Virago Modern Classic Number 1: This is the 1991 edition, with an introduction by Elizabeth Bowen. The cover shows a detail from Girl and Flowers by Dod Procter. |
Written
in 1933, it’s a fictionalised account of White’s own childhood, telling the
story of Nanda Grey’s time at a repressive Catholic school. Her fall from
grace, and the way her spirit is finally broken make for painful reading. And
these days the rules governing the girls’ daily lives would probably be
regarded as an abuse of human rights. Is
this an accurate portrayal of a convent school I wonder? Did nuns really treat their
pupils like this? How could they be so cruel in the name of religion? What
about compassion? And whatever happened to the idea of a loving, forgiving God?
It’s
not that the nuns at the Convent of the Five Wounds are physically cruel to
their young charges: they play psychological mind games which seems somehow
worse. And there’s a kind of drip-feed brainwashing because everything in the
school relates to God – even the rooms have religious names, and there are pictures
and statues, and edifying (but often horribly gruesome) stories about saints
and sinners.
The
nuns, who see themselves as instruments of God, demand unquestioning obedience
to themselves, to the school, and to God. And they have very odd ideas about education.
Mother Radcliffe, the Mistress of Discipline, explains:
We work
to-day to turn out, not accomplished young women, nor agreeable wives, but
soldiers of Christ, accustomed to hardship and ridicule and ingratitude.
Nanda (short for Fernanda) is nine when she arrives at the exclusive girls’ boarding school. She is ‘one of those children who cannot help behaving well’. She wants to please, to fit in, but she is too good, which makes the nuns suspicious. t’s surprising how quickly she adapts: when her parents visit at the end of the first week she already feels ‘unpicked and resewn and made over to a different pattern’.
And
there’s a lot of making over to be done. There are all kinds of regulations.
There are no
mirrors, the girls must never be naked, and they sleep flat on
their backs, with hands crossed on their breast, so if the Lord calls them in
the night they are ready! Close friendships are forbidden, so girls cannot go
about in pairs. Letters to and from home are vetted, and the girls are watched
all the time.
Author Antonia White. |
At
night the girls opt to show their piety by placing stockings in the form of a
cross on top of their neatly folded uniforms. And they indulge in small
mortifications, like washing in cold water, and putting salt instead of sugar
on their rhubarb, or stones in their shoes.
Lessons,
like the girls, must bend to the will of God. Most story books are deemed
unsuitable (unless written by Catholics); science is a dubious area, because
most scientists are wrong; poetry is fine for the glory of God – but not for
personal enjoyment. But poetry and passionate friendships arouse feelings in
Nanda that her religion cannot provide. Even her First Communion, eagerly
awaited as the biggest day in her life, proves a disappointment. Nevertheless,
her faith doesn’t waver:
She accepted
the Catholic Church whole-heartedly and tried hard to mould herself into the
proper shape of a young Catholic girl. […] She could never, she knew, break
away without a sense of mutilation. In her four years at Lippington it had
grown into every fibre of her nature; she could not eat or sleep or read or
play without relating every action to her secret life as a Christian and a
Catholic. She rejoiced in it and
rebelled against it.
That
seems to reflect the experience of many Catholic writers – perhaps it’s that
tension which enables them to be creative?
Despite
her efforts to fit in, Nanda has an independent streak, which sets her on a
collision course, and when she is finally sent away, on her 14th birthday,
Mother Radcliffe tells her:
Every will
must be broken completely and re-set before it can be at one with God’s will.
And there is no other way. That is what true education, as we see it here at Lippington,
means.
There
are all kinds of things I haven’t mentioned: the girls themselves, who are all
utterly believable; the constant ringing of bells; curtseying; gloves; the
smell of beeswax and incense; cabbage drowned in vinegar, and the sense of
being shut away in an enclosed community which becomes more real than the world
outside.
Virago non-fiction:There's Something About A Convent Girl, published in 1991. |
After
finishing Frost in May, I re-read There’s
Something About A Convent Girl, a Virago anthology edited by Jackie Bennet
and Rosemary Forgan, because it makes an interesting companion piece, containing a
brief history of convent schools, and varied recollections from former pupils.
Some contributors, like Maeve Binchy and, surprisingly, Germaine Greer seem to have happy
memories of their schooldays. Others, like playwright Mary O’Malley (author of
Once A Catholic), hated the humiliations, the lack of kindness, the bigotry,
and the feelings of guilt about sex and life in general.
Her
view of convent school life echoes that of Virago founder Carmen Callil, who says
she can never forgive the nuns at her convent for the way she was treated. She’s
particularly scathing about the view of the Catholic Church on suffering,
especially in relation to women, and she gives a moving account of her feelings
when she first read Frost in May:
I was
absolutely suffused with misery and agony and fury as I read it because I
identified with it so much. It told what I felt to be my own story. Not that it
was my own story, but the suffering it conveyed and the feeling of mindless
repression that the child couldn’t deal with because the child couldn’t
understand what was going on and what the reasons were. I felt so strongly
about it I actually invented Virago Modern Classics to enable me to publish
that book. The world had to read the book again.
I
think she’s right, and I’d urge anyone to read it, because Frost in May is beautifully
written, with some wonderful characters, and it’s as valid and relevant now as
it was when Callil reprinted it, and when Frost wrote it.
This book is part one of a series of four.I really liked the final book BEYOND THE GLASS.
ReplyDeleteI'm looking out for the other three - I gather she changed the name of heroine for these later books, but they seem to be regarded as part of a quartet rather than a separate trilogy.
DeleteA lovely blogger sent me a copy of Frost in May several years ago but I found it to be an upsetting read. I've learned not to let my emotions run away with me quite as much when I don't like a character, or the subject matter. It's probably worth a reread...later on. And I really enjoyed reading about your book buying in London!
ReplyDeleteI can understand how you would feel that way but I think I was angry more than upset at the way the girls were treated, and the petty spitefulness, and the way they ignore the poorer girls. And the nuns were vile to poor Monica who was so slow... I still can't get the book out of my head.
DeleteThis was one of the first Viragoes I read - I have all four but haven't revisited them for ages. I think I'm going to have to work some re-reads into NEXT All Virago / All August (as I have plenty for this one).
ReplyDeletePerhaps someone should set up another month, just for re-reading VMCs!
DeleteI read this years and years ago, but you have convinced me that it's time to revisit this book, and maybe then to move on to the sort-of-sequels that I didn't know about back then.
ReplyDeleteIt's definitely worth a re-read I think, and I'm going to get the others - I like your way of describing them as sort-of-sequels.
DeleteI'm fond of this book, too. I think it is part of a trilogy but I've only read the first two. Have you read In This House of Brede by Rumer Godden. It's pretty wonderful.
ReplyDeleteJust discovered I have unpublished comments - sorry!. I have read In This House of Brede, and agree with you, it is pretty wonderful. Again, there's a very enclosed community, and an emphasis on obedience, and doing God's Will, but somehow I had the feeling that through that the nuns were discovering the true selves, and they seemed more compassionate,
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