Introduction
The Life and Opinions of Tristram
Shandy, Gentleman (or, more briefly, Tristram Shandy) is
a novel by Laurence Sterne. It was published in nine volumes, the first two
appearing in 1759, and seven others following over the next 10 years.
Summary
The action covered in Tristram
Shandy spans the years 1680-1766. Sterne obscures the story's underlying
chronology, however, by rearranging the order of the various pieces of his
tale. He also subordinates the basic plot framework by weaving together a
number of different stories, as well as such disparate materials as essays,
sermons, and legal documents. There are, nevertheless, two clearly discernible
narrative lines in the book.
The first is the plot sequence that
includes Tristram's conception, birth, christening, and accidental
circumcision. (This sequence extends somewhat further in Tristram's treatment
of his "breeching," the problem of his education, and his first and
second tours of France, but these events are handled less extensively and are
not as central to the text.) It takes six volumes to cover this chain of
events, although comparatively few pages are spent in actually advancing such a
simple plot. The story occurs as a series of accidents, all of which seem
calculated to confound Walter Shandy's hopes and expectations for his son. The
manner of his conception is the first disaster, followed by the flattening of his
nose at birth, a misunderstanding in which he is given the wrong name, and an
accidental run-in with a falling window-sash. The catastrophes that befall
Tristram are actually relatively trivial; only in the context of Walter
Shandy's eccentric, pseudo-scientific theories do they become calamities.
The second major plot consists of
the fortunes of Tristram's Uncle Toby. Most of the details of this story are
concentrated in the final third of the novel, although they are alluded to and
developed in piecemeal fashion from the very beginning. Toby receives a wound
to the groin while in the army, and it takes him four years to recover. When he
is able to move around again, he retires to the country with the idea of
constructing a scaled replica of the scene of the battle in which he was
injured. He becomes obsessed with re-enacting those battles, as well as with
the whole history and theory of fortification and defense. The Peace of Utrecht
slows him down in these "hobby-horsical" activities, however, and it
is during this lull that he falls under the spell of Widow Wadman. The novel
ends with the long-promised account of their unfortunate affair.
Synopsis and style
As its title suggests, the book is
ostensibly Tristram's narration of his life story. But it is one of the central
jokes of the novel that he cannot explain anything simply, that he must make
explanatory diversions to add context and colour to his tale, to the extent
that we do not even reach Tristram's own birth until Volume III.
Consequently, apart from Tristram
as narrator, the most familiar and important characters in the book are his
father Walter, his mother, his Uncle Toby, Toby's servant Trim, and a
supporting cast of popular minor characters including the chambermaid,
Susannah, Doctor Slop and the parson, Yorick.
Most of the action is concerned
with domestic upsets or misunderstandings, which find humour in the opposing
temperaments of Walter—splenetic, rational and somewhat sarcastic—and Uncle
Toby, who is gentle, uncomplicated and a lover of his fellow man.
In between such events, Tristram as
narrator finds himself discoursing at length on sexual practices, insults, the
influence of one's name, noses, as well as explorations of obstetrics, siege
warfare and philosophy, as he struggles to marshal his material and finish the
story of his life.
Though Tristram is always present
as narrator and commentator, the book contains surprisingly little of his life,
only the story of a trip through France and accounts of the four comical
mishaps which shaped the course of his life from an early age:
·
While still only a homunculus, Tristram's
implantation within his mother's womb was disturbed. At the very moment of
procreation, his mother asked his father if he had remembered to wind the
clock. The distraction and annoyance led to the disruption of the proper
balance of humors necessary to conceive a well-favored child.
·
One of his father's pet theories was that a
large and attractive nose was important to a man making his way in life. In a
difficult birth, Tristram's nose was crushed by Dr. Slop's forceps.
·
A second theory of his father was that a
person's name exerted enormous influence over that person's nature and
fortunes, with the worst possible name being Tristram. In view of the previous
accidents, Tristram's father decreed that the boy would receive an especially
auspicious name, Trismegistus. Susannah mangled the name in conveying it to the
curate, and the child was christened Tristram.
·
As a toddler, Tristram suffered an accidental
circumcision, when Susannah let a window sash fall as he urinated out of the
window because his chamberpot was missing.
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