Barbara
Pym is the least flashy of the tremendously readable English women novelists
who are the heirs of Virginia Woolf: Elizabeth Bowen, Pym, Penelope Fitzgerald,
Muriel Spark, Elizabeth Taylor, Ivy Compton-Burnett, and Iris Murdoch. I don’t
intend to write about all these women, but this is the second of my reactions
to my favorites: Pym, Bowen, and Fitzgerald.
She had
a curious career in that for fifteen years no one wanted to publish her, though
she had a loyal readership beginning with the publication of her first novel in
1950, and though she died in 1980, all of her books are still in print forty
years later.
She
published nine novels during her lifetime, and several apparently finished or
nearly-finished manuscripts have been posthumously published. Pym’s are quiet
tales. She tends to center them on small societies surrounding a vicarage,
either rural or suburban, or the people working in an office, or a pair of
women who are siblings or close friends. Often we find at the end of one of her
books that things have not much altered. This pattern is set in her first
novel, Some Tame Gazelle (1950).
Though proposals, rumors of engagements, and actual engagements abound, at the
end the Bede sisters are as they were. Belinda, having turned down the surprise
proposal of the Bishop Mbawawa, “would continue to find such consolation as she
needed in our greater English poets,” while “Harriet would accept the
attentions of Count Bianco and listen patiently and kindly to his regular
proposals of marriage.”
In her
second book, Excellent Women (1952),
the concentration is on one woman. Mildred Lathbury is a 30-something spinster,
active in her Anglo-Catholic parish where she is a friend of the vicar Julian
Malory and his sister Winifred, working mornings at the society for Aged
Gentlewomen. She is fond of Julian and may in her most fanciful moments imagine
them as a couple. Her life is stirred up first when new renters come to her
building: the undomestic anthropologist Helena Napier and her charming,
handsome naval officer husband Rockingham. Through them Mildred meets another
anthropologist, Everard Bone, who collaborates with Helena on field work and
its writing-up, which eventually gives Helena the idea that more of a bond
exists between them, and she leaves her husband. Mildred, who admits to being
charmed by Rocky, acts reluctantly as a go-between in their reconciliation. The
Napiers move to the country.
Meanwhile
Julian Malory is smitten by the attractive widow Allegra Gray, who rents
Julian’s and Winifred’s spare rooms in the rectory. Julian proposes to Mrs.
Gray, she accepts, and friction begins to build between Winifred, who is too
dim to see she needs to move out of the rectory, and Allegra, who dislikes
Winifred from the get-go. Winifred, humiliated by Allegra one rainy evening,
runs to Mildred, Julian and Allegra have it out, and the engagement is broken.
At the
end, Mildred finds herself in much the same relation with the Malorys as
before. When she insists she was not hurt by Julian’s engagement, we alone
believe her—though she might have been disturbed about what he was getting into. She drifts into
being useful to Everard Bone, which could go further, in a later book we hear
of their marriage. These people are all very much what they are, and Mildred
sees them clearly, and herself pretty clearly most of the time. The light touch
of humor comes largely from this difference in self-awareness among the
characters. Pym’s names are often humorously apt: the anthropologists include
Mr. Bone and Miss Clovis, the new co-tenant of Mildred’s at the end is the
Roman Catholic Miss Boniface, and while the doubtful women have names like
Helena and Allegra, the excellent women are called Mildred and Winifred.
Jane and Prudence (1953) is Pym’s
funniest book. I often appreciate the subtle humor of the other books, but
reading this one I found myself laughing out loud. Jane is a little bit
bumbling, a little too much of a literary type than seems quite suitable, in
her eyes, for a rural clergyman’s wife. She thinks much more than she allows
herself to say, and “a not quite appropriate quotation would come into her mind
on nearly every occasion,” usually from love poetry of the seventeenth century.
She is awkward, backing into people and begging off pouring coffee on account
of clumsiness. She’s also very perceptive and self-aware, but her perception
works best directed outward, as I suppose everyone’s does.
Prudence
is pretty, but vain, a bit apt to think nostalgically of all her past
conquests, while in the present she makes absurd choices, at first attaching
herself hopelessly to her aloof boss, Arthur Grampian, who is often not even
aware she’s in the room. Then Prudence accepts Jane’s misguided matchmaking,
which pairs her with a handsome widower, older and even vainer than herself,
who is then maneuvered into marriage under prudence’s nose by the mousiest
woman in Jane’s village. Prudence consoles herself by vacationing with a young
man in Grampian’s office, which cushions the pain and allows her to condescend
in her treatment of the men like Grampian she’s left in the wake of her love
life.
