MR. BENNETT AND MRS. BROWN
VIRGINIA WOOLF
MR.
BENNETT AND MRS. BROWN
It seems to me possible, perhaps
desirable, that I may be the only person in this room who has committed the
folly of writing, trying to write, or failing to write, a novel. And when I
asked myself, as your invitation to speak to you about modern fiction made me
ask myself, what demon whispered in my ear and urged me to my doom, a little
figure rose before me—the figure of a man, or of a woman, who said, "My
name is Brown. Catch me if you can."
Most novelists have the same
experience. Some Brown, Smith, or Jones comes before them and says in the most
seductive and charming way in the world, "Come and catch me if you
can." And so, led on by this will-o'-the-wisp, they flounder through
volume after volume, spending the best years of their lives in the pursuit, and
receiving for the most part very little cash in exchange. Few catch the
phantom; most have to be content with a scrap of her dress or a wisp of her
hair.
My belief that men and women
write novels because they are lured on to create some character which has thus
imposed itself upon them has the sanction of Mr. Arnold Bennett. In an article
from which I will quote he says: "The foundation of good fiction is
character-creating and nothing else. . . . Style counts; plot counts;
originality of outlook counts. But none of these counts anything like so much
as the convincingness of the characters. If the characters are real the novel
will have a chance; if they are not, oblivion will be its portion. . . ."
And he goes on to draw the conclusion that we have no young novelists of
first-rate importance at the present moment, because they are unable to create
characters that are real, true, and convincing.
These are the questions that I
want with greater boldness than discretion to discuss to-night. I want to make
out what we mean when we talk about "character" in fiction; to say
something about the question of reality which Mr. Bennett raises; and to
suggest some reasons why the younger novelists fail to create characters, if,
as Mr. Bennett asserts, it is true that fail they do. This will lead me, I am
well aware, to make some very sweeping and some very vague assertions. For the question
is an extremely difficult one. Think how little we know about character—think
how little we know about art. But, to make a clearance before I begin, I will
suggest that we range Edwardians and Georgians into two camps; Mr. Wells, Mr.
Bennett, and Mr. Galsworthy I will call the Edwardians; Mr. Forster, Mr.
Lawrence, Mr. Strachey, Mr. Joyce, and Mr. Eliot I will call the Georgians. And
if I speak in the first person, with intolerable egotism, I will ask you to
excuse me. I do not want to attribute to the world at large the opinions of one
solitary, ill-informed, and misguided individual.
My first assertion is one that I
think you will grant—that every one in this room is a judge of character.
Indeed it would be impossible to live for a year without disaster unless one
practised character-reading and had some skill in the art. Our marriages, our
friendships depend on it; our business largely depends on it; every day
questions arise which can only be solved by its help. And now I will hazard a
second assertion, which is more disputable perhaps, to the effect that on or
about December 1910 human character changed.
I am not saying that one went
out, as one might into a garden, and there saw that a rose had flowered, or
that a hen had laid an egg. The change was not sudden and definite like that.
But a change there was, nevertheless; and, since one must be arbitrary, let us
date it about the year 1910. The first signs of it are recorded in the books of
Samuel Butler, in The Way of All Flesh in particular; the plays of Bernard Shaw
continue to record it. In life one can see the change, if I may use a homely
illustration, in the character of one's cook. The Victorian cook lived like a
leviathan in the lower depths, formidable, silent, obscure, inscrutable; the
Georgian cook is a creature of sunshine and fresh air; in and out of the
drawing-room, now to borrow The Daily Herald, now to ask advice about a hat. Do
you ask for more solemn instances of the power of the human race to change?
Read the gamemnon, and see whether, in process of time, your sympathies are not
almost entirely with Clytemnestra. Or consider the married life of the
Carlyles, and bewail the waste, the futility, for him and for her, of the
horrible domestic tradition which made it seemly for a woman of genius to spend
her time chasing beetles, scouring saucepans, instead of writing books. All
human relations have shifted—those between masters and servants, husbands and
wives, parents and children. And when human relations change there is at the same
time a change in religion, conduct, politics, and literature. Let us agree to
place one of these changes about the year 1910.
