader that my Eleanor could bring herself to marry” either man (144).
But such a reading of Barchester Towers’ narratorial realism depends
on Trollope’s narrator chronicling the events from outside the narrative world,
an omniscient perspective entirely free from the restrictions of time, place,
and the insulated human mind, which his POV is not. Although for the most part
the speaker appears omniscient, there are consistent narratorial ruptures that call
attention to his corporeality and as such, his temporal and informational limits.
Some of these textual moments expose the
limits of the narrator’s contextual and characterological knowledge. Unlike the
narrator of the Palliser novels, who details the intricacies of Parliament, this
narrator admits that he does “not precisely understand [the] nature” of the
religious ceremonies for Dr. Proudie’s ascension to bishop, and therefore “will
not describe the ceremony” (18). Of Mr. Slope’s parentage’s he admits “I am not
able to say much,” and begins what short background he provides with “I have
heard it asserted that…” (25). When describing the bishop’s participation in a
Sunday school society, the narrator can’t seem to recall his exact role and
explains that he was “a patron, or president, or director” (36). At other
moments he qualifies the details of the narrative, as when he says “Mr. Slope
ought to have been gratified. I have reason to think that he was gratified” (48 emphasis mine).
Other moments contradict his omniscience
by drawing attention to his temporal limits. He establishes a pattern of a
present tense perspective early in the narrative when he explains that “of Mr.
Slope’s conduct much cannot be said, as his grand career is yet to commence;
but it may be premised that his tastes will be very different from those of the
archdeacon” (31). Unlike his definitive disclosure of Eleanor’s ill-fated love
affairs, this is a proposition about future narrative events based on a present
temporality that necessarily excludes prospective analysis (Grosz). The
narrator reinforces this POV in reference to the leading clergy’s debate,
saying “such a meeting as that we have
just recorded is not held in such a city as Barchester unknown and untold
of” (59 emphasis mine). Later, at the opening of Chapter IX, the narrator
locates himself in the present-tense of the narrative world, explaining “It is
now three months since Dr. Proudie began his reign” (69). In these moments the
narrator positions himself in the present tense, relating events as they are
happening instead of recounting them from an already materialized future. In
one instance the narrator is so present
that he decides, “while [Eleanor is out of the room adjusting her cap] we will
briefly go back and state what had been hitherto the results of Mr. Slope’s
meditations on his scheme of matrimony” (146). And yet he uses the reader’s
understanding of his omniscience to bait their continued investment in the
narrative, as when he explains that Mrs. Bold’s father and sister falsely
believe her to be interested in Mr. Slope, and writes “Poor Eleanor! But time will
show” (132). As readers of a realist novel, we inherently trust that time will show, and implicitly agree to keep reading.
At the heart of such limits is the narrator’s
corporeal presence in Barchester and his familiarity with its residents. This
is most clearly seen when—eliding the difference between character/narrator and
past/present—the narrator speaks from the temporal moment of the incendiary
sermon and embodies the Grantly party perspective in a direct internal address
to Mr. Slope,
With what
complacency will a young parson deduce false conclusions from misunderstood
texts, and then threaten us with all the penalties of hades if we neglect to
comply with the injunctions he has given us! Yes, my too self-confident
juvenile friend, I do believe in those mysteries, which are so common in your
mouth; I do believe in the unadulterated word which you hold there in your
hand; but you must pardon me if, in some things, I doubt your interpretation.
(53)
We know the narrator is personally
familiar with Mr. Slope because he exclaims “I myself do not like Mr. Slope”
(62), and admits “I never could endure to shake hands with Mr. Slope. A cold,
clammy perspiration always exudes from him, the small drops are ever to be seen
standing on his brow, and his friendly grasp is unpleasant” (29). These are
first-hand accounts that push on the boundaries of omniscient narration.
The narrator also locates himself in Barchester’s
past by displaying a long established familiarity with residents. For example he
claims that Madeline Stanhope’s “nose and mouth and teeth and chin and neck and
bust were perfect, much more so at twenty-eight than they had been at eighteen,”
suggesting that he has known her for at least ten years (74). In another moment
he explains that “there was a depth of dark clear brightness in [Eleanor’s]
eyes which was lost upon a quick observer,” implying he had been an attentive
observer (145). While such descriptions might not raise eyebrows in the context
of omniscient narration, because the narrator has already established himself
as a corporeal person in this narrative world—for certain intents and purposes, as a character in this story—such moments carry more weight, and provide a glimpse at
the narrator’s interiority and past.
Given his contingent status as
character, perhaps it is understandable that the narrator differentiates
himself from “the author” (72). At times they appear as co-writers of this
narrative, such as when he writes “we need not say had been, she was never more
beautiful” (74). At other times they’re united in perspective, like when the
narrator explains that Mr. Harding “did not hate the chaplain as the archdeacon
did, and as we do” (171). In yet other instances the narrator seems to speak on
the author’s behalf, informing the reader that “here the author must beg it to
be remembered” (136).
