"You must remember that in this war it is not only those
who are doing the spectacular and dangerous work, those in uniforms of one sort
or another who are alone in helping the war effort, but also what I like to
call the great forgotten army of women in exile, women like yourself, my dear,
who for one reason or another are banished from their homes, their husbands,
the work and the friends they love, sometimes their children, and who find
themselves in a strange place among strangers. Theirs is the hardest lot of any
to bear, for they have not even the reward of feeling that they are
contributing to their country's effort, they are idle and lonely and
desperately unhappy, quite a number of them, in all circumstances of life."
It's
the Reverend Mother at the hospital where Kathy Murdoch is learning nursing who
thus passionately sums up the theme of this wartime novel by Jean Ross, an
author I'd not read before who published just under two dozen novels from the
1930s to 1960s.
Women in Exile is certainly an odd
novel, and to some extent it's a frustrating one. Ross excels at women’s
voices, and loves providing her women characters with entirely believable,
entertaining monologues, something she does with an array of varied women. There's
Kathy and her mother, the widowed Mair, who with the rest of their family are
bombed out of their home and seek shelter in a rather humdrum English village.
They stay at a house belonging to Jack and Nell Heron, with the Herons'
housekeeper Mrs Liddard, who resents the interlopers. Then Mrs Firth arrives
from heavily-bombed West Ham with her two children. And what would an English
village novel be without a vicar's wife, and the gossipy but kind-hearted Mrs
Marchant fulfills her role admirably.
Lovely that Graham Greene provided his praise, but too bad they misspelled his name. Oops! |
Most of these women are given effective speeches at one time or another, and these are usually compelling to read. Mrs Firth's aggressively demanding attitude toward Mrs Liddard when she first arrives at the house, for example, is prickly enough, but also rather poignant when one realizes what she must have gone through to reach this point:
"I am sure that there should be no difficulty in our
working well together," [Mrs Liddard] said finally in the tone of one who
reproves the upper housemaid for having ideas above her station." As for a
gas ring and a cupboard, I don't know I'm sure, I shall have to ask Mrs.
Murdoch.''
"Well, if you're nervous of speaking to 'er, I will. You
see, I've been through all this before. They all say the sime at first: oh,
it'll be all right, you kin 'ave the stove w'en I ain't using it, we'll find a
time. But it ain't all right. Nor ain't it if they does yer cooking for yer.
Always complaining the kiddies et too much, and that they stole!"
"I'm sure that—"
"Believe me, you don't know. You've never 'ad evacuees
before. You'd be the same as the rest of them in a week. It ain't much to ask,
but I got to 'ave it, and otherwise I take 'em back to be bombed and you 'ave
it on your conscience. Believe me. You're safe 'ere. You donnow wot a blitz is.
I do. But I'd rather 'ave a blitz, I'd rather live dahn the shelter than go
through wot I 'ave in the country. It's only for me 'ubby's sake I come 'ere nah,
and cos ahr 'ome's gone. Nothing but a bleeding shell."
Unfortunately,
though, these powerful moments with their insights into women's wartime lives
are strung together with a melodramatic and sometimes downright silly plot,
which includes ghosts and second sight in a way presumably meant to comfort
those of Ross’s readers who had lost loved ones in the war. Mair, it emerges,
is a "medium" who occasionally sees apparitions or visions of the
future. She's determined to prevent Kathy from disgracing herself with the
married Jack, with whom she has had an immediate (and implausible) "love
at first sight" scenario. There's also plenty of the expected melodrama
between Kathy, Jack, and Jack's wife Nell, and late in the novel one of Mair's
apparitions will play an important role in the illicit romance.
Such a lot of bright moments, but rather like a string of lovely pearls threaded onto a string too weak for their weight. It's a shame, but I can still share a couple of other rather wonderful high points.
Right
at the beginning of the novel, Mair vividly recalls the bombs that have landed
them in the countryside:
She remembered suddenly how at the first bang the curtains
flared out into the room at right angles, and stayed there for an aeon of time
while she watched them paralysed. The siren not gone nor anything, then up and
trying to find one of her bedroom slippers in the dark.
All this must have passed in a flash when the second explosion
was upon them and the world came to an end. If only things would stop falling and
she could come to her senses; she was deafened and blinded, she was on her
hands and knees, the house, that solid Victorian Kensington piece, had taken a
sickening lurch forwards and then backwards as though about to perform a pas de seul, parting with all glass,
plaster and movables in the process, and yet, miraculously, standing at the end
of it. Two more explosions, more distant. A
stick of bombs. That was it, then.
And
I do love, in a rather sad way, descriptions of wartime London that allow one
to situate them more or less precisely on a map. Here's a great example,
describing what Kathy has seen during her visit to the beaten and bruised city:
She had spent the day in London, walking about the streets.
During the previous week there had been a further bad raid, the pavements were
still thick with debris, more houses were gutless and forlorn, the back streets
of Mayfair and the rectangle made by Edgware Road, Marylebone Road, Oxford and
Orchard Streets enclosed areas of houses shuttered and deserted. Some had
notices "this desirable residence to be let at moderate rental."
Nearly all windows were covered with black felting, the terraces were gap-jawed
where a bomb had knocked out two or three houses and destroyed the symmetry.
Down in white tiled basements open to the air, men burnt small fires of rubbish
where white-capped chefs had once prepared seven-course dinners. People were
still living in the smaller and meaner streets behind boarded windows.
Sometimes amongst the wreckage an armchair perched on a ledge or a wardrobe
hung at a dizzy angle, door aswing. London was shabby; whole districts were
dead, they had shrunk as a corpse does when the life goes out of it. The main
swing of the life of London went on, the people were as cheerful, but the place
was emptier. The life was not the same, its quality had altered. There was no
time for the non-essentials. She was glad to be out of it and away.
There's
also a rather gut-wrenching description of air raid casualties, which, though
it's a valuable slice of the realities of war, might be best left to your
imagination—it still makes me shiver a bit.
Jean
Ross followed Women in Exile with a
novel called Strangers Under Our Roof,
which sounds as though it could also deal with evacuees. If it is, it could
also contain some fascinating insights into home front life. Even allowing for
my disappointment in this book, it might be worth checking out…
Thank you for your biographical sketch of Jean Ross on your big list. I saw a couple of her books on ebay this week and was wondering if she could be the same Jean Ross as Isherwood's friend. It would have been wonderful if it had been. Regardless this book sounds like it has something to contribute and I will look for it. (I've been going through a bit of a Weimar phase recently and everything seems to remind me of Isherwood.)
ReplyDeleteIt would certainly have been interesting to read a novel by Isherwood's Jean Ross. Alas. But glad my list entry was able to clarify the situation!
DeleteLovely cover art, and it sounds like portions of this novel would be very interesting contributions to the "WWII Home Front" feel. It does sound uneven enough I would hate to spend big time money on it. But many thanks for the review/mention. And the cover!!
ReplyDeleteJerri
Yes, Jerri, it's definitely interesting for its home front perspectives, but Ross does love her melodrama!
Delete