But even
at their most distracted and foolish, these women are smarter than the men
around them. Jane muses at one point about women’s part in romance, thinking
“that was why women were so wonderful; it was their love and imagination that
transformed these unremarkable beings. For most men…were undistinguished to
look at, if not positively ugly.”
The book
ends with Jane again contemplating making a match for Prudence, this time with
the parliamentary member for her district, while Prudence thinks beyond her
current young man to “the richness of her life” and the “many more evenings
before us if we want them.”
Less Than Angels (1955) breaks a pattern
is some ways, since the little community Pym is laying out for us is an
academic one of anthropologists and their students. The tables re turned, as it
is Catherine, the main character and a writer, who does the studying of human
behavior, with her subject the subculture of anthropologists who teach, do
field work, and find mates.
Many
readers think Pym’s next book, A Glass of
Blessings (1958), her best book, but I cannot agree. I think they’re
impressed by her frankness with the subject of homosexuality at this date. So
am I, but I would still vote for Jane and
Prudence. We see A Glass of Blessings
through the eyes of Wilmet Forsyth, whose desires to do good works or help with
church functions in her parish do not rise above the level of velleities. Like
Gillian Welch’s Miss Ohio, she wants to do right but not right now. She loves
her dull husband Rodney after her fashion, but enjoys the flirtations of her
friend Rowena’s husband Harry and Rowena’s brother Piers Longridge, whom she
thinks something of a ne’er-do-well. But the idea of unfaithfulness does not
even get up to the level of a velleity with Wilmet. When her vanity is not
obscuring her vision, Wilmet sees clearly enough for Pym to exercise her gentle
satire through this character’s first-person perceptions, which she can even
occasionally turn on herself in the midst of a vain thought, at one point
musing with chagrin about her “inability to accept even a pleasant smile from a
clergyman at its face value.”
The
clergyman in question is the handsome new curate in Wilmet’s Anglo-Catholic
parish, Father Ransome. Wilmet’s vanity may be the reason she fails to see the
romance developing between Ransome and her friend plain Mary Beamish. Certainly
it prevents her from perceiving that Piers Longridge, whom she imagines is the
secret admirer who sent her an anonymous Christmas gift, is in fact gay. She
only gets it when Piers takes her to meet Keith, his live-in partner, whom
Wilmet first reacts to as “not quite us,” but learns to like for his humor and
kindness.
Wilmet
doesn’t actively practice misguided matchmaking as Austen’s Emma does, but
through her imaginary matchmaking and blindness to real matches she begins,
like Emma, to learn something about herself. When dull Rodney confesses that
he’s taken a coworker out to dinner a couple of times and has seen the inside
of her flat, Wilmet gets a further shock. After some self-examination she
pronounces herself happy and content with her lot.
The book
has the usual Pym complement of dithering clergy and the people who help them
get through life (and are watchful no one trespasses on their turf while
they’re doing it). The novelty here is that the cook for the vicar Father
Thames (!) and his curates is a man—another one of Pym’s rather remarkable
portraits, for 1958, of a sympathetic gay man—this one with a slight case of
kleptomania.
No Fond Return of Love (1961) again
features two friends, Viola and Dulcie, but this time the two are interested in
the same man, Aylwin. Their curiosity about him leads to Aylwin’s mother’s
guest house, where, like Catherine in Less
Than Angels, Dulcie, who is also a writer, observes the little society
there. With few exceptions Pym’s theme is human observation, of oneself and
others, and the way that observed behavior and emotion is changed by affection,
infatuation, disappointment, and all that occurs to take us from the serene
life we may imagine as an ideal.
And then
Jonathan Cape, Pym’s publisher, turned down her next manuscript. When she went
to other publishers they also refused to publish it, and An Unsuitable Attachment never did find a publisher during her
lifetime. For the next sixteen years no Barbara Pym book appeared. Then in
1977, Lord David Cecil and Philip Larkin, each writing separately for a TLS feature asking literary notables
who, in their opinion, was the most underrated writer of the 20th
century, both named Barbara Pym. Her career was relaunched. That same year she
published Quartet in Autumn.
After
the hiatus Pym’s books have a slightly darker tone even when they make us
smile, but Quartet in Autumn is
undoubtedly her bleakest book. Two members of the quartet, Letty and Edwin, are
people we would recognize from the circle of characters in Pym’s other books.
Letty is a well-dressed, sixtyish woman, with no illusions about herself and
able to read those around her, a reader but not intellectual, single, and in an
awkward house-sharing situation since her friend with whom she was supposed to
retire in the country has just gotten engaged to the vicar there. Edwin likes
to visit Anglo-Catholic churches at lunchtime and in the evening, catching
festivals and keeping up with the liturgical calendar. He is a widower,
slightly younger than Letty, content with his family and church circles.
