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Authors: Anthony Trollope

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Carbury is happy only in deferential Suffolk, where ‘the poor people touch their hats, and the rich people think of the poor' (p.129). We are mostly instructed to admire him for being, as he often says, ‘old-fashioned':

‘“I am old-fashioned, Hetta.”

‘“And we belong to a newer and worse sort of world.”' (p.63).

Hetta can say so, knowing her mother's unscrupulousness and her brother's baseness, and she can accept Carbury's righteousness quite uncritically. On the other hand, we are also informed that whatever the world may be like it is still necessary to live in it. Mr Booker cannot ‘oppose himself altogether to the usages of the time' (p.12), and it is all very well for Carbury to stand by the ‘old-fashioned idea that the touching of pitch will defile' (p.61), but not everybody can; and people must marry even in a loveless world. ‘Who thinks about love nowadays?' asks Georgiana, understandably desperate to be married (p.728); the answer is that Roger Carbury does, but with romantic extravagance, planning to spend his life a bachelor for want of the one woman he has chosen. But people have grown less romantic about love, just as they no longer felt ‘bound to be so punctilious in the paying of money as they were a few years since' (p.570). In fact Roger Carbury represents an admired and honourable way of behaving, but one that must inevitably submit in some measure to the forces of change. These would continue irresistible even if there were no such villains as Melmotte, for whom Carbury has a special loathing, and whom of course it would have been proper for English society to reject as he did, rather than sit at his table, invite him into their houses, and invest in his companies.

In his autobiographical references to the novel Trollope mentioned that he had gone ‘beyond the iniquities of the great speculator who robs everybody, and made an onslaught also on other vices – on the intrigues of girls who want to get married, on the luxury of young men who prefer to remain single, and on the puffing propensities of authors who desire to cheat the public into buying their volumes'.

This last intention starts the book off, though Trollope must have seen that a novel that took as its principal theme the backscratchings of minor writers in a genteel Grub Street could hardly be a grand survey of metropolitan change and corruption. Nevertheless he felt very strongly on the subject of dishonesty in literary journalism and thought of it as a symptom of the more general ill. In the
Autobiography
he expresses his particular dislike for anonymous reviewing (a practice maintained long after his time in, for example, the
Times Literary Supplement).

Yet not even signed reviews, though more honest, would remedy the evil. The public had no reliable critical guidance, for editors were careless or venal, and critics incompetent. Later in the
Autobiography
Trollope returns to the matter of ‘dishonest criticism', the sort of reviewing Lady Carbury solicits from her editor friends, and one can see how he would relate this to other, and in the eyes of most people larger,
instances of venality, regarding them all as evidence of the deplorable way we live now. Indeed in the
Autobiography
he imagines a typical response to his objections: ‘“Where have you lived, my friend, for the last twenty years… that you come out now with such old-fashioned stuff as this?” And thus dishonesty begets dishonesty, till dishonesty seems to be beautiful.'
Sic vivitur
, as Cicero remarked in a passage Trollope, according to Ruth apRoberts, was echoing: ‘What can you do? That's the way things are nowadays' or, that's the way we live now.

The implications of Lady Carbury's behaviour are skilfully brought out, and are a good starting place for the huge complicated plot of the novel. Her son, the beautiful Sir Felix, is a graceless scamp, and the clientele of his club, the Beargarden, is, like the market, enslaved to a foreign speculator and trades in IOUs, paper as little likely to be redeemed as Melmotte's share flotations. (There is one scene in which one member of the Beargarden acquires shares in Melmotte's venture by the redemption of IOUs acquired from another, and for various reasons Melmotte involves several of the club members in his operations.)

Trollope's handling of the club scenes has been praised for the accuracy with which it represents contemporary life as it was lived among idle, well-born young men, and these commendations are deserved. Yet the story of a young aristocrat bent on seducing a country girl but prevented from doing so by her sturdy peasant lover – the story of Felix and Ruby Ruggles – is an ancient one. The theme goes back to the medieval pastourelle, in which the lord sometimes gets what he wants but sometimes, like Sir Felix, gets his comeuppance; and it crops up over the ages in many a tale of peasant virtue and seigneurial wickedness.

This blending of old and new is characteristic, and Trollope's skill in getting the most out of a plot is further illustrated by the relationship that exists between the Ruggles and John Crumb and Roger Carbury. Bold economy in plotting makes Ruby turn up at the very house in Islington that Mrs Hurtle occupies, with consequent interaction between the story of Felix and that of Montague, the close friend of Roger. The meeting of Montague and Mrs Hurtle with Roger on the sands at Lowestoft is improbable but well engineered. It is Trollope's easy but studied matter-of-factness, as well as his willing submersion in the conventions of Victorian fiction – if events can be formed into plot patterns why should they not be formed into very elaborate plot patterns? – that prevents readers from finding these connections discouragingly improbable. Realism is a highly artificial mode and calls, as
much as any melodrama of squire and maiden, for readerly cooperation. Are we troubled by the coincidence that John Crumb was at hand in a London backstreet at the very moment when Sir Felix decided to take Ruby by force? Or that Roger should, in due course, be at hand to discuss the fracas with John Crumb?

