The two leading political parties in England in the late 1830s were the
Tories and the Whigs, led respectively by Sir Robert Peel and Lord
Melbourne. Melbourne's Whigs were the governing party
from 1835 until 1841, holding power thanks to the support of a small group of
MPs known as Radicals. The Radicals were
advocates of political reform going beyond the terms of the Whig Reform Bill of
1832: they wanted to extend the franchise, introduce the secret ballot, and
increase the frequency of elections.
Many of them had connections with the extra-Parliamentary Anti-Corn Law
League, the organization of merchants and manufacturers who sought to repeal
the Corn Laws which protected the landed aristocracy. The Radicals and the Anti-Corn Law League
were quite distinct from, and often at odds with, the other major
extra-Parliamentary group of this period, the Chartists, who launched two
violent but abortive uprisings in 1839 on behalf of the working class.
The position of Fraser's Magazine,
in which Catherine appeared in
serialized form between May 1839 and February 1840, was clearly Tory – even ultra-Tory, to use the term applied to that
section of the Tory party that had felt betrayed when Peel and the Duke of
Wellington, the other major Tory leader, introduced Catholic Emancipation. Fraser's
continually attacked the Whigs, and was particularly critical of their attempts
to find allies to the left so as to create "a confederacy of Whigs,
Radicals, Republicans, Chartists, Socialists, and Atheists" (Jan. 1840,
21:121). And despite its unhappiness
with the Tory leaders over Catholic Emancipation, what Fraser's longed to see was "Toryism ... in the ascendant"
(Jan. 1840, 21:31).
Thackeray had once been an ultra-Tory in the Fraser's mould. When
Catholic Emancipation came in, the seventeen-year-old Thackeray wrote articles
against it and expressed "great grief & consternation" at its
passage (Letters 1:34, 34n, 55). At the time of the Reform Bill of 1832, he
wrote in his diary that "the country [has] gone to the Devil!" He worried that "to morrow perhaps a
king may be pulled off his throne," and he looked on the Duke of
Wellington as a "hero" for his opposition to the Reformers (Letters 1:199, 200, 189).
By the late 1830’s, however, Thackeray's political attitudes had changed. No longer did he stand against Reform; on the
contrary, he embraced it and criticized the Whigs for not going far enough with
it. Writing as the Paris
correspondent of the Radical paper, the Constitutional,
in 1836-1837, he criticized the "so-called liberal ministry" in England for not promoting the liberal cause in Spain and Portugal. Attacking the "lazy Whigs," he
praised instead the Radicals and celebrated Daniel O'Connell, the Irish
agitator for Catholic Emancipation, saying that it was thanks to O'Connell that
"freedom in Ireland and
Radicalism in England
... [had] advanced." He warned that
the French government of Louis-Philippe would try to stop the progress of
British reform, but expressed confidence that the French would not
succeed: "We are luckily too strong
... to be bullied back into Toryism" (Mr.
Thackeray's Writings 193, 194, 172, 213, 130, 135, 128).
Moreover while writing Catherine,
in 1839, Thackeray made two drawings to assist a campaign by the Anti-Corn Law
League. And in 1840, he wrote his mother
that he hoped the day would come when "the rascally Whigs and Tories ... [will]
disappear from among us" (Letters
1:385-86, 458). He disavowed Chartism,
and indeed seemed terrified of Chartist violence and working-class revolution (Letters 1:410-11, 458), but he declared
himself to be a "republican" and said he would like to see "all
men equal, and this bloated aristocracy blasted to ... the winds" (Letters 1: 458).
This anti-aristocratic attitude can be found in Catherine, stripped of its political significance, in the unflattering
portrayal of the senile Count von Galgenstein in the latter part of the
novel. Similarly, Thackeray's attack on the
upper classes as drunken, gambling womanizers (in the account of Corporal
Brock's progress in high society in Chapter 5) accords with the political
attitude he was expressing in the late 1830’s outside the pages of Catherine. However, within Catherine there is no hint of Thackeray's political Radicalism.
It is true that there is an attack, in the opening paragraph of the
novel, on the Whig government's roguery which could come from a Radical
position as easily as from a Tory one, but later in the novel, when Thackeray
associates the Reform Bill with corruption and favourably contrasts the Duke of
Wellington and another Tory politician with the radical O'Connell and the Whig
Lord Melbourne, the attitude of the novel seems clearly Tory. And if the narrator's comment in Chapter 6 on
the popularity of Catholicism is meant to be a veiled attack on the Catholic Emancipation
Act, then Thackeray in Catherine is
in effect putting himself forward as an ultra-Tory, taking a position
completely in accord with that of Fraser's.
