Fainting and weeping As the novel as a legitimate form emerged through the 18th century, sensationalist and theatrical elements of fiction were being explored as grossly popular characteristics of the Gothic. A common trope of the Gothic novel was excess sentimentality –
The Castle of Wolfenbach is no exception. This presents itself as inability in its heroines to take control of their worldly bodies in the face of supernatural terror, villainous deeds or romantic gestures. Heroines swoon, weep and act "as if enraptured, delirious, or frenzied" whenever confronted with something extraordinary. In
The Castle of Wolfenbach, the heroine Matilda Weimar and the secondary heroine, Victoria Wolfenbach, are subject to regular fits of fainting. Sometimes they are saved from losing consciousness by material objects in their path as they fall. It could be a chair ("She sunk fainting into a chair.") smelling salts ("She turned sick and faint, was obliged to have recourse to her salts.") or best of all, the arms of a lover ("down she dropped, and had not the Count been attentive to her motions, and caught her in his arms, she must have fallen to the ground.") More often than not, however, the heroines have no dashing men, furniture or chemicals to protect their fall and must finish their frenzy of sentimentality on the cold, merciless ground: "[I] fell senseless," or "in a few minutes afterwards I fell senseless from my seat". While fainting in
The Castle of Wolfenbach is excessive, weeping is still more so. Victoria and Matilda weep four times as often as they faint; their tears are as varied in cause as copious in amount. They deplore their fates: "'What can I – what ought I to do?' cried she, shedding a torrent of tears"; they exit a room heroically: "She quitted the apartment with a flood of tears"; they express relief: "A friendly burst of tears relieved her beating heart"; they show gratitude: "Matilda's grateful heart overflowed; speech indeed was not lent her, but her tears, her expressive looks forcibly conveyed the language she could not utter"; it acts as an emotional outlet: "I must have vent for my feelings, or I shall be opprest to death. She burst into tears"; Tears also accompany mourning of dead children, reunion of lost family members, and hearing and telling of personal tragedies. Wherever she can, Parsons has characters weep. In fact Matilda and Victoria spend most of their time alternately weeping and fainting, as though they were favourite pastimes. As William Beckford satirises the nonsense of Gothic romance in
Azemia and Jane Austen the dangers of subscribing to a Gothic lifestyle in
Northanger Abbey, the fits of fainting and weeping, so common in the works of Parsons and her contemporaries, are parodied in countless responses, from 1807's anonymous
Men and Women, to
Eaton Stannard Barrett's
The Heroine. Barrett's heroine is named Cherry, and for her the model of a heroine in the Gothic sense is one who "blushes to the tips of her fingers, and when mere misses would laugh, she faints. Besides, she has tears, sighs, and half-sighs, always ready." The concept of the Gothic heroine as a woman who alternately faints and weeps was rooted in literary and popular culture. This parodying of the heroine is not baseless. As scholar Angela Wright has commented, "The character of a Gothic heroine is seemingly a
tabula rasa which exists to be over-written by emotions and overwhelming memories." It is as if the Gothic heroine were a blank slate, and all that was needed to fill it was emotion and tragic circumstances. This recipe that Parsons utilises unabashed for Victoria and Matilda. It is this poor characterisation, based solely on emotionalism, that causes many to criticise the Gothic novelist as inferior, and gives way to easy parody.
The Castle of Wolfenbach walks a fine line between realistic and theatrical. As scholar Robert Kiely has pointed out, Gothic abounds in theatricality and "the works [of romantic novelists] often seem about to turn into plays or poems." It is almost impossible not to parody such unrealistic, sentimental plots. With fainting and weeping, the most theatrically ridiculous occurrence is when Matilda Weimar saves herself from fainting by a "copious flood of tears". Furthermore, the plot seems as if it could be easily given a Shakespearean format. It contains heroines on a quest, star-crossed lovers, property-scheming villains, bumbling servants, and "ghosts" on top of them all –
Hamlet,
Romeo and Juliet,
King Lear and ''All's Well That Ends Well'' rolled into one; that is, if it were in the least bit realistically theatrical, rather than irredeemably ridiculous in its theatricality.
Finding an identity Another theme in
The Castle of Wolfenbach and often in Gothic novels as a genre, is secret parentage, unknown identity and questing to find oneself. As the Introduction to the Valancourt Edition points out, "[Matilda's] challenge in the novel is to discover the secret of her birth, find her parents, and inherit her rightful property." Robert Miles, in his genealogy of Gothic writing, claims that in these novels "the usurped and disposed find their rights restored; the lost are found, and a true genealogy reasserts itself." In fact, these things happen to Matilda; she discovers her parentage, finds her mother and inherits her noble class title. The Gothic and Romantic genres are obsessed with perfect, unsullied aristocratic lineages. It is Matilda's unwritten and unknown history that keeps her so long apart from her true love, the Count de Bouville; she cannot admit that she loves him until she discovers her ancestry: "She was of noble birth; no unlawful offspring, no child of poverty: then she thought of the Count.". As often the case with heroines, most of her friends are convinced of her goodness and beauty even before her noble lineage comes to light. Matilda's true identity is hinted sporadically:
Marquis de Melfort: If there is a mystery in her birth, time may yet bring it to light (p. 71).
Marquis de Melfort: I have no doubt but one time or other a discovery will take place to her advantage (p. 78).
Matilda: Yes, I have a pre-sentiment that I am no base-born unworthy offspring (p. 83).
Marquis de Melfort: For my own part I have little doubt but her birth is noble; her person, her figure, the extraordinary natural selection she possesses confirms my opinion that so many graces seldom belong to a mean birth or dishonest connexions (p. 72).
Marchioness de Melfort: You sprung not from humble or dishonest parents, – the virtues you possess are hereditary ones, doubt it not, my dear Matilda; if nobleness of birth can add any lustre to qualities like your's, you will one day possess that advantage (p. 124).
Mother Magdalene: 'tis possible you have parents still living, who may one day fold you to their bosoms.... you have no right to dispose of your future destiny, whilst there is the least probable chance you may be reclaimed (p. 148). == Publication history ==