When a publisher asked for changes in the plot of
John Caldigate
Trollope politely told him he had never found himself able ‘to effect changes in the plot of a story. Small as the links are, one little thing hinges on another to such an extent that any change sets the whole narrative wrong'.
13
To make a unity of a story that involved a study not only of Melmotte and his circle but of Mr Broune and Mr Alf, of Mrs Hurtle, of the barren and snobbish Longestaffes, of the Beargarden set, including the pleasant Nidderdale – a more complicated young man than he at first appears (witness his disinterested kindness to Marie Melmotte after her father's death) – is no small feat of management. And that is to mention only a small number of characters; others are provided at need, like the contrasted lawyers Squercum and Bideawhile, and Lady Monogram and Father Barham, and various politicians and angry fathers. This, as Michael Sadleir remarked, was ‘the work of no ordinary mind'.
14

In a private note to his son, who was trying his hand at a novel, Trollope tells him he ‘has not yet quite got into the way of writing for lengths. One cannot do all these mechanical tricks at once.'
15
Trollope does them all at once – mechanical tricks calling for the fashioning of hinges, and the whole complicated structure casts some of the ethical shadows I have referred to.

Roger Carbury is quite a large hinge. Despairing lover of Hetta, head of the Carbury family (which either venerates or despises and exploits him), landlord of the Ruggles and the Crumbs, close friend of Montague, his successful rival in love, he is indeed central to the plot mechanism. And of course, as I have already remarked, he is a kind of ethical norm, a gentleman according to the minimal definition given in
The Prime Minister
, ‘a man who would not for worlds tell a lie' (Chapter
30
).
16
He
represents the way ‘we' lived before we started living as we do now, in a time when a family might, like him, modestly thrive because they had ‘been true to their acres and their acres true to them through the perils of civil wars, Reformation, Commonwealth, and Revolution' (p.44). Roger Carbury remains true in this way. Yet here, as we have seen, the shadow is present, the ambiguity into which Trollope was so beneficially led by the mere fact of using story to illuminate a moral or satirical theme. For his notions of justice and fairness don't fit when it is right that they shouldn't, but also when they should, by being adapted to a world that cannot help but change.

For
The Way We Live Now
, though it is undoubtedly about decadence, is also about change, and change is often identified with decadence. During Trollope's own lifetime England changed enormously, grew wonderfully more wealthy yet, despite huge deals in the market, was already almost imperceptibly in decline. It was a world increasingly more congenial to the speculator than to the gentleman, whose morality expressed itself more easily in an older form of society, with clear ideas about proper stations and the conduct appropriate to them. It is natural to lament the passing of a civility, whatever its basis in injustice, and to deplore the rude excesses that supplant it. If Trollope says nothing about the gross disparity between rich and poor in these years, it may be that the wickedness of that disparity is reflected in the venality and inanity of the rich as he represents them. And of course it can be said that his title could be applied to the description of almost any developed society at any modern period, including our own.

A NOTE ON THE TEXT

The text of this edition is taken from the last edition of Trollope's lifetime (Chatto & Windus, 1877). Some obvious errors have been corrected. It has not seemed necessary to correct small inconsistencies of spelling. In the notes on individual points in the text – gathered at the end of this volume – I am indebted to the notes of Professor John Sutherland (edition of 1982), some of which are in their turn indebted to the edition of Robert Tracy (1974).

The complicated writing and publishing history of
The Way We Live Now
has been studied in minute detail by Professor Sutherland in two articles.
1
Trollope wrote the novel in twenty parts of thirty-two printed pages, dividing each part into five chapters, a task calling for elaborate planning and ferociously methodical labour, his best performance was to write eight numbers (Chapters
31
–70) in six weeks, with much necessary ‘tinkering' as he went along. Unlike Thackeray, he did not use the proof-stage for further corrections. Sutherland concludes from his study that Trollope's own account of his methods of work, as we have it in the
Autobiography
, is put in question by the evidence of his working materials for this novel.

The Way We Live Now
was the fifth of Trollope's novels to be published in parts, by this time a rare procedure. In June 1875, three months before the part-publication was finished, the publisher, Chapman & Hall, brought out the two-volume first edition at 21s. It was made up of the parts. The publishers rushed it out because they had already assigned the copyright to Chatto & Windus, a firm specializing in cheaper reprints, for £300, and a 6s. rival could be expected before the end of the year. Chatto subsequently published several editions in descending price ranges, some much reduced in bulk from the two-volume edition. The impetus of the book, never exceptionally strong, was eventually exhausted, and the book was out of print for many years. Its reputation as the greatest of Trollope's novels began just as Chatto's

stock finally ran out, with Michael Sadleir's
Commentary
of 1928. Sutherland concludes from his examination of the accounts that neither Chapman & Hall nor Chatto & Windus, did very well out of
The Way We Live Now
, though Trollope, pocketing his £3,000, certainly did.

