Saturday 18 April 2015

ANNOTATIONS to Chapters Two through Four of Catherine


[Numbers refer to pages and lines in the 1999 University of Michigan Press edition of Thackeray's Catherine: A Story, edited by Sheldon Goldfarb.]

20.22-23 if the Whigs remain in, I, for my part, will be content with nothing less than a blood-red hand on the Solomons’ seal
The narrator (the criminal Ikey Solomons) is on one level hoping to be made a baronet; he would then be entitled to put a red hand (the emblem of the baronetcy) on his family seal. The suggestion here, in line with the anti-Whig politics of Fraser’s Magazine (in which Catherine was appearing), is that the Whigs might bestow honours on a criminal like Ikey Solomons. Thackeray is perhaps hoping his readers will remember how the Whigs had offered high positions to Daniel O’Connell, the Irish radical, the year before.
As to the Solomons’ seal, besides being the seal of the Solomons family, it is also the old name for the Star of David, the traditional Jewish symbol, so that Thackeray is alluding to Solomons’ Jewishness and also conjuring up the odd image of a red hand on the Star of David.

21.6 pot-house
A tavern or alehouse.

21.14 weazand
The esophagus, the windpipe, or more generally the throat.

21.43 land-junker
German for country squire.

22.20-21 Was not Helen ... ninety years of age when she went off with ... Prince Alexander of Troy?
Traditionally, Helen of Troy was a great beauty when Paris (also known as Alexander) abducted her. But in a version of the tale told by the satirist Lucian she is made out to be almost as old as Paris’s mother.

22.22 Was not Madame La Vallière ill-made, blear-eyed, tallow-complexioned, scraggy, and with hair like tow?
A reference to one of Louis XIV's mistresses. She was considered by some to be extremely pretty, but others had more negative views along the lines of Thackeray’s description here.

22.23 Wilks late of Boston
The explorer Charles Wilkes (1798-1877), who attended naval school in Boston. In the 1830’s he was in Europe to procure equipment for a major expedition to the Pacific region and Antarctica.

22.24 the celebrated Wilks of Paris
The notorious swindler John Wilks (d. 1846), who lived in Paris after 1828. Thackeray himself may have been one of his victims (see Goldfarb).

22.24 Wilks of No. 45, the ugliest, charmingest, most successful man
The eighteenth-century radical reformer John Wilkes, who became notorious for the publication of Issue 45 of his periodical the North Briton, was generally seen as ugly, with "curiously malformed features" (cit. Quennell 199), but he was known for his success with women.

22.26 cui bono?
Latin for "who would benefit?"

22.28 Bow Street
Site of London's main police station until replaced by Scotland Yard.

23.10 ménage
Domestic establishment or household.

24.35 brown Bess
Type of flintlock musket used by the British army in the eighteenth century.

25.4 couches
Confinement to bed for childbirth.

25.5 a chopping boy
A boy who is healthy and vigorous.

25.6 bar sinister
Heraldic mark of illegitimacy: a diagonal band running from top right to lower left on a coat of arms.

25.39 confidences
Secret communications (French).

26.19 free-born Briton
Ironic reference to the phrase used by radicals to indicate their opposition to the ruling hierarchy (more usually "freeborn Englishman").

26.19 lick-spittle
Fawning, flattering, toadying. Literally, a reference to someone who would lick up someone else’s spit.

26.24 on the pavé
On the pavement, i.e., abandoned or without lodgings.

26.31 caracolling
Wheeling to the right or left.

26.36 purchase a regiment
It was common, from the Restoration until well into the nineteenth century, for officers to purchase their commissions in regiments and even to purchase the regiments themselves, that is, the right to command or raise them.

26.47 dun
Creditor or creditor's agent, a bill-collector.

27.8 Croesus
Proverbially rich king; ruled in Asia Minor in the sixth century B.C.

27.15 that’s poz
That’s certain or positive.

27.16 brandy-faced
Red in the face, especially from the effects of liquor.

27.28 Mr. Kean
The tragedian Charles Kean (1811-1868); known for his over-acting.

27.32-33 piano ... con molta espressione
"Quietly ... with a great deal of expression" (Italian).

28.15 Nan Fantail
A fantail was a hat worn by a coal-heavers and garbage collectors.

29.9 Miss Drippings, the twenty-thousand-pounder
She’s an heiress worth twenty thousand pounds, and her name suggests the fat dripping off roasted meat. It also suggests an impossibly large cannon. Farquhar in The Recruiting Officer also refers to an heiress as a twenty-thousand -pounder.

29.27-28 Holophernes ... Judith
In the Apocrypha, Judith of Judea cuts off the head of Holophernes after he falls into a drunken stupor. The reference anticipates the events at the end of the novel.

29.37 laudanum
Mixture of opium, distilled water, and alcohol. Commonly used in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as a non-prescription treatment for a variety of ailments, including toothaches, but also known to be fatal in too large a dose.

30.11 quote Plato, like Eugene Aram
In Bulwer-Lytton's 1832 novel Eugene Aram, the title character, though a murderer, is also a sensitive, serious scholar who quotes poetry, discusses philosophy, and is praised for his classical learning. He does not, however, quote Plato.

