First UK edition cover |
"I must have a little more time. For years," she
said, feeling the fire on her cheek mingling with that other inner warmth so
that she flushed and her cheeks were red, "for years I've trailed along
behind Aunt Barbe. Now—I'm just beginning to go on my own—to cast her off a
little."
Henrietta
(Henry) Castle is a classic Rumer Godden heroine whose widening world unfolds against an uncharacteristically Gothic background. Orphaned, Henrietta lives in France with her widowed Aunt
Barbe, a cold-blooded aging beauty who enjoys pushing people to the limit
("I like to interfere. I like to watch what happens. … It amuses me to
pinch them in their tender places."). As Godden's fourth novel opens, the
pair—along with elderly Nana, who has babied and enabled Aunt Barbe her entire
life—are returning to their chateau in rural St. Lieux, where Henrietta spent
much of her happy childhood before the death of her Uncle Louis. There, she
finds the atmosphere much changed since their last visit five years before, and
the locals, who loved and respected her uncle, have come to despise her aunt.
Soon, Aunt Barbe's machinations are set on a young gypsy and his family, driving
them remorselessly into tragedy.
Gypsy, Gypsy lends itself to a
dramatic summary.
And
obviously it lends itself to wildly different evaluations as well. Rumer Godden
herself, in her wonderful memoir A Time
to Dance, No Time to Weep (1987), speaks of the book as one of her lesser
works (she must have felt the pressure of following up her first big success, Black Narcissus, published the year
before, not to mention that war was looming—and indeed starting—as she wrote).
Contemporary reviews were divided. Kirkus
said:
Another string to Rumer Godden's longbow, a story altogether
different from Black Narcissus, built
on a compelling, tantalizing theme, that of evil deliberately set in play, a
theme handled with a light-fingered touch that is as distinctive as it is
fascinating.
The
Chicago Tribune couldn't get past the
fact that Godden hadn't written a book exactly like its predecessor, and Time memorably if bewilderingly said
"Gypsy, Gypsy might have been
written by Emily Brontë if she and her prose had pernicious anemia but were not
otherwise seriously indisposed." (It might be noted that that critic
doesn't seem to have liked Black
Narcissus either.) The Observer
dismissed it casually, the Guardian somewhat
noncommittally said it was "written with the care and devotion of one who
treats novel-writing as an art." And finally, the crème de la crème:
Katherine Woods, writing in the New York
Times and, happily, engaging with the book on its own terms rather than
comparing it to Black Narcissus, more
or less raved about it, concluding:
[I]t is always a fascinating story. One is held by it, so, in reading—even
before one stops to realize the subtle perfection of form, the natural
awareness and troubling suggestion, the strangeness and penetration and beauty,
that make it an extraordinary achievement, and leave its echoes calling in
one's mind.
Well,
exactly. You may have guessed by now that I'm very much in agreement with the Times reviewer. You might say, of course,
in hindsight, having read Godden's later work, it's easier to appreciate the
best qualities of an early work even if her later brilliance hasn't quite
developed yet. But the one modern-day review I found online (which, be warned,
gives away the entire plot), written by a Godden fan, is pretty packed with
vitriol. The reviewer (see here
if you don't mind the spoilers) seems to be personally offended that Godden was
trying her hand at something different.
First US edition cover |
And
indeed Gypsy, Gypsy is different from
much of Godden's later work. Perhaps influenced by a world descending into war,
Godden's vision is a bit darker here than usual, though the charming Henrietta
is, as I mentioned above, as quintessentially a Godden-esque heroine as could
be imagined. She could comfortably have danced in A Candle for St Jude, plotted against her parents' divorce in The Battle of the Villa Fiorita, or
shimmered like a ghost in the timelessness of China Court. She is only just finding herself and learning to
resist her aunt. She is surely scarred by Aunt Barbe's behavior, both in the present
and the past—among them repeated love affairs, which Uncle Louis endured
stoically—but she also retains her compassion and love for others, becoming
more mature and wiser in the course of the story, and consciously strives to
become a very different kind of woman from her aunt. There's a subplot about
her uncle's will, which contained a clause suggesting she should marry his
nephew and eventual heir, René (no blood relation, though they are cousins by
marriage), and Henry's shifting views of this prospective marriage are the
feelings of any Godden heroine. There are many passages, too, that could have
come from any better-known Godden novel. For example:
She sat down on a bench worn shiny with people sitting and the
rubbing of their hands. Now she rubbed hers there too, and once again she had
the sense of being one of many, of doing as other people did, and she sat
there, dreamily happy, watching the candles.
Then
there's Aunt Barbe herself, perhaps the darkest character Godden ever created (maybe
the name is short for "barbarian"). And yet, she is a fascinating
character, not simply an evil villain, but a woman with peculiar
vulnerabilities and damage of which we catch glimpses now and then. Perhaps her
behavior is a bit exaggerated, but Godden is too compassionate and subtle to
create a Cruella de Vil. Readers will be hard-pressed to find any redeeming
qualities in her, but at least they'll get some glimpses of how she turned into
such a monster.
