Walter Scott's Kenilworth as a Historical Novel
Scott's conception of historical novel is different
from the common and traditional concept of history. Generally speaking, a historical
novelist enlivens the great historical
episodes in his novel but Scott is not so much interested in historical episodes
as he is interested in historical
characters. He never showed history in the making: he chose to show
characters as they were made by history. He wanted to produce the spirit of English history more than the flesh and
form.
Kenilworth
is a historical novel in the sense
that it is set against a historical background. The time is that of Queen
Elizabeth's reign. The characters bear historical names, and the main events
are also distilled from history. Above all, the spirit of Elizabeth's age is
exhibited most artistically and realistically.
A number of historical
inaccuracies can be mentioned in Kenilworth. Scott always treated history
with perfect disregard of inconvenient facts and dates. There are many
illustrations of this in Kenilworth. Robert Dudley was the fifth son of the
Duke of Northumberland, who was executed by Queen Mary for his attempt to crown
his son, Lord Guildford Dudley, the husband of Lady Jane Grey. In the year
1550, Robert Dudley had married Amy Robsart when he himself was but nineteen
years old. The ceremony contained no element of secrecy, Edward VI himself
being present.
Thus in1560, Dudley had been married for ten years but
Kenilworth represents the
marriage as of recent occurrence, and Amy's father and lover in distress because
they had not yet been able to find tidings of her whereabouts. Dudley was not
at this time Earl of Leicester, title being conferred on him in 1563, three
years after Amy's death, when Elizabeth put him forward as a suitable husband
for Mary Queen of Scots.
There are, as historical
evidence, letters, written by the then Spanish ambassadors in England. In
1559, De Feria wrote to Philip of Spain that Elizabeth was "enamoured of
my Lord Robert Dudley, and will never let him from her side. His wife has a
cancer on the breast and the Queen only waits till she dies to marry him."
Another letter written by De Quandra in 1560, states
that Cecil had told the writer, "Dudley had made himself master of the
business of State and of the person of the Queen.....and that they were thinking
of destroying Lord Robert's wife ..... They had given out that she was very
ill, but she was not ill at all; she was very well, and taking care not to be
poisoned."
The conclusion of Kenilworth
is mysterious. It is different from the historical records. Leicester
determines to kill his wife but relents; his servants go beyond their orders
and kill her before their master can prevent them. In real life, however,
Varney and Foster have no share in the tragedy and no evidence against them has
been found. Scott in his notes has accepted this fact. He says. "If faith
is to be put in epitaphs, Anthony Foster was something the very reverse of the
characters represented in the novel."
Scott has also altered Sir
Walter Raleigh out of history. Though the gallant incident of the cloak
is the traditional and his historical account of this celebrated statesman's
rise at court, but Raleigh's pride and boldness have been put to a stake in the
novel. In his descriptions of the Cumnor Hall and the Kenilworth Castle, Scott
makes use of his poetic gifts; his imagination overpowers his sense of fact.
The bedsteads with their furniture, chairs, stools, cushions, carpets, pictures
have been described with capitalized details.
Scott was competent to deal
with history. He knew a lot of English history. He was called the
'glutton of books,' as he had read almost all the great romances, old plays,
and epic poetry. He had the contemporary life, such as most of Miss
Edgeworth's. His handling of history in Kenilworth may not
be precisely historical, but it is plausibly historical. He aims at depicting
the manners and customs' of the time of Queen Elizabeth.
The main interest in Scott's
historical novels is often not historical and the historical interest
is at least always divided with purely
fictitious interest. In Waverley, the hero and heroine are historical ; and the
same is true of Old Mortality, Ivanhoe, The Fortunes of Nigel
and The Abbot. Kenilworth
is different only in appearance. Amy Robsart bears a historical name but she is
really the typical tragic heroine, and Leicester is the conventional villain
with some facts taken from Dudley's life for a historical semblance. The
attention is thus distracted from Elizabeth, Mary, James, Cromwell, and the
young Stuart Pretenders. In adopting this method of dealing with history, which
was in part Shakespeare's also, Scott was able to give within the vaguely
defined boundaries of fact and legend, a very free play to his imagination.
Hence Kenilworth
is realistic when it deals with lowly life, but the prevailing mood is romantic
with historical bias. It is not a pure
history; it is a beautiful blend of history and romance.
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