The
other two members of the quartet, ill at ease in social situations and lacking
insight into themselves, do not read others well either and are apt to offend
with sharp or satiric remarks. Marcia finds some little identity in her
mastectomy, idolizing her surgeon from a distance and sharing vague details
with strangers. Now, after retirement, she is neglecting her appearance, giving
way to some of her obsessive habits, and eating practically nothing. Like
Norman, she is inclined to answer sharply when spoken to, with little regard
for others’ feelings, but she does not have Norman’s constant sarcasm.
Little
happens here, apparently, but lives are changed. Letty’s friend’s engagement
falls through, so she has the choice to go to the country again. Marcia
gradually dies of inanition and reveals, through the gift of her house to
Norman, an apparent connection well-concealed on both sides. Norman, too, has
more choices now. As for Edwin, there are churches all over London.
Pym’s
penultimate novel is The Sweet Dove Died,
published in 1978. Leonora Eyre, an
elegant, aging, self-absorbed spinster who wants the admiration and
companionship of men but abhors the thought of sex, meets the widowed antiques
dealer Humphrey Boyce and his nephew James at a sale of old books. Humphrey considers
himself the more suitable companion and perhaps lover for Leonora, but though
she enjoys Humphrey’s attentions, she becomes infatuated with James. When James
allows himself to be seduced by a young woman named Phoebe, Leonora uses
Humphrey to humiliate her. But Leonora is outwitted by the bounder Ned, who
becomes the gormless James’s lover, detaches him from Leonora, and holds onto
him until some other handsome youth catches his eye. James’s attempts to make
up with Leonora are politely received, but nothing more.
Each of
these flawed characters is partially self-aware, and the comedy often comes in
interplay between the aware and the unaware parts in interior monologues, less
often in dialogue between characters. But Pym knows the precise quantity and
nature of the self-absorption defining every one of these characters. The
author’s trick is not merely in continuing to make her people amuse us, but in
preventing us from despising them; we recognize just enough of ourselves to
keep us from doing that.
At the
beginning of A Few Green Leaves
(1980), the last book published during Barbara Pym’s lifetime, Emma Howick is
living in her mother’s cottage while she writes up the results of some
unspecified anthropological research. She sees herself as a temporary resident
and curious observer of village life. Emma becomes more interested and
contemplates dropping her project to concentrate on a formal study of the
village, and she begins making notes. At the end of the book, she has
determined to stay, and we don’t know whether her notes on the village will
turn into a book, just as we are uncertain whether her warming friendship with
Tom Dagnall the rector will turn into a romance.
While
not her best book, A Few Green Leaves
is a kind of culmination, combining features from Pym’s previous novels. She
has alternated—in successive books and sometimes within a single book—between
village and urban settings, returning to a village here, though it appears to
be close enough to town that characters often show up for day trips or short
stays. And we have here many of the topics she’s treated elsewhere: clergymen
and their flocks, anthropologists and their often odd lack of interest in
society, the whole subject of observation as it relates to anthropologists,
sympathetic characters, and the novelist herself; the dynamics of a household
where two women live together.
Tom
Dagnall, the village rector, is a little too interested in the history of his
church and searching for a possible D.M.V., or deserted medieval village
nearby. In a telling moment, he thinks about his failed efforts to keep a diary
in the manner of such figures as James Woodforde. But what would he put in it,
he asks himself. His sister’s conversation about a gooseberry tart and her
plans to move to Birmingham? Would that interest readers of the next century?
The answer, of course, is yes, if Barbara Pym’s practice is anything to go by.
The seemingly mundane, closely observed by a sympathetic and mildly amused
observer, is Pym’s and Woodforde’s stock-in-trade.
A good
deal happens in the book without causing much fuss. There is a death, though it
is not, as we suspected for a moment, that of the ancient Miss Vereker, the
governess in the days when the manor was occupied and its family was the
village’s center; she has decided to take a day trip back to the village,
telling no one of her whereabouts, and she takes a fall in the woods. But Miss
Vereker is fine, and it is the “elderly village eccentric,” Miss Lickerish, who
dies. The re-ignition of Emma’s old romance with a boring and ill-mannered
anthropologist fizzles, and he goes back to his air-headed wife. Tom’s sister does move to Birmingham, giving up her
dream of a retirement in Greece, where she has spent idyllic summers. Emma
Howick finds a place to be and a life of interest.
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