‘Ready?’
enquired Sheila, coming in to look her over. She herself was highly coloured,
with dark curls, wet lips, green earrings and a full bosom. She wore a green
gown and her black coat with civet cat collar.
Oh, Miss
Spence, you do look lovely!’ cried Alice.
Sheila
didn’t know what to say about Alice.
Her
reaction is unsurprising because poor Alice, the central character in Dorothy Whipple’s short story A Lovely Time, definitely does not
look lovely. She is wearing a black dress which hangs from her shoulders just
as it hung from its hanger.
...in fact
there was little difference between the two means of support, for although Alice
was twenty, she as small and bony as a child...
An Eton crop was a very short,slicked back hairstyle, made famous by singer Josephine Baker in the late 1920s. |
Beneath
it she is wearing her new woolly vest, with a piece cut out of the top so it
will not show (but it does, as we discover later in the evening). Over the
dress she places what she considers the crowning glory of her outfit: a
strawberry pink, artificial satin cloak with a ruched collar, hand-made by her
sister. She has used lots of powder, lipstick and eyeblack on her face, but doesn’t
know what to do with her hair – so she lets Sheila persuade her to go for the
Eton Crop look, plastering it with borrowed Stickit (which is like boiled
starch) which causes the hair at the back of her head to rise’ like a stiff hackle’.
Alice
comes from Ilkeston, but since moving to London she has taken to calling
herself Alys, to rhyme with knees. Her job in an office barely brings in enough
money to pay the rent for her small, cold room, and there is little left over
for food, and none for luxuries. She never goes out and has no social life,
since she has no friends in London. So she is delighted when Miss Spence (the
girls in the lodging house address each other very formally) asks her to make
up a foursome with two men for a night out, with dinner at a restaurant, and a
trip to a night club.
She sang
as she took off her work-a-day clothes. Fancy Miss Spence asking her! It was
most kind, because she hardly knew her really and yet she called her darling
and asked her out to dinner and a night club. Oh, London life had begun! She
had been lonely, she had been dull, she had been cold and felt the food at Vale
House inadequate, but now the lights had gone up, the fun, the excitement, the
experience she had come for were going to begin!
What
Alice doesn’t realise is that she is ‘Hobson’s Choice’, and has only been
invited because another girl can’t (or won’t) go. She has no social graces, no
style, no conversation, and is shy, inexperienced, and unsure of herself, so an
evening with Sheila and her smart men friends is bound to be a disaster.
Dorothy Whipple. |
Finally
the night ends as it began with Alice, her dreams shattered, writing to her
sister. Unable to tell the truth about her lonely life in the big city, her
inadequacy, and her fears that she will never fit in, she says the only thing
she can: “I had a lovely time.’
In some ways, although their lives are very
different, she reminded me of Julia in EMDelafield’s Holiday Group (another of the tales in The Persephone Book of Short Stories), desperately trying to
convince herself that everything is wonderful. On the face of it Alice is more
naive, but when it comes down to it she is a realist and is better able to face
the truth about herself and her life, even though she is left bitter and
disillusioned. She may fool her family back home, but she can’t fool herself.
That's so *sad*. (I wonder if anyone's done a Book of Sad Short Stories! So many of the Persephone ones I've read reviews of would seem to fit in.) I really must start this book - I love the idea that they are tasters for wider exploration.
ReplyDeleteVicki, a lot of these stories do seem to be sad, and many of them are about outsiders with a bleak future ahead of them, which makes it sound a bit grim, but there is plenty of humour and wit as well. You are right about it being a taster - it's helping me get acquainted with the short story genre, and it is an introduction to some authors I've never read before.
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