It was
lovely, thought Mrs Miniver, nodding good-bye to the flower-woman and carrying
her big sheaf of chrysanthemums down the street with a kind of ceremonious joy,
as though it were a cornucopia; it was lovely, this settling down again, this
tidying away of the summer into its box, this taking up of the thread of one’s
life where the holidays (irrelevant interlude) had made one drop it. Not that
she didn’t enjoy the holidays: but she
always felt - and it was, perhaps, the measure of peculiar happiness – a little
relieved when they were over. Her normal life pleased her so well that she was
half-afraid to step out of its frame in se one day she should find herself
unable to get back. The spell might break, the atmosphere be impossible to recapture.
Mrs Miniver, as you can tell from
the opening passage of the novel which bears her name, is a fortunate woman,
and she is well aware of that, and is always prepared to count her blessings.
But wealthy, happily married women face trials and tribulations just like
anyone else, even though they may pale into insignificance compared to what
else was going on in the world. Jan
Struther’s classic tale of family life is utterly charming - forget about
that dreadfully sentimental old film, and read the book! Mrs Miniver is
actually a rather endearing character, and I found her easy to warm to, despite
the difference in life-style (no say nothing of income) and a gap of well over
50 years.
It’s
set in the months immediately before WW2, and takes us through to the onset of the
conflict, ending at Christmas 1939, by which time Mrs Miniver is doing war work
in London, leaving staff at her country home to care for seven evacuees and her
three children (when they are not away at school. To be honest, for much of the
time you wouldn’t know how grave the situation is. But her tone gets more
serious as things worsen, and there are unexpected glimpses of the way life
changes. She describes the difficulties of getting around on a moonless night
in the blackout when, she says, one ‘confines oneself to neighbours who are
within groping distance’, and in the evening there is so little traffic that ‘people’s
footsteps on the pavements make quite a loud
clatter’. And she mentions the beneficial effect on people’s health, telling
us:
And apropos (literally for once) des bottes, you’ve no idea how all this walking has improved people’s figures. Men with incipient pots, women who were developing Dunlop ridges above the belt, are now sylphlike.
I
just love that description.
However,
for me the most moving and thought provoking comment on the war is her account
of the lack of children. My mother’s family took in evacuees, and an entire
school was moved out of London to the small Surrey town where she lived, so my
view is based on her memories, and the impact made by this sudden influx of
children and their teachers. But, of course, those extra youngsters in that one
place meant fewer young people somewhere else, a fact which I’ve never considered
before – and I don’t think I’ve seen it referred to elsewhere. Anyway, Struther, writing as Mrs Miniver,
confides:
The other
thing I miss, terribly, is children. Not only my own - I do at least see them
(and plenty of others) at weekends: but children in general, as an ingredient of
the town’s population, a sort of leven. It may be different in some parts of
London, but around here they have acquired a rarity interest. They used to be
daisies and are now bee orchises.
Her
view was interesting, especially as I am taking a leisurely stroll through Vere
Hodgson’s wartime diaries. But this book isn’t about the war, or politics, or
current affairs: it’s about people, and the way they react with each other, and
the odd things that make us love our families, and above all it’s about Mrs
Miniver’s thoughts on Life, the Universe and Everything. And that’s where it’s
strength lies, because it’s warm, and funny, and very joyous and life affirming
and, surprisingly, it’s very easy to identify with Mrs Miniver (especially as
she has the ability to laugh at herself) and her concerns with her family and
the small things of everyday life.
Like
many other novels issued at this time, Mrs Miniver was originally published as
a regular column in a newspaper. Stuther, a poet and essay writer, was asked to
produce pieces to liven up the court page in The Times! Peter Feming (Ian’s
brother) wanted her to create an ‘ordinary sort of woman who leads an ordinary
sort of life – rather like yourself’. Her pieces, gathered into a book in
October 1939, were immensely popular, and are thought to have been based on her
own life and family.
They
mostly take the form of straight forward, short narratives, with one topic for
each chapter, but my 1989 Virago edition includes four ‘letters’ written by Mrs Miniver after the
book’s original.
There’s
no overall plot, so if you like a book with a strong storyline, this is not for
you, as it’s really a series of reflections on different topics and situations.
Funniest of all is Mrs Miniver’s account of how she and her husband track down
a mystery smell in their country cottage. They fear it might be drains, or a
dead rat – but it turns out to be two boxes of fishing bait (once alive, but
now in an indescribable state) left behind in a bag abandoned by their eldest
son!
A portrait of Jan Struther by Fritz Reichl, in the National Portrait Gallery, |