Ghastly ghastly ghastly paperback cover |
There
are other intriguing characters too. There's Monsieur Juneton, the new Abbé (who
replaced an older one who caught pneumonia rescuing victims of a shipwreck—indirectly
caused by Barbe, no less), who thinks Barbe pure evil until he actually meets
her, and then falls under her spell, convinced he can save her. There's various
servants and tenants and villagers, virtually all of whom hate Barbe for her
cruelty or insensitivity or simple incompetence in running the estate after
Louis' death. This is summed up by poor Madame Quibel, whose property was
auctioned because she couldn't pay her rent, including her donkeys, now grazing
uselessly in one of Barbe's fields. She has carefully skimped and saved and comes
to buy back one of her own donkeys so her son can sell fish from a cart around
the countryside. Barbe refuses merely "to teach her a lesson". Yikes.
Last
but not least are the gypsies themselves. In 2019, of course, the whole
"gypsy" terminology—which apart from its derogatory associations also
derives inaccurately from "Egyptians", though genetic studies have
shown the group originated in India—is being replaced by the more neutral
"Roma" or "Romani", but Godden didn't, I think, have any
ill intent in her portrayal of the Roma family here. There's neither
idealization or demonization here. They do, however, remain solidly at a
distance in this novel, unlike in Godden's later children's book The Diddakoi. Henry initially fears the
gypsies, due to the superstitions of the locals, but comes to admire them as
she learns to judge for herself. Aunt Barbe delights in attempting to subvert
their traditional habits, luring the children with candy and giving the oldest
daughter (whom she calls "the Object") a glamorous makeover. But we
can only really guess at what they themselves are thinking and feeling. In that
sense, they all remain the "objects" of the anxieties and egos of
others. And in a way, this perhaps makes the story more poignant, as we can
only imagine what they're suffering as Aunt Barbe leads them to destruction.
Rumer Godden in Kashmir, 1943 |
In
Gypsy, Gypsy, Rumer Godden hasn't
quite got the hang of her effortless later style, which at its best manages to
combine past, present and future events in such a way that they all come alive
at once. Likewise, there's not the same depth of characterization here. It's
not a perfect novel, but it's a good and compelling one, with a powerful
sensibility and a wonderful eerie, disturbing atmosphere that could almost have
come from Daphne du Maurier.
Was that a hint, Scott?
ReplyDeleteWell, her books should certainly be in print, Vronni. Whether I can have anything to do with it is another story!
DeleteI have only read A CANDLE FOR ST. JUDE by Godden, and just the other day I ran across the very brief (a paragraph or so) review of it I did. (I compared it to Penelope Fitzgerald's AT FREDDIE'S, as I recall.) I need to read more of her work. GYPSY GYPSY looks fascinating.
ReplyDeleteAs for Margery Sharp -- I'm looking forward to seeing what you write about her. I've written about her a couple of times, and I mentioned Taylor. (Here's what I wrote: All this is a shame. Margery Sharp was an outstanding writer. Her metier was comedy -- very light comedy, I suppose. And comedy does have a tendency to be underappreciated -- especially when its satiric bite is not all that intense. Sharp was also popular in her day -- which may have meant that nobody felt she needed revival, or special appreciation. Compare Barbara Pym, who wrote novels of similar quietude, but never achieved the commercial success early in her career that Sharp did. Late in her life Pym became the subject of a significant rediscovery, and as a result she is now placed, it seems to me, on a shelf with the likes of Elizabeth Bowen and the great Elizabeth Taylor. Sharp has never got such attention. Quite possibly her fame as a writer of children's books was also to her reputation's detriment.)
Thanks for sharing that, Rich. Candle is one of Godden's best, I think, though also inexplicably out of print. I recommend Greengage Summer, An Episode of Sparrows, and Kingfishers Catch Fire as possible next reads--those are my favorites from before I was blogging. As for Sharp, I agree with you she's highly underrated. First Sharp post coming very soon now!
DeleteHave only read one of Godden's - In This House of Brede, which I recall liking VERY much. And only recall reading one of Sharp's - In Pious Memory, which was wickedly funny!
ReplyDeleteTom
See my Godden recommendations to Rich above, Tom. Do yourself a favor and try them out. But surely you've read more Sharp? What about Britannia Mews?
DeleteGoodness me Scott, I thought I had devoured every single written word by Rumer Godden but I have never come across this one. Not entirely sure I want to now I have read about it in detail but I shall nevertheless keep an eye out for it.
ReplyDeleteAll best seasonal wishes to you and Andy. Gilx
Thank you Gil! It is a darker book, but I think it has the Godden magic.
Delete