Saying goodbye is difficult. When I finished The Last Chronicle of Barset by Anthony Trollope (four years after picking up The Warden, the first in Trollope’s delightful series), it was with tears streaming down my face and the sense that I was parting from dear old friends. But the beautiful thing about books is that I can always revisit these friends, as long as they remain on my shelves (which they will do – forever).
Much has changed since we were first introduced to the cathedral town of Barchester in The Warden. Children have grown to adulthood (or been wordlessly killed off, in the case of two of the Grantly offspring), ecumenical battles have been waged, marriages both good and bad have been made, and, as is only natural with the passing of time, our beloved central characters have aged. Mr Harding, surely the sweetest and most beloved of all Trollope’s creations, is slowly begininning to drift out of this life. The Grantlys are rejoicing in the worldly success of their children, though youngest son Henry, now a widower, is less certain of his path than his siblings. In Allington, Lily Dale, still in her early twenties, is settling down to a life of pleasant spinsterhood while in London Johnny Eames is progressing steadily at work and, when he’s not too busy, still pining after Lily. And, at the bishop’s palace, a quiet revolution is being to take shape.
At the heart of the story is the very Trollope-esque mystery of Mr Crawley and the stolen cheque. Mr Crawley, the morally uptight and perpetually cheerless perpetual curate of Hogglestock, stands accussed of stealing a cheque. Never a particularly attentive man, he can’t adequately explain how the cheque came to be in his possession. He thought it came from Dean Arabin, but Arabin thought not. Already poor and relatively friendless, Crawley settles in to enjoy his martyrdom and alienate those friends who do try to assist him in his time of need.
And those friends are legion, though they are in truth really the friends of his long-suffering wife and eldest daughter, Grace. The Luftons and the Robarts at Framley try to help, as do Lily and Mrs Dale, and various Grantlys – particularly Henry, who is in love with Grace Crawley. But Crawley is a stubborn man and is determined to suffer until his innocence is proved. Meanwhile, he goes a little mad.
With such a father, I can forgive a great deal in Grace Crawley. She is perhaps the dullest Trollope heroines I’ve yet to come across – certainly the dullest in this series. She is so sweet and good and morally upright that she refuses to marry the man she loves, Henry Grantly, as long as her father stands accused. Her reasoning is peculiarly Victorian: she will not taint her love and his illustrious family with her father’s shame. And, of course, she is beautiful and graceful and a true lady, etc, etc. When the archdeacon finally meets Grace, he quite falls in love with her and is moved to tears by her plight (a situation easily foreseen by Mrs Grantly, who knows her husband’s sentimental heart). A fine pair.
I can’t bring myself to like Grace. Trollope’s other heroines are equally good and moral but they have a bit more fun and fight in them. Grace is a sad creature with no discernable sense of humour. She’ll make Henry Grantly a lovely wife but a dull one – which is fine as he seems quite dull too, as do his two surviving siblings. None of the archdeacon’s passion or Mrs Grantly’s well-concealed cunning seem to have been passed down to the next generation. As they are two of my favourite characters – indeed, the archdeacon is probably my favourite of all Barsetshire residents – this is a sad thing indeed.
All the youthful female spirit and wit (I say youthful since the elder generation – such as Mrs Proudie and Mrs Grantly – has never for a moment been lacking) was saved for that determined spinster, Lily Dale. I love Lily. I was enchanted and beguiled by her when I read The Small House at Allington but Trollope gives us even more to love about her here. Further encounters with both Crosbie and Johnny Eames leave her determined to remain an old maid – a choice I would probably also make if my only choice were between those two. Crosbie is now a poor widower, losing his hair, with none of the brilliancy that attracted Lily before. Johnny continues to grow into a promising man and there are times when Lily does seem tempted. And Trollope certainly thinks she should be:
My old friend John was certainly no hero – was very unheroic in many phases of his life; but then, if all the girls are to wait for heroes, I fear that the difficulties in way of matrimonial arrangmenets, great as they are at present, will be very seriously enhanced. Johnny was not ecstatic, nor heroic, nor transcendental, nor very beautiful in his manliness; he was not a man to break his heart for love or to have his story written in an epic; but he was an affectionate, kindly, honest young man; and I think most girls might have done worse than take him.
Much as I love Johnny, I can’t think he would make Lily a good – or constant – husband. He is always falling prey to some artful female, always too happy to neglect his duties, always, in short, thinking of himself and the present moment. No, as a husband for Lily he will not do and so the author sentences them both to eternal singledom. Something I suspect they will both excel at. They are friendly, selfish creatures, much loved by others. They shall never lack for friends and never need to think of anyone else.
Johnny remains a touching figure and clearly one Trollope identified with. He is, Trollope points out to us early on, much improved from his earlier days:
With his own mother and sister, John Eames was in these days quite a hero. He was a hero with them now, because in his early boyish days there had been so little about him that was heroic.
He has worked his way up in the world, inherited a little money, and made a few more influential friends. He has a gift for making friends and, by instantly and carelessly sharing his heart and innermost thoughts with them, turning them into his devoted supporters. Those who know him a little better would wish him to work harder and with less complaints – both in matters of commerce and the heart. He shares his feelings and his dreams with everyone he meets – endearing, no doubt, but concerning if you are Lily Dale and constantly being petitioned on his behalf by near strangers. He still keeps less respectable company in town, with no true friends to reign him in and steer him in less dangerous directions (though Conway Dalrymple tries). Trollope, better than almost any writer I’ve found, understands how lonely and scary it is to be in your twenties and starting a career, hating the dull, grinding work, wanting to move up but not really wanting to expend the necessary effort. Any distraction is welcome and any chance to be heroic should be seized. God bless Johnny Eames for seizing what adventures come his way.