I have said that people have to
acquire a good deal of skill in character-reading if they are to live a single
year of life without disaster. But it is the art of the young. In middle age
and in old age the art is practised mostly for its uses, and friendships and
other adventures and experiments in the art of reading character are seldom
made. But novelists differ from the rest of the world because they do not cease
to be interested in character when they have learnt enough about it for
practical purposes. They go a step further; they feel that there is something
permanently interesting in character in itself. When all the practical business
of life has been discharged, there is something about people which continues to
seem to them of overwhelming importance, in spite of the fact that it has no
bearing whatever upon their happiness, comfort, or income. The study of
character becomes to them an absorbing pursuit; to impart character an
obsession. And this I find it very difficult to explain: what novelists mean
when they talk about character, what the impulse is that urges them so
powerfully every now and then to embody their view in writing.
So, if you will allow me, instead
of analysing and abstracting, I will tell you a simple story which, however
pointless, has the merit of being true, of a journey from Richmond to Waterloo,
in the hope that I may show you what I mean by character in itself; that you
may realise the different aspects it can wear; and the hideous perils that
beset you directly you try to describe it in words.
One night some weeks ago, then, I
was late for the train and jumped into the first carriage I came to. As I sat
down I had the strange and uncomfortable feeling that I was interrupting a
conversation between two people who were already sitting there. Not that they
were young or happy. Far from it. They were both elderly, the woman over sixty,
the man well over forty. They were sitting opposite each other, and the man,
who had been leaning over and talking emphatically to judge by his attitude and
the flush on his face, sat back and became silent. I had disturbed him, and he
was annoyed. The elderly lady, however, whom I will call Mrs. Brown, seemed
rather relieved. She was one of those clean, threadbare old ladies whose
extreme tidiness—everything buttoned, fastened, tied together, mended and
brushed up—suggests more extreme poverty than rags and dirt. There was
something pinched about her—a look of suffering, of apprehension, and, in
addition, she was extremely small. Her feet, in their clean little boots, scarcely
touched the floor. I felt that she had nobody to support her; that she had to
make up her mind for herself; that, having been deserted, or left a widow,
years ago, she had led an anxious, harried life, bringing up an only son,
perhaps, who, as likely as not, was by this time beginning to go to the bad.
All this shot through my mind as I sat down, being uncomfortable, like most
people, at travelling with fellow passengers unless I have somehow or other
accounted for them. Then I looked at the man. He was no relation of Mrs.
Brown's I felt sure; he was of a bigger, burlier, less refined type. He was a
man of business I imagined, very likely a respectable corn-chandler from the
North, dressed in good blue serge with a pocket-knife and a silk handkerchief,
and a stout leather bag. Obviously, however, he had an unpleasant business to
settle with Mrs. Brown; a secret, perhaps sinister business, which they did not
intend to discuss in my presence.
"Yes, the Crofts have had
very bad luck with their servants," Mr. Smith (as I will call him) said in
a considering way, going back to some earlier topic, with a view to keeping up
appearances.
"Ah, poor people," said
Mrs. Brown, a trifle condescendingly. "My grandmother had a maid who came
when she was fifteen and stayed till she was eighty" (this was said with a
kind of hurt and aggressive pride to impress us both perhaps).
"One doesn't often come
across that sort of thing nowadays," said Mr. Smith in conciliatory tones.
Then they were silent.
"It's odd they don't start a
golf club there—I should have thought one of the young fellows would,"
said Mr. Smith, for the silence obviously made him uneasy.
Mrs. Brown hardly took the
trouble to answer.
"What changes they're making
in this part of the world," said Mr. Smith looking out of the window, and
looking furtively at me as he did do.
It was plain, from Mrs. Brown's
silence, from the uneasy affability with which Mr. Smith spoke, that he had
some power over her which he was exerting disagreeably. It might have been her
son's downfall, or some painful episode in her past life, or her daughter's.
Perhaps she was going to London to sign some document to make over some
property. Obviously against her will she was in Mr. Smith's hands. I was
beginning to feel a great deal of pity for her, when she said, suddenly and
inconsequently,
"Can you tell me if an
oak-tree dies when the leaves have been eaten for two years in succession by
caterpillars?" She spoke quite brightly, and rather precisely, in a
cultivated, inquisitive voice.
Mr. Smith was startled, but
relieved to have a safe topic of conversation given him. He told her a great
deal very quickly about plagues of insects. He told her that he had a brother
who kept a fruit farm in Kent. He told her what fruit farmers do every year in
Kent, and so on, and so on. While he talked a very odd thing happened. Mrs.
Brown took out her little white handkerchief and began to dab her eyes