Henry Tilney

Fictional character
Henry Tilney
Jane Austen character
In-universe information
GenderMale
OccupationClergyman
FamilyGeneral Tilney
RelativesMiss Eleanor Tilney; Captain Frederick Tilney
HomeNorthanger Abbey/Woodston Parsonage

Henry Tilney is the leading man in Jane Austen's 1817 novel Northanger Abbey. The younger son of a local landowner, Tilney is comfortably placed as a beneficed clergyman on his father's estate.

Character

Tilney, with his teasing yet kind-hearted mentorship of Catherine, has been considered the nicest of Austen's heroes.[1] At the same time, with his knowledge of muslin and of Gothic novels, he is the least masculine of them.[2] Overshadowed by his military father and elder brother, he is a strangely passive figure, falling for Catherine only after she falls for him,[3] and with his father as the driving force behind her coming to the Abbey.[4] Nevertheless, he does not lack moral courage, as he shows with his marriage to Catherine at the book's close.[5]

Origins

Frank Swinnerton considered that, as a teasing mentor, knowledgeable on female matters, Tilney might represent a disguised version of the author herself.[6] Later critics, more cautiously, have seen him as representing in part the author's "voice".[7]

Sydney Smith, who is known to have overlapped with Austen in Bath at the close of the eighteenth century, and whose witty conversation resembles Tilney's, has also been seen as a possible model for the character.[8] So too has Austen's witty brother Henry: “affectionate & kind as well as entertaining....he cannot help being amusing”.[9]

See also

  • Father complex
  • Hugh Blair
  • Silver fork novel
  • William Sawrey Gilpin

References

  1. ^ G. B. Stern, Talking of Jane Austen (London 1946) p.73
  2. ^ Claire Harman, Jane's Fame (Edinburgh 2009) p. 249
  3. ^ R. Jenkyns, A Fine Brush on Ivory (Oxford 2007) p. 135-6
  4. ^ E. Copeland, The Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen (Cambridge 1997) p. 38-9
  5. ^ G. B. Stern, Talking of Jane Austen (London 1946) p.153
  6. ^ G. B. Stern, Talking of Jane Austen (London 1946) p.74
  7. ^ B. Hardy, Reading of Jane Austen (2000) p. 166
  8. ^ B. Benedict ed. Jane Austen: Northanger Abbey (Cambridge 2006) Introduction p. xxv
  9. ^ Deidre Le Faye ed., Jane Austen's Letters (Oxford 1996) p. 101-2 and Introduction p. x
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  • Sense and Sensibility (1811)
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