Not
everything worth reading is hot off the press. In this section, we recommend "something old" that is still well worth
reading. "Something old" can mean anything from a venerable and antique
classic to a good book first published four or more years ago.
“AMELIA” by Henry Fielding (written
1749-51; first published late 1751, but dated 1752)
As
I’ve remarked already a number of times on this blog [look up the three entries for Henry Fielding on the index at right],
time was I took it into my head to read my way methodically through the works
of the 18th century master Henry Fielding. Of his three full-length
novels I admitted that Tom Jones was
clearly the masterpiece (and I might one day get around to proving that on this
blog), but that I found Joseph Andrews
the most entertaining. Then there was
the problem of Fielding’s Amelia.
Published late
in 1751 and his last major work (Fielding was only 47 when he died in 1754), Amelia has never enjoyed the same
popularity as either Tom Jones or Joseph Andrews. To the best of my
knowledge, nobody has ever turned it into a film, musical or television series,
as has happened with the other two. Why should this be so? Reading this
particular novel was in part a quest to answer that question. In the two-volume
Everyman’s edition that sits on my shelf, it runs to a little over 600 pages,
but severely simplifying, and cutting out some short sub-plots, I was able to
make a summary of its story, which goes as follows:
Amelia Harris
was slightly disfigured in the face in an accident, but the surgeon’s skill
cured her and she is a great beauty. Against her mother’s wishes, she elopes
with and marries the army officer Captain William Booth. When her mother dies,
the will disinherits Amelia. When Booth is sent on service to Gibraltar, he is
wounded and discharged on half-pay.
Booth is
basically decent but feckless. He never makes enough to support his growing
family. The novel is the tale of how his virtuous and loving wife Amelia
constantly gets him out of the scrapes into which he falls by his own
weaknesses. Booth is always in debt. He is bailed out of debtor’s prison by
Miss Fanny Matthews, who has seduced him and hopes to make him her lover. But
he returns – feeling guilty – to his wife.
Amelia and Booth
are indebted to the apparently kindly Mrs Ellison, who finds them lodgings. But
we know that Mrs Ellison actually acts as pimp for an unnamed nobleman who
wants to seduce Amelia. Others are of the same mind, such as Booth’s apparent
friend Colonel Bob James. Colonel James’ brother-in-law Colonel Bath has high
and pugnacious views of honour, which lead him into duelling and fights. Booth
is tempted into brawling and duelling too, as he is tempted into gambling. At
one stage he reduces his family to penury by gambling away money he had been
given to pay debts.
Attempts to corrupt
Amelia’s virtue are frequent, often accompanied by the argument that by
prostituting herself she would be able to liquidate her husband’s many debts.
There are,
however, positive characters in the tale. The sergeant Atkinson, who rescues
Booth on a numbers of occasions, is a model of propriety. He later marries the
virtuous widow Mrs Bennet, who first alerts Amelia to Mrs Ellison’s treachery.
Then there is a righteous clergyman Dr Harrison, who was originally Booth’s
rival for Amelia’s hand, but who becomes the family’s chief guardian and
protector.
It is Dr
Harrison who provides the novel’s happy ending. He hears the dying confession
of a shyster who had connived with the corrupt lawyer Murphy to forge old Mrs
Harris’s will, disinheriting Amelia. The matter is made public, and Amelia
becomes a wealthy woman, at last gaining her inheritance, restoring her family
to comfort and implicitly causing her husband to reform. But not before the
virtuous Amelia has had ample opportunity to show that she would have stuck by
her husband even if he had remained a feckless pauper.
There
are two matters which may add to our knowledge of what Fielding thought he was
up to in writing Amelia, but which do
not necessarily enhance our appreciation of this novel.
First, there is
the novel’s autobiographical matter. It is generally believed that Amelia
herself is Fielding’s affectionate and posthumous portrait of his first wife,
Charlotte, who had died five or six years before the novel was written. In
memory, Fielding sees her as a paragon of virtue. Likewise, Captain William
Booth is Fielding’s portrait of his younger self, learning virtue from his
wife - not that the specific events of
Booth’s life really echo those of the younger Fielding’s life (although
Fielding, in his mid forties when he wrote Amelia,
was enough of a sexual scamp to have impregnated his second wife, Mary, before
he married her).
