Sunday
morning is here again, so I shall try to gather my thoughts and decipher my
notes and come up with a few brief comments on some tales from The Persephone Book of Short Stories.
Actually, I visited my Younger Daughter in London on Thursday and planned on
calling at the shop and treating myself to a couple of volumes when, but I left
the address at home! However, I’m planning a mini-tour round the Bloomsbury area
on a future visit (I like to have something to look forward to), and I might
get Cheerful Weather for a Wedding, and A Writer’s Diary, neither of which is a
short story, and that is what this post is supposed to be about. So here goes… Three
from the early 1940s…
It All begins Again, by Helen Hull, published in 1941, was not
one of my favourites. Set in America (just before the US joined WW2) it centres
on Mary Bristol, now in her mid-seventies, widowed, and recovering from
illness. Despite having made a decision never to live with any of her children,
she agrees to spend the summer with her daughter Vera, son-in-law Clem at their
country house. Mary is reluctant to fall in with Vera’s plan, but lacks the
strength to offer any opposition.
Vera was
like that, insistent and unsubtle in projecting upon someone else the necessity
for doing what she herself wished. Mary liked showing her up, and perhaps one
reason she didn’t want to live with her daughter was that she knew she’d have
to hold her tongue. It was one thing to catch Vera up in an afternoon call,
when Vera could take her injured feelings home and forget them in some new
scheme. But under one roof!
That
doesn’t augur well for the future, does it? A happy family life would not
appear to be on the cards at all. And what kind of relationship does Mary have
with Vera? What kind of mother likes to show her daughter up?
As
news of the war in Europe filters through Mary remembers other times and other
conflicts. She recalls her childhood, when he father returned from a Southern
jail, sick and shattered by his experiences fighting in the Civil War. She
thinks about her husband Will, and Tom, their elder son, who died after WW1, ‘the
neat surgery job done on his interior after Verdun being inadequate for many
years of service’. And she
listens to her grandchildren, Hilda and Bill, both engaged in conflicts with their parents as they try to select their own paths through life
and love.
In
some ways Mary reminded me of Lady Slane in Vita Sackville-West’s All Passion
Spent, perhaps it’s simply because they are both elderly women who don’t really
like their grown-up children much, reflecting on the past. But I didn’t find
Mary a very sympathetic character (I think it was that early comment about
liking to show her daughter up that put me off), and the tone is darker and
bleaker. Mary takes a wider view of humanity than Lady Slane does, and she
doesn’t like what she sees. She’s not looking to recapture the girl she once
was, or to achieve personal peace, harmony and a balance in life – she’s
searching for answers to the chaos around her, and her bitterness and despair
shows through. There's a sense of disillusionment here I think.
A land
where a man can be free, and his children after him, she thought. Free? We have
thought the world was run for us, that we could go on turning always in those
narrow, petty, selfish cells. We are losing them again, peace freedom. We had
the only as a promise. My father, my sons, and now these children. They have
lost them, having no dream to hold them safe, to strive to keep them. They are
blind and empty, passionless…
Defeat, by Kay Boyle, was written in the same year
as It All begins Again,but is much more to my taste. We’re in Europe, watching
French soldiers making their way home after the fall of France.
They had
found their way back from different places, by different means, some on
bicycle, some by bus, some over the mountains on foot, coming home to the
Alpes-Maritime from Rennes, or from Clermont-Ferrand, or from Lyons, or from
any part of France, and looking as incongruous to modern defeat as survivors of
the Confederate Army might have looked, transplanted to this year and place
(with their spurs still on and their soft-brimmed, dust-whitened hats), limping
wanly back, half dazed and not yet having managed to get the story of what
happened straight. Only, this time, they were the men of that tragically
unarmed and undirected force which had been the French Army once but was no
longer, returning to what orators might call reconstruction but which they knew
could never be the same.
Isn’t
that a haunting scene? And doesn’t it paint the image so clearly? Boyle tells
you everything you need to know about the general situation, then moves
seamlessly into the way it affects individuals. Here we have two escaping
soldiers, who meet with great kindness from a courageous young schoolmistress
with French flags and red, white and blue bunting – an act of defiance against
the Nazi Occupation. She gives the fresh clothing, and food, and they agree
that ‘a country isn’t defeated as long as its women aren’t’. There is more
kindness at a farm, where the duo eat bread and soup, and enjoy a glass of red
wine before being shown to the attic where they can sleep.
Then,
in a small town, on July the Fourteenth - the French national holiday – grim reality
intrudes, and you suddenly realise that not all women were as brave as the
schoolmistress, and that many people did what they could to survive, even if it
meant fraternising with the enemy. After his return home one of the soldiers
describes what happened, and is surprisingly charitable as he tries to make
sense of events. But he has tears in eyes as he thinks about it.
I
loved this story. It was sad and reflective, offering a very personal view of
life in France in the early days of Occupation. And I found it especially
interesting read alongside Vere Hodgson’s wartime diaries, Few Eggs, and No
Oranges, and the comments she makes about the Fall of France, and the Vichy
Government, and General de Gaulle, and the Occupation. I must find a decent history about war-time
France, and try to find out a little more.
Finally,
I can’t forget Mollie Panter-Downes’
Good Evening, Mrs Craven, written in 1942, which features
in a collection of her short stories published under this title (also produced
by Persephone), which I reviewed here,
and I think every single one of the tales is an absolute gem: the author’s
prose and characterisation are faultless. You can tell I’m a huge fan of Mollie
Panter-Downes, and if you read nothing else in The Persephone Book of Short
Stories, you should read this one. It is quite, quite perfect. Better still, buy the MPD collection, then you can read them all!
You're so right about the MPD collection - absolutely wonderful writing. I'm aching to read the peacetime collection now!
ReplyDeleteMe too! I think she is brilliant - she is such an understated writer, and says so much, in very few words.
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