The Perpetual Curate by Mrs Margaret Oliphant
published 1864
Blogfriend Marty recommended this as my next Oliphant book,
when I posted on Phoebe
Junior a while back. This is what she said: 'My recommendation of the Carlingford books
would be The Perpetual Curate which came right before Miss Marjoribanks in the
series. It has a male protagonist but also interesting female characters. It
does talk a lot about the Dissenters versus "the Church" but
theological expertise isn't needed, it goes more to motivation of the
characters.'
That’s a very fair description – you do have to take on
board some church business, and understand the way the religious world works,
but it is like reading about any organization – you can pick it up.
The plot has a lot to do with livings, ie the appointment of
a clergyman to a parish, where he can have some security and an income. These
were often in the hands of families, as the squire explains:
"I'd never have any peace of
mind if I filled up a family living with a stranger—unless, of course," Mr
Wentworth added in a parenthesis—an unlikely sort of contingency which had not
occurred to him at first—"you should happen to have no second son.—The
eldest the squire, the second the rector. That's my idea, Leonora, of Church
and State."
But apparently the sons can’t always count on getting what
they want…
“He was always brought up for it,
as everybody knows; and to disappoint him, who is so good and so nice, for a
fat young man, buttered all over like—like—a pudding-basin," cried poor
Miss Dora, severely adhering to the unity of her desperate metaphor.
There is a very unnerving plotline where the eponymous
curate is suspected of misdemeanours with a young woman – it is very convincing
how easy it is for him to look guilty, and how hard to clear his name. There is
an annoying rector, but more than saved by his absolutely splendid wife, a very
nice woman who hates the carpet in her sitting-room:
It would be difficult to explain
what influence the drawing-room carpet in the Rectory had on the fortunes of
the Perpetual Curate; but when Mr Wentworth's friends come to hear the entire
outs and ins of the business, it will be seen that it was not for nothing that
Mr Proctor covered the floor of that pretty apartment with roses and lilies
half a yard long.
She is as generous and Christian as the rector’s wife should
be, but just occasionally it all gets too much for her:
she had no patience for a
tiresome, middle-aged lover, who no doubt was going to disappoint and
disenchant another woman.
Will he? There is a gloriously awkward wooing scene between the
older couple…
"You see we are neither of
us young," said Mr Proctor; and he stood by the table turning over the
books nervously, without looking at her, which was certainly an odd
commencement for a wooing.
"That is quite true,"
said Miss Wodehouse, rather primly. She had never disputed that fact by word or
deed, but still it was not pleasant to have the statement thus thrust upon her
without any apparent provocation. It was not the sort of thing which a woman
expects to have said to her under such circumstances.
[Reminiscent of a discussion in this
blogpost – where Dickens and George Eliot have similar moments]
He doesn’t even know her first name (Mary). And yet – the reader is
rooting for them, and thinks they will be able to finally find peace and
happiness together, when both of them seemed to face a bleak future.
That’s the religious side. The Perpetual Curate is also a
member of a hilariously awful, and bizarrely complex, family. His father the
squire has outlived several wives and keeps having more children, who all annoy
him. (That’s why he can’t imagine not having enough sons, see above).
Oliphant is so good on awful family conversations:
“Butterflies," said Mr
Wentworth, looking at [his daughters] in their pretty dresses, as they sat
regarding him with dismay, "that don't understand any reason for doing
anything except liking it or not liking it. I daresay by this time your sister
knows better."
"My sister is married,
papa," said Letty, with her saucy look.
"I advise you to get married
too, and learn what life is like," said the savage Squire; and
conversation visibly flagged after this effort.
There is a hilarious running feature of ‘the Wentworth
complaint’ - ‘When a man has all the
suffering attendant upon a special complaint, it is hard not to have all the
dignity.’ The Squire is outraged when annoying Miss Dora ‘with a sob of fright’
thinks her sister might have it - "It has been in our family for two
hundred years," said Mr Wentworth; "and I don't think there is a
single instance of its attacking a woman—not even slightly.”
The book is wonderfully involving – the religious
difficulties, the livings, the clergyman who is going to do something
spectacularly inconvenient to everyone else: all become vitally important. There
are characters who behave badly or stupidly, but Mrs O has that wonderful
good-heartedness that means she makes you understand them.
The rather heroic curate does have one sharp remark at the
end, which I enjoyed enormously: (not really a very slight spoiler…)
[Miss Leonora says] ‘Of course,
you are going to marry, and live happy ever after, like a fairy tale."