Second, there is
the fact that Fielding, seeing himself as writing an “epic” of virtue,
consciously modelled the structure of Amelia
on the structure of Vergil’s Aeneid.
The Aeneid has twelve books, and so
does Amelia. Events in the novel are
supposed to be recognised by the alert, classically-educated reader, as echoing
events in Vergil’s epic. Booth is the wanderer in danger of being drawn from
the path of virtue, just as Aeneas is. In Book Four of the Aeneid, Aeneas is tempted from his heroic destiny by the seductions
of Dido, Queen of Carthage; just as in Book Four of Amelia, Captain William Booth is seduced from virtue by Fanny
Matthews. There are many other such parallels. Would, however, one reader in a
hundred recognize these parallels now if there were not annotated editions to
tell them? My own view is that the classical allusions add little to the story
and its unfolding. It is interesting to note that when the novel was first
published, many of Fielding’s contemporaries regarded his ‘epic’ ambition with
contempt and there were pamphlets written attacking the novel and pamphlets by
Fielding defending it.
So how did I react
to this least favourite of Fielding’s longer novels?
Its twelve books
make awkward reading. There is not a great deal of forward momentum to the
plot. It is early established that Booth is feckless and in debt, and that
Amelia is virtuous and self-sacrificing. The various attempts on her sexual
virtue are repetitive and often seem contrived merely to spin matters out. I
wonder if some of this has to do with the difficulty of dramatizing married
love? The loving couple, in finding each other, have already acted out the
great drama of their lives, and whatever else happens to them doesn’t shift
this bedrock. Hence we have events, but no real movement in character. Right up
to Book 12, Amelia is virtuous and Booth’s spirit is willing while his flesh is
weak. They do not change until the deus
ex machina of Amelia’s coming into wealth, with the promise that henceforth
Booth will mend his ways. Regrettably, I am left feeling that in terms of
character, there has been little real development. I am also left feeling that
Booth has not really changed in any way, except that he is now the husband of a
wealthy woman.
There is, too,
that problem of “virtue rewarded”. This as what Fielding objected to in
Richardson’s Pamela – the idea that
apparent “virtue” can be prudential, and practised for the sake of bringing
material reward. Of course Fielding is at pains to show that Amelia remains
faithful to her husband, and resists material corruption, even when they are
reduced to poverty. She is sorely tried, as when she hears of his gambling
losses after she has pawned their belongings to pay off debts, or when Colonel
James sends a letter hinting that Booth is having an affair with Miss Matthews.
However, Fielding contrives a happy-ever-after ending, very similar to Tom Jones’
discovery that he has an inheritance and has been cheated by Blifil. Doesn’t
this mean that Fielding rewards Amelia’s virtue just as Richardson rewarded
Pamela’s? The real challenge would have been to show Amelia staying, life-long,
virtuous and faithful in continuing poverty. One’s hackles do rise a bit, too,
at just how foolish and spineless Booth is.
For
a modern reader, perhaps with a more gender equitable view of marriage, there
is another problem about character. Not only is Amelia’s virtue repeatedly
assailed by devious libertines, but Amelia is determined to keep news of such
attempts from her husband. Only occasionally is Booth aware that other men wish
to seduce his wife. Why, I kept wondering, couldn’t Amelia honestly tell her
husband what the problem was? Doesn’t this show a curious lack of true
partnership in their marriage? Perhaps it goes along with Amelia’s habit of
affectionately addressing her husband as “child”. Isn’t this virtuous wife in
fact indulging her rather foolish
husband, and letting him ignore the nastier side of life? Weighting much of
this novel, I have the sense that Fielding is in part answering the criticism
that Tom Jones was a charter for
fornicators and loose young men. It is almost as if this is the novel written about
an older Sophie Western, whose preservation of her virtue is not matched by her
husband’s preservation of his virtue. Booth is the man led by his senses seen
critically, whereas Tom Jones is the man led by his senses seen uncritically.
