Betteredge’s meticulous, loquacious personality allows Collins to offer the reader important background information about the novel’s central characters. As the Verinders’ land manager and then butler, Betteredge virtually worships his employers, and clearly he is beloved by them, too. This illustrates how class relations transform into personal attitudes, but also how Betteredge sits in the middle between his aristocratic employers and the servants over whom he presides. His marriage shows both his utterly practical mindset (with everything except
Robinson Crusoe, his one pleasure in life) and his regressive views on gender: he does not bother to include or consider Selina’s perspective on the matter. Indeed, in Victorian Britain marriage was often more about property and class than about love, and these two tendencies remain in tension throughout the book.