30.11-12 sing ... ballads ... like jolly Dick Turpin
The highwayman Dick Turpin sings songs in Harrison Ainsworth's 1834 novel Rookwood.

30.12-13 prate eternally about to kalon like that precious canting Maltravers

The Greek phrase means "the Beautiful," something that is "prated" about in Bulwer-Lytton's novel Alice (1838). Ernest Maltravers is a character in this novel, but he is not the one who does the prating.

30.14 Biss Dadsy
Mispronounced version of the name "Miss Nancy" in Oliver Twist.

31.15 Seven's the main ...
This expression and the ones that follow are associated with the old dice game hazard. When the count says seven's the main, he is declaring the number he is trying to roll. Because he rolls a four instead, he now has to roll a four (the "chance") before he rolls another seven. In the end, after rolling a nine and an eleven, he rolls a seven before he can roll a four, and therefore loses.

31.15-16 Three to two against the caster
The odds of throwing a second four. Hazard was such a popular game that tables of odds were worked out for the various dice rolls. Thackeray is actually wrong about the odds; with a "main" of seven and a "chance" of four, the odds against the caster were not three to two, but two to one.

31.17 Ponies
A bet of 25 pounds.

31.39 booked his winnings
Recorded them rather than collecting them.

32.45 toledo
A sword made at Toledo in Spain.

33.22-23 mustard and salt ... oil ... hot water.
A treatment for laudanum poisoning basically in accord with the medical practices of the day, which recommended inducing vomiting by having the victim drink large quantities of warm water mixed with salad oil.

34.22 Schlafen Sie wohl ... bon repos
German and French respectively, both meaning "Sleep well."

35.29 a gentleman in black
There was an 1830 novel about the Devil by James Dalton, entitled The Gentleman in Black, illustrated by George Cruikshank and discussed by Thackeray in an 1840 essay on Cruikshank.

35.39 The "Liverpool carryvan,"
A caravan, or stage wagon, was a large, slow stagecoach primarily used for transporting goods, but also carrying passengers.

36.5 Jehu
Traditional name for a coachman, from the Biblical driver (2 Kings 9:20) who drove fast and furiously.

36.20 groat
Old coin worth fourpence. In circulation during the seventeenth century and perhaps into the early eighteenth. Revived in Thackeray's own time.

37.20 sack-possett
A cold remedy consisting of hot milk mixed with sack (a Spanish white wine).

38.10 coachmasters
The owners of the stagecoaches.

38.44 tramper
A tramp or vagrant.

39.19 trull
Whore.

39.38 Magdalen
A reformed prostitute, after the Biblical Mary Magdalen.

40.15 the green
The village green, the common land near the village.

40.47 upon this hint the elopement took place
"Upon this hint I spake," says Othello about his courtship of Desdemona (Othello I.iii.166), an ill-fated courtship, like the courtship of Catherine and John Hayes.

41.1 pillow
Variant of "pillion," the cushion attached to the back of a saddle on which a second person, usually a woman, could sit behind the rider.

41.10-12 a proclamation ... for the encouragement and increase of seamen
An actual proclamation printed in the March 28-April 1 issue of the Gazette (1-2).

41.13-14 constables, petty constables, headboroughs, and tything-men
Terms for policemen dating back to medieval times.

41.18-19 and another [act] ... for pressing men into the army
Possibly "An Act for the better Recruiting Her Majesty's Army and Marines" (1706).

41.20 a mighty stir throughout the kingdom
There was opposition to the recruiting acts from one section of the Tories, who thought they violated traditional freedoms. There were also riots to free newly enlisted men.

41.24-25 The great measure of Reform ... carried along with it much private jobbing and swindling
Though the Whig Reform Bill of 1832 is now generally seen as something that removed corruption from the old electoral system, in Thackeray's day Fraser’s Magazine and other Tory opponents of the bill threw the charge of corruption back at the Whigs and said the Reform Bill was itself associated with corruption.
"Jobbing" means doing public business dishonestly for private gain.

41.27 the British glories in Flanders
Marlborough's victory at Ramillies in 1706.

41.28-29 not the first time that a man has been pinched at home to make a fine appearance abroad
A pun. "Pinched" can mean "frugal" and also "seized" or "arrested," while "abroad" can mean "outdoors" or "overseas." So the sentence can mean both that men economize at home in order to look impressive in public and that they are seized in England to perform well on foreign battlefields.

41.31 extortion
There were cases of extortion in which those subject to impressment were allowed to escape in return for money; there were also sham press gangs at work, like the one Brock leads.

41.42 halbert
A combination spear and battle-axe, still used at this period by sergeants.

42.9 at this lock
In this dilemma or difficulty.


Works Cited

Goldfarb, Sheldon. "Thackeray and the Celebrated Wilks of Paris." English Language Notes 31, 2 (December 1993): 40-43.

Quennell, Peter. Four Portraits: Studies of the Eighteenth Century. Rev. ed. London: Collins, 1965.