Thomas Love Peacock’s Nightmare Abbey was published the same year as Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey and is similarly a satire against the heightened emotions of the romantic era and the gothic novel. While both are still in print and read, I can see why the Austen book is the greater read.
Northanger Abbey is a brilliantly done romance that skews gothic tropes and features fully fleshed out characters and a genuinely interesting storyline, Nightmare Abbey is a series of in-jokes played out in scenes that are strung along from each other. If it’s inspired anything, it’s more like the Wodehouse Blandings series, a group of eccentrics hang out in an old building.
Mr Glowry married a woman who wanted him for his money. Having received it, she shrank away from all other sources of pleasure and became a very cruel woman whose death makes him a “very consolate” widower. He retreated into his Lincolnshire hall where he surrounds himself with servants with long faces and miserable names. His son, Scythrop is a self-proclaimed genius (based on Shelley) whose book of deep philosophy was only bought by seven people, who he regards as the people most likely to start a new revolution.
Mr Glowry’s brother-in-law, Mr Hilary, is the only cheerful person in the house. He’s staying there with the hopes he can get his daughter, Celestina to marry Scythrop. She loves to torment her would-be lover, alternately spurning him and luring him on.
Mr Toobad is a guest, a nutty priest who shouts about the devil owning the world, it’s a hobby-horse that he won’t get off of. He wants to wed his daughter Celinda to Scythrop, but she’s gone missing on being told what to do. (It turns out the place she hides is Nightmare Abbey, because she was one of Scythrop’s seven readers and doesn’t know he was the person intended for her…Scythrop flits between these too loves.)
Then there’s Mr Flosky, a visitor based on Coleridge, who loves gloomy things, declaring that the world isn’t as good as it used to be and refuses to have any thoughts or ideas that make sense. He prefers his philosophies to be mysterious and murky and at one point stops talking because, he finds himself “unintentionally trespassing within the limits of common sense”. That’s the only time he stops talking. There’s also Mr Listless, a man too posh and lazy to do anything, he even uses his servant as many people use AI, to do tasks and remember things he could probably remember himself.
For a brief time there’s a Byron analogue, Mr Cypress and there’s Mr Asterias, my favourite character, a scientist on fish who is obsessed by mer-people and determined to catch one.
These strange characters bumble about and have conversations which reveal their various idiosyncrasies and ridiculousness. There’s a slight plot about Scythrop hiding his loves from each other which has a good comic pay-off at the end.
The main pleasure of the book is the way the characters rub up against Rach other and the way the book is told. It has a prissy, self-satisfied tine with long pseudo-philosophical sentences filled with unusual turns of phrase. I love the “consolate widower”, a character’s “atrabilarian temperament” and some one else who is “jerremitaylorically pathetic”. My spell check hates this review.
Essentially the author is having fun. He’s having fun with poking at people he knows and likes, at exaggerating their fondness for melancholy and mystery and he’s also having fun with words. That fun does come across still, but it is dulled over time as the immediate objects of ridicule are thoughts and people of the (increasingly distant) past. Because the book pokes fun at universal human frailties, such as taking confusing for deep, it is still funny - but because those frailties are expressed in extremely time-specific ways, the fun is blunted.
It’s not for everybody, and I’m glad it was short but it was an enjoyable little nugget and I shall read some more Thomas Love Peacock at some point.