Indeed, one is forced to conclude that the reason Thackeray's politics
in Catherine appear to be Tory or
ultra-Tory is that he was trying to accommodate himself to the politics of Fraser's. If the novel had not been written for Fraser's, it might not have contained
Tory political statements; in fact, it might not have contained political
statements at all, for Thackeray did not generally take up political issues in
his fiction. He did not write about the
plight of factory workers in the manner of Dickens or Elizabeth Gaskell; nor
did he present proposals for reorganizing society in the manner of Benjamin Disraeli. Indeed, in two reviews he wrote in 1845 of
books by Disraeli and Charles Lever, he expressed disapproval of novelists who
wandered into "the crabbed labyrinths of political controversy" and
who used their novels as platforms to "tell us that society is diseased, the
laws unjust, the rich ruthless, the poor martyrs, the world lop-sided, and vice versâ." He did not want such "instruction,"
he said, but preferred "romances which do not treat of algebra, religion,
political economy, or other abstract science" (Morning Chronicle 72, 71, 77-78).
Of course, one could say that Thackeray was being political himself, if
one defines the term broadly, in attacking corruption and ineptitude among the
higher orders, as he does in his depiction of Lord Steyne and Sir Pitt Crawley
in Vanity Fair. And to the extent that his attacks express a
desire to eliminate class distinction, one could say that there is a political
element to them. However, since the
attacks on the upper classes are usually coupled with fantasies about rising into
their ranks (consider Becky Sharp, Barry Lyndon, and in Catherine itself Corporal Brock), the strongest message that emerges
from Thackeray's fiction is not that aristocracy should be abolished but that
the aristocrats should open their ranks to certain deserving but currently
excluded individuals.
In any case, what is clearly not
found in Thackeray's fiction are political
programs, examinations of specific political or social issues, or advocacy of
the rights of one social class against another.
Nor, in his fiction outside of Catherine,
does Thackeray generally make the sort of partisan political comments found in
his first novel. It was more typical of him to write mockingly of political
partisans in general than to join one side or the other. Thus, in "The Bedford-Row
Conspiracy," a story he began publishing in the New Monthly Magazine even before Catherine completed its run in Fraser's,
he makes fun of one political activist who becomes a Radical solely because his
sweetheart leaves him for a Tory and of another who deserts the Tories as soon
as they lose power. Similarly, in Chapter
7 of Vanity Fair, he mocks the
political trimming of the Crawley family, and
in Chapter 1 of Catherine itself he
invites the reader to laugh at the political shifts of Corporal Brock's mother.
Thackeray was never a very good political partisan. Even when an ultra-Tory in his youth, he
could denounce Reform in his diary and then go off to Cornwall to campaign in
an election for his Radical friend Charles Buller against the Tories (Letters 1:246). Later, in his Radical period, while writing
his pro-Reform articles from Paris for the Constitutional,
he confided to his mother that he found the Paris version of the Radical party
to be "the most despicable I ever knew" and that as a result he was
in danger of becoming a Tory (Ray 191). "I
am a very weak & poor politician," he confessed a few years later,
"only good for outside articles and jeux d'esprit" (Letters 2:225).
It seems, therefore, that the Tory partisanship of Catherine was not Thackeray's but Fraser's – and this partisanship misrepresents Thackeray's views
not simply because he was a Radical rather than a Tory at the time, but because
essentially he was not a political partisan of any sort and did not approve of harnessing
literature to politics. As he put it in
a letter to his mother in December 1839, using a phrase that would become a
battle cry at the end of the century: "Criticism has been a party matter
with us till now, and literature a poor political lackey – please God we shall
begin ere long to love art for art's sake"(Letters 1:396).
Works Cited
Ray, Gordon N. Thackeray:
The Uses of Adversity, 1811-1846. New York: McGraw-Hill,
1955.
Thackeray, William
Makepeace. Mr. Thackeray's Writings in "The National Standard" and
"Constitutional." London, 1899 (abbreviated
Mr. Thackeray's Writings).
-----. The
Letters and Private Papers of William Makepeace Thackeray. Ed. Gordon N. Ray. 4 volumes.
Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1945-46 (abbreviated Letters).
-----. William
Makepeace Thackeray: Contributions to the Morning Chronicle. Ed. Gordon N. Ray. Urbana:
University of Illinois
Press, 1955 (abbreviated Morning
Chronicle).
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