"It is possible I may be guilty of that additional enormity," said the Curate, "which, at all events, will not be your doing, my dear aunt, if I might suggest a consolation. You cannot help such things happening, but, at least, it should be a comfort to feel you have done nothing to bring them about."
The top photo is a daguerreotype of an American clergyman, Rollin Heber Neale, ‘one of the most eloquent and successful preachers of his day’. (A faint look of Peter Capaldi as Malcolm Tucker?)
Anne Chalmers Hanna, 1813 - 1891. Daughter of Rev. Dr Thomas Chalmers; wife of Rev. William Hanna, 1844, from the National Galleries of Scotland.
It sounds as though this is as much about those relationships as it is about clergy life and religious living, Moira. And that can work very well. I like that there's plenty of wit in it, too. And for me, when a Victorian novel has well-developed, strong female characters, I consider that a special plus!
ReplyDeleteYou are so right Margot, those are exactly the features that make this so enjoyable.
Delete"Mrs O has that wonderful good-heartedness that means she makes you understand them." I love that line and know exactly what you mean, but have seldom heard it said so succinctly.
ReplyDeleteOh thank you! I once read (and I wish I could remember where) that authors divide into those who think we can aspire to achieve perfection, and those who think we won't make it but we can still be good people. I was much struck, and realized that I like the second kind (whoever it was who wrote it used Shakespeare as the example of the second kind, so not doing badly). I find it a useful distinction in fact and often assign authors to one or the other category. And very much Mrs O is the second kind!
DeleteOh, I must read this, Moira. I do like Mrs Oliphant and her good-heartedness. I feel that Trollope is somewhat the same. Chrissie
ReplyDeleteYes indeed, see comments to Birgitta above. I think you will enjoy.
DeleteAnd...downloaded this from the Internet Archive but it will have to wait. I'm going to the Danube next month so I'm currently working throughout Patrick Leigh Fermor's travel trilogy.
ReplyDeleteoh lucky you, Danube and Fermor! As it happens I have just reread the second Fermor, and was completely lost in the world of Transylvania, I loved it so much. I don't think I have ever read the third book in fact, though Time of Gifts I have read several times over the years. He just sounds so nice...
DeleteGlad you enjoyed the book! Mr Proctor also had his own book, "The Rector" which preceded this one. It's short and includes several characters from "The Perpetual Curate" including the Curate himself, and contrasts their different kinds of ministry. I agree with Chrissie that Trollope and Mrs Oliphant share a sympathetic view of their characters, even the wrong'uns. They both seemed to write a lot about clerics ("religious" in varying degrees) with a lot of fuss about High Church vs Low, and livings and incomes and the large families the vicars always seem to have! And a lot of their romances demonstrate "the amorous effects of brass" like Austen.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the recommendation, I loved it as you can tell! I will read The Rector at some point. Indeed - Victorian novelists don't seem to worry about consistency on the subject of love/marriage/money - their theories and practice are all over the place.
DeleteI'm not well enough up on religious matters to know how those plotlines stand up!
In Trollope anyway, I get the impression that mostly religion is just another factor in the power struggles. Only a few characters seem to have really strong feelings about religion, but it makes a good excuse for some of their behavior.
DeleteYes that's a very good point - Oliphant's people take it more seriously.
DeleteIn Trollope's and Mrs Oliphant's books, I found it interesting to see how much religion is connected to social class. CoE clergymen were considered "gentlemen" but the "Low Church" clerics were assumed to be, well, lower! To a Statesider it's a little hard to imagine an "official" religion, but maybe that had a little to do with the Dissenters having lower status?
ReplyDeleteDissenters were definitely seen as mostly coming from a lower section of society: Church of England very much the Establishment at prayer. You admirably have no established religion in the US, but don't Episcopalians see themselves as the top people? Do tell!
DeleteOver here, every denomination thinks itself the best! I don't really know if the upper echolons of society are mostly Episcopalians. I think a lot of it is regional, depending on which immigrants settled where. And some of the higher-ups were once lower-downs--the Kennedy clan comes to mind--and kept their old religion when they rose in society.
DeleteSuch a fascinating topic! My reading on the Kennedys suggests they had to overcome a certain amount of prejudice - he was the first Catholic President, right, but also they were the first Catholics in a number of other areas in their lives...
Delete