There are two major deaths in The Last Chronicle of Barset: the entirely expected passing of Mr Harding, after a long and satisfying life, and the unexpected death of Mrs Proudie, the bishop’s reviled wife. Mrs Proudie’s death comes as a shocking blow to her husband, who had only just begin tto assert himself after decades under the rule of that virago. Dr Proudie has always been a pitiable character but never moreso than here.
It was the peaceful departure of good, sweet Mr Harding that left me wiping away tears as I finished the novel. The archdeacon’s tribute to his father-in-law was what did it:
“I seem to have known him all my life,” said the archdeacon. “I have known him ever since I left college; and I have known him as one man seldom knows another. There is nothing he has done – as I believe nothing that he has thought – with which I have not been cognisant. I feel sure that he never had an impure fancy in his mind, or a faulty wish in his heart. His tenderness has surpassed the tenderness of woman; and yet, when occassion came for showing it, he had all the spirit of a hero…The fact is, he was never wrong. He couldn’t go wrong. He lacked guile, and he feared God – and a man who does both will never go far astray. I don’t think he coveted aught in his life – except a new case for his violincello and somebody to listen to him when he played it.”
I cried less for Mr Harding – so certain that he is going to his reward – than for the archdeacon. They never truly understood one another but they were family, friends and allies for so many years. My dear archdeacon will miss him.
In the end, this was not my favourite Barsetshire book; The Small House at Allington retains that honour. A dull romance and over-long plot about the stolen cheque detracted from the really excellent elements: the return of Lily Dale and Johnny Eames, the archdeacon’s emotional outbursts over any number of things, and the beautifully touching depiction of Mr Harding’s final days. Yes, not the best book in the series but still a wonderful conclusion to an absolutely absorbing saga.
I think you’ve convinced me to like Lily a little more than I did1 Anyway, you wrote about this book beautifully – something I haven’t quite managed to do at all Thank you!
Yay for Team Lily! If you do write about the book, I’ll look forward to reading your thoughts. I actually finished it back in early November and really enjoyed writing this review now and getting to think back on all the things I loved about it.
Great review of this wonderful set of novels. I read all of them this year, I couldn’t wait to see what happened next. Are you in the Anthony Trollope group on Facebook?
Thanks, Terra. And congratulations to you on reading all of the books this year! I’m not in the AT Group on Facebook – not much of a FB user.
I loved Johnny Eames too — I just read C.P. Snow’s excellent (and short!) biography of Trollope and he claims that Eames is really Trollope in his early years at the Post Office. However, I do get tired of these selfless girls who won’t marry the man they love because of some scandalous obstacle — they seem to appear repeatedly in Trollope and I found that tiresome. Can’t stop reading his books, though — three Pallisers left and about another 24 novels besides!
After reading Victoria Glendinning’s excellent biography of Trollope earlier this year, it’s not at all difficult to see young Trollope in Johnny. And I can tolerate the tiresome selflessness as long as it is coupled with a sense of how ridiculous it all is (a la Mary Thorne or Lucy Robarts). Happy reading!
A lovely post on one of my very favorite books.
“The morally uptight and perpetually cheerless perpetual curate” – that made me laugh! – and then this, “Crawley settles in to enjoy his martyrdom and alienate those friends who do try to assist him.” I don’t think anyone growing up with him as a father is going to show much spirit or humor, unfortunately.
I too cried for Mr Harding, even though I knew the end was coming. That sad progression – being barred from his beloved cathedral. And if anything were needed to seal my dislike of Griselda Dumbello (or Hartletop), it would be her treatment of her grandfather. I don’t think she even came to the funeral.
I appreciate Lily much more after reading The Small House and The Last Chronicle this year. And I really felt for her in this book, with everyone constantly pushing Johnny Eames at her. I thought Mrs Arabin was particularly out of line.
Griselda is the worst. Absolutely the worst. How could she possibly be the child of my beloved Grantlys?
So happy to hear you are warming to Lily! I love her because she’s not as perfect as Trollope’s other young females – though she is certainly more put upon in this book. Someone needs to tell Johnny how tacky it is to get others to do your courting for you!
Every time I read about your love of Trollope, I want to run out and read some for myself because it always sounds like exactly the kind of classic that I like. Then I remember that I tried to read Lady Anna this summer and got half way before I just stopped reading it and I still almost never just stop reading a book.
Lady Anna is definitely one of his lesser works. I’d start with the Barsetshire or Palliser books, or one of his timeless stand alones (The Way We Live Now, for example).
The Way We Live Now is the only one I’ve actually read and I remember really enjoying it. Lady Anna though…
Thanks for the suggestions!
You have inspired me to pick up Framley Parsonage. Have been side-tracked by reading the Palliser series & viewing the DVDs with friends but I think I prefer the ambience & characters in the Barchester books. I heard PD James say ‘The Small House at Allington’ was one of her most favourite books which she read annually.
BTW I loved your piece abt Lake Garda – bought a leather jacket in one of the lakeside villages back in 1989 – a favourite haunt for German holiday-makers thrn too.
PD James was very wise indeed!
Happy to hear you too have fond memories of Lake Garda. It was certainly a highlight of my trip and I’d love to go back one day.
[…] The Last Chronicle of Barset (1867) by Anthony Trollope A funny, poignant, generous novel to end Trollope’s extraordinary […]