But in a very significant instance the
two come together as the reader’s friendly counsel and guide through this
narrative, a perspective that self-consciously defines the purpose of reading
realism. In the last pages of Chapter 15 “The Widow’s Suitors,” the narrator
asks if “it may be allowed to the novelist to explain his views on a very
important point in the art of telling tales” (144). Speaking on their behalf,
the narrator directs plot-invested readers to the novel’s “last chapter” to
“learn from its pages all the results of our troubled story,” maintaining that
…the story shall
have lost none of its interest, if indeed there by any interest in it to lose. Our
doctrine is, that the author and reader should move along together in full
confidence with each other. Let the personages of the drama undergo ever so
complete a comedy of errors among themselves, but let the spectator never
mistake the Syracusan for the Ephesian; otherwise he is one of the dupes, and
the part of a dupe is never dignified. (144)
By aligning the novel reader with the
privileged perspective of a spectator at a performance of Shakespeare’s Comedy of Errors, the narrator argues
that to get caught up in the individual [love] plots is as foolish as
inhabiting the limited perspective of the dramatic characters who “mistake the
[twin] Syracusan for the Ephesian.” The interest in reading this novel, he
suggests, is in observing the plot—a comedy of errors—from the removed (ad)vantage
of a theatergoer, one who can appreciate the whole precisely because one's perspective is not narrowly invested in the parts.
And yet such a definition of how and why
to read realism implies an already complete, teleological text that’s narrated
from the whole—the comedy’s—perspective; an insular POV that’s necessarily retrospective
or omniscient. Neither of these perspectives correlates with the friendly embodied
narrator-guide whom the reader “move[s] along” with in the present, a temporality
from which “full confidence” necessarily excludes the future, and thus the
whole. In publishing terms, to read (the comedy) like a theatergoer
necessitates a complete novel, to “move along” the story “together” with the
“author” necessitates a serial publication.
The author/narrator in Barchester Towers is at once the
omniscient speaker and the corporeal, present character, a temporal marriage of
novel and serial that like the embryo plots, is Trollope “hav[ing] his cake and
eat[ing] it too” (Dever 864). Like an omniscient narrator, he is (mostly) all
knowing and can jump from scene to scene, allowing us (mostly) full access to
character thoughts and motivations. His realistic attributes (like his hatred
of Slope) resonates with readers, investing us in his continued development. The
narrator, with his perspectival limitations and personal biases, becomes our narrative
guide with whom we “move along together in full confidence.” This narratorial
“fine discrimination” “teach[es] us how to read culture” in two ways: as an
author/narrator he cultivates and as a character he models an interpretive empathy “capable of understanding and
interpreting the different and often overlapping ‘interests’” in social
discourse (Rowe as quoted in Goodlad 851).
"Although for the most part the speaker appears omniscient, there are consistent narratorial ruptures that call attention to his corporeality and as such, his temporal and informational limits." This seems exactly right to me and in fact anticipates the argument of the Lyons essay we are reading for Monday's class on Volume 3.
ReplyDeleteAlso this quotation from the novel itself which always intrigues me: "the author and reader should move along together in full confidence with each other." It seems as though Trollope's narrator puts himself forward as a kind of presence for the reader; something akin to one of the ghosts in Dickens's "A Christmas Carol" but more chatty. I find that this kind of narrator--omnsicient but with many features of a character, corporeal and chatty but endowed with the capacity to befriend and guide readers across space and time--is part of what gives Trollope's novel that air being always of the present moment. That is to say, one the one hand, we are in a *Barsetshire* novel: it's provincial, regional, clearly *not* London and, thus, thick with details of a particular place at a particular time. But on the other hand, it takes place a present day that seems designed to withstand the passage of time. There is something permanently presentist about *Barchester Towers* in that its narrator is there ready to walk in confidence with any reader as together they encounter the foibles of specifically situated characters undergoing the force of historical change at a pace slow enough for the reader to take it all in and become immersed in that ever-present world. Does that make sense?
Yes! It absolutely makes sense, and I love this idea of the narrator being a chatty presence akin to Dickens's ghosts, one who makes us feel like we're in an ever-present world. Obviously all narratives are guided, but this particular kind of narrator undercuts the illusion of impartial objectivity, which I guess is Lyons's point. As where within the context of Dickens's "A Christmas Carol" the ghosts are obviously sermonistic/instructive, obviously guiding, Trollope's narrator "teach[es] covertly," through a "manipulative partiality" that suggests "the complexity of human nature makes omniscience impossible in life or on paper" (Lyons 43, 48, 45).
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