It is not probable that Trollope gave much attention to the text, at any rate after the proofs of the parts, but somebody in Chatto's office corrected a few errors in the Chapman & Hall edition. Others have been corrected by Robert Tracy in his edition (Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1974). I have incorporated some but not all of Tracy's emendations; some of them had already been made by Chatto, and, as he demonstrates, by the publishers of the first American edition and the European edition of Tauchnitz. Some I think unnecessary (for example, ‘missels' in Chapter 40 is an old variant of ‘trestles' and need not be changed).

I am grateful to Professor Sutherland for much help with this edition.

THE WAY WE LIVE NOW
CONTENTS

1
Three Editors
7

2
The Carbury Family
15

3
The Beargarden
23

4
Madame Melmotte's Ball
29

5
After the Ball
41

6
Roger Carbury and Paul Montague
44

7
Mentor
53

8
Love-sick
60

9
The Great Railway to Vera Cruz
66

10
Mr Fisker's Success
74

11
Lady Carbury at Home
83

12
Sir Felix in his Mother's House
93

13
The Longestaffes
98

14
Carbury Manor
107

15
‘You Should Remember that I am his Mother'
114

16
The Bishop and the Priest
122

17
Marie Melmotte Hears a Love Tale
132

18
Ruby Ruggles Hears a Love Tale
141

19
Hetta Carbury Hears a Love Tale
146

20
Lady Pomona's Dinner-Party
155

21
Everybody Goes to Them
160

22
Lord Nidderdale's Morality
170

23
‘Yes, I'm a Baronet'
177

24
Miles Grendall's Triumph
186

25
In Grosvenor Square
193

26
Mrs Hurtle
199

27
Mrs Hurtle Goes to the Play
208

28
Dolly Longestaffe Goes into the City
217

29
Miss Melmotte's Courage
222

30
Mr Melmotte's Promise
229

31
Mr Broune Has Made up his Mind
237

32
Lady Monogram
244

33
John Crumb
252

34
Ruby Ruggles Obeys her Grandfather
262

35
Melmotte's Glory
267

36
Mr Broune's Perils
275

37
The Board-room
280

38
Paul Montague's Troubles
291

39
‘I do love Him'
298

40
Unanimity is the Very Soul of these Things
308

41
All Prepared
313

42
‘Can You Ready in Ten Minutes?'
318

43
The City Road
327

44
The Coming Election
337

45
Mr Melmotte is Pressed for Time
344

46
Roger Carbury and his Two Friends
351

47
Mrs Hurtle at Lowestoffe
359

48
Ruby a Prisoner
369

49
Sir Felix Makes Himself Ready
374

50
The Journey to Liverpool
381

51
Which Shall It Be?
389

52
The Results of Love and Wine
397

53
A Day in the City
404

54
‘The India Office'
413

55
Clerical Charities
422

56
Father Barham Visits London
427

57
Lord Nidderdale Tries his Hand Again
435

58
Mr Squercum is Employed
442

59
The Dinner
450

60
Miss Longestaffe's Lover
457

61
Lady Monogram Prepares for the Party
465

62
The Party
469

63
Mr Melmotte on the Day of the Election
480

64
The Election
487

65
Miss Longestaffe Writes Home
496

66
‘So Shall Be my Enmity'
502

67
Sir Felix Protects his Sister
510

68
Miss Melmotte Declares her Purpose
516

69
Melmotte in Parliament
523

70
Sir Felix Meddles with Many Matters
533

71
John Crumb Falls into Trouble
540

72 ‘
Ask Himself
' 547

73
Marie's Fortune
556

74
Melmotte Makes a Friend
562

75
In Bruton Street
570

76
Hetta and her Lover
578

77
Another Scene in Bruton Street
587

78
Miss Longestaffe Again at Caversham
595

79
The Brehgert Correspondence
601

80
Ruby Prepares for Service
611

81
Mr Cohenlupe Leaves London
617

82
Marie's Perseverance
627

83
Melmotte Again at the House
635

84
Paul Montague's Vindication
642

85
Breakfast in Berkeley Square
650

86
The Meeting in Bruton Street
656

87
Down at Carbury
663

88
The Inquest
671

89
The Wheel of Fortune
678

90
Hetta's Sorrow
687

91
The Rivals
693

92
Hamilton K. Fisker Again
701

93
A True Lover
709

94
John Crumb's Victory
717

95
The Longestaffe Marriages
724

96
Where ‘The Wild Asses Quench their Thirst'
731

97
Mrs Hurtle's Fate
738

98
Marie Melmotte's Fate
746

99
Lady Carbury and Mr Broune
753

100
Down in Suffolk
761

BOOK: The Way We Live Now
5.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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