Among
the more tedious elements of the novel are the frequent allusions to specific
eighteenth century social evils which are of little relevance to us - sponging
houses (where bailiffs imprisoned debtors and then extorted money out of them);
fashionable society which recognises only wealth and rank (though that one
isn’t necessarily a time-specific observation); and the foolish sort of
“honour” and duelling – personified in Colonel Bath – which takes offence at
trifles and seems most connected with military men. There is an interpolated
chapter in Book Five about the poor state of the medical profession that
attends to Amelia’s sick children. In Book Eight there is a tedious satirical
passage where Booth converses with a hack writer who produces hack works by
subscription to cover his debts. This appears to be Fielding’s critique of the
state of letters in his day. It is, however, at least moderately interesting to
see Fielding indulging some of his peeves. If, in Book One, Booth is accosted
in jail by a hypocritical freethinker and a Methodist pickpocket, it is clearly
because Fielding had little time for either freethinkers or Methodists. And
there are moments of sordid frankness of the sort that would not have appeared,
a century later, in Victorian novels. In prison is “a man committed for certain odious, unmanlike practices, not fit to be
named”. (Book One, Chapter Four) – meaning, presumably, homosexual
activity. In Book Seven, the virtuous Mrs Bennet relates how she contracted a
sexually transmitted disease.
Another
problem with this novel is its over-use of anterior narrative. At least a
quarter of the novel consists of characters telling us about their past – Booth
and Miss Matthews in the first three books, and Mrs Bennet in Book Seven. Yes,
this too is an echo of the Aeneid
(Aeneas tells Dido about the fall of Troy etc.), but it is no more palatable
because of that. Fielding too often resorts to telling us that “words could not do justice” to a certain
emotional scene that he can’t be bothered dramatising. This goes along with his
habit of allowing Amelia to faint rather too often in moments of tension.
Then there is
the cumbersome figure of Dr Harrison. He is meant to be the novel’s moral
mouthpiece, and is one of Fielding’s good, virtuous Anglican clergymen. Booth
describes him thus:
“Nothing, however, can be imagined more
agreeable than the life that the doctor leads in his homely house, which he
calls his earthly paradise. All his parishioners, whom he treats as his
children, regard him as their common father. Once in a week he constantly
visits every house in the parish, examines commends, and rebukes, as he finds
occasion. This is practised likewise by his curate in his absence; and so good
an effect is produced by their care, that no quarrels ever proceed either to
blows or law-suits; no beggar is to be found in the whole parish; nor did I
ever hear a very profane oath all the time I lived in it.” (Book Three,
Chapter Twelve)
Alas, Dr
Harrison is also a pious bore. As a Don Quixote figure, the virtuous Rev Abraham
Adams is dotty, amusing and a great comic character in Joseph Andrews; but Dr Harrison’s laboured, over-long sermons are
irritating rather than enlightening and his Hellenic and Latinate joking over
the classics is an affectation when he matches wits with Mrs Bennet and others.
(Although such joking does allow Fielding to include more references to the Aeneid.)
I
have made a rather thorough job here of thrashing a novel. It is rather cruel
of me, for there are moments of interest. The best has to be Booth’s experience
of guilt when he first gets out of prison and realizes what deception he has
practised on Amelia in his adultery with Miss Matthews. At that point in the
novel, I had the fleeting hope that this would be a novel of close
psychological observation and developing character. It turned out to be largely
a delusive hope, alas.
Yet I would be
dishonest if I did not admit that moments in the novel made me admire Fielding
in better form than most of the novel displayed.
I can agree with
at least some of his moralising, as in his defence of free will:
“To retrieve the ill consequences of a
foolish conduct, and by struggling manfully with distress to subdue it, is one
of the noblest efforts of wisdom and virtue. Whoever, therefore, calls such a
man fortunate is guilty of no less impropriety in speech than he would be who
should call the statuary or the poet fortunate who carved a Venus or who writ
an Iliad” (Book One, Chapter One)
Booth’s
passionate declarations of his love for Amelia are such that one suspects
Fielding of practising a complicated irony, showing that such self-dramatising
can be superficial, as evidenced by Booth’s infidelities. Here is Booth
recreating his reaction to Amelia early in their courtship, complete with
Amelia’s trademark fainting:
“Her
manner, look, voice, everything was inimitable; such sweetness, softness,
innocence, modesty! – Upon my soul, if ever man could boast of his resolution,
I think I might now, that I abstained from falling prostrate at her feet and
adoring her. However, I triumphed; pride, I believe, triumphed, or perhaps love
got the better of love…. I then fell
on my knees before her; and, forcing her hand, cried out, O, my Amelia! I can
bear no longer. You are the only mistress of my affections; you are the deity I
adore. In this style I ran on for above two or three minutes, what it is
impossible to repeat, till a torrent of contending passions, together with the
surprise, overpowered her gentle spirits and she fainted away in my arms”.
(Book Two, Chapter Two)
Certainly
Fielding is being ironical when he “defends” Booth’s adultery with Miss
Matthews:
“ We desire, therefore, the good-natured and
candid reader to be pleased to weigh attentively the several unlucky
circumstances that concurred so critically, that Fortune seemed to have used
her utmost endeavours to snare poor Booth’s constancy. Let the reader set
before his eyes a fine young woman, in a manner, a first love, conferring
obligations and using every art to soften, to allure, to win, and to inflame;
let him consider the time and place; let him remember that Booth was a young
fellow in the highest vigour of life; and lastly, let him add one single
circumstance, that the parties were alone together, and then, if he will not
acquit the defendant, he must be convicted, for I have nothing more to say in
his defence.” (Book Four, Chapter One)
Yet I do not
think he is being ironical at all when he discourses on the power of sexual
attraction and how it can overwhelm the best of moral resolutions:
“And yet… my young readers… flatter not
yourselves that fire will not scorch as well as warm, and the longer we stay
within its reach the more we shall burn. The admiration of a beautiful woman,
though the wife of our dearest friend, may at first perhaps be innocent, but
let us not flatter ourselves it will always remain so; desire is sure to
succeed; and wishes, hopes, desires, with a long train of mischiefs, tread
close at our heels. In affairs of this kind we may most properly apply the
well-known remark of nemo repente fuit turpissimus. It fares, indeed,
with us on this occasion as with the unwary traveller in some parts of Arabia
the desert, whom the treacherous sands imperceptibly betray until he is
overwhelmed and lost. In both cases the only safety is by withdrawing our feet
the very first moment we see them sliding.” (Book Six, Chapter One)
I would also
endorse the following as a truthful observation:
“Few men, I believe, think better of others
than of themselves; nor do they easily allow the existence of any virtue of
which they perceive no traces in their own minds; for which reason I have
observed, that it is extremely difficult to persuade a rogue that you are an
honest man; nor would you ever succeed in the attempt by the strongest
evidence, was it not for the comfortable conclusion which the rogue draws, that
he who proves himself to be honest proves himself to be a fool at the same time.”
(Book Eight, Chapter Eight)
And what of all
those encomia on Amelia’s moral greatness? Fielding was a man who sought
domestic comfort and stability from a wife, while making apologies for male
adventuring. He could now easily be attacked for the “double standard” in
marriage. The following is in effect the icon of what Fielding sees as
attractive in Amelia, coming across like a Victorian print of the good little
wife. Amelia is preparing Booth’s favourite supper just before the shocking
scene in which she gets the note saying he may be dallying with Miss Matthews:
“As soon
as the clock struck seven the good creature went down into the kitchen, and
began to exercise her talents in cookery, of which she was a great mistress, as
she was of every economical office from the highest to the lowest; and as no
woman could outshine her in a drawing-room, so none could make the drawing-room
itself shine brighter than Amelia. And, if I may speak a bold truth, I question
whether it be possible to view this fine creature in a more amiable light than
when she was dressing her husband’s supper, with her little children playing
about her.” (Book Eleven, Chapter Eight)
Just before she
learns that she will come into an inheritance, Amelia is asked by her husband
whether she would be happy in a life in which they have to toil for their
living. She replies:
“I am
sure I could be happy in it…. And why not I as well as a thousand others, who
have not the happiness of such a husband to make life delicious? Why should I
complain of my hard fate while so many who are much poorer than I enjoy theirs?
Am I of a superior rank of being to the wife of the honest labourer? Am I not
partaker of one common nature with her?” (Book Twelve, Chapter Eight)
These are noble
sentiments, but they do raise the possibility that there is something so
saint-like in Amelia that she is almost impossible for any woman (or man) to
identify with. Along with the novel’s other defects, this may be one reason why
Amelia has never been as popular as
Fielding’s other two long novels.
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