Burrowing into Books, Anthony Trollope "The Small House at Allington"
Sydney M. Williams
swtotd.blogspot.com
Burrowing into Books
Reviews of Selective Readings
January 29, 2017
“The Small House at Allington”
Anthony Trollope
“The squires of
Allington had been squires of Allington since squires,
such as squires are now, were first
known in England.”
Anthony
Trollope (1815-1882)
The
Small House at Allington, 1864
If one wants facts, read
non-fiction. If one wants to understand character, read fiction. Novels allow
authors to explore emotions and responses, unencumbered by historical events or
bothersome statistics. This was especially true before the advent of movies or television.
Mythology, stories from the Bible and Shakespeare provide examples of fictional
character traits we recognize in everyday relationships, as do 19th
Century novelists like Trollope, Dickens, Eliot, Austen, Hardy and the Bronte
sisters.
Male-female relations have been fodder for novels since books were
first written. “None but the most
heartless of women know the extent of their power over men,” wrote Trollope
in The Small House at Allington,” – as
none but the most heartless of men know the extent of their power over women.”
This story is one of triangulated and unrequited love – that of Lily Dale, one
of Trollope’s most enduring (and endearing) creations, for Adolphus Crosbie,
and of Johnny Eames for Lily Dale. Lily, who is the heroine of the story, lives
with her widowed mother and elder sister Bell in the “Small House” as guests of
her brother-in-law, the Squire of Allington, who owns the Big House. The late
critic Stephen Wall said of Lily, that while she is “instantly recognizable, she remains a mystery.” Trollope thrived on
the complexities of people and relationships. Among the best-known episodes in
the book is the walk in the moonlight, where Lily first realizes her love for
Crosbie. The reader, however, gets a harbinger of things to come: To Lily, moonlight
and poetry represented romance; to Crosbie, they were nonsense.
Having been jilted, Lily Dale might today be considered a victim of false
promises, thus a candidate for #MeToo. Maybe she would have marched, but I
suspect she was too independent. Romances do not always have story-book endings,
which Trollope understood. Crosbie, though older, is weak and immature – “a swell,” as Lily described him. She is young,
pretty, smart, and headstrong. She knows her mind, but loses her heart. The
reader understands, even though Lily does not, that she is better off without
him.
At 600-plus pages, with multiple characters and plots, the story is too
complex to summarize. In part, the reader is left unsettled: why, for example,
did Lily not reciprocate Johnny Eames’ love? After all, in the story he stops
being a “hobbledehoy and enters manhood.”
Regardless, the mark of a good book is
when the reader is sorry to turn the last page, and when we miss those we cheered
and jeered. However, Trollope’s characters often return in future books. This
is the penultimate in the Barsetshire series. So, I look forward to The Last
Chronicle of Barset, in which Lily, Johnny and Ambrose reappear. After all,
to paraphrase Robert Frost on birches, one could do worse than be a reader of
Trollope.
Labels: 19th Century British novels, Anthony Trollope, Books, Burrowing into Books, Fiction versus Non-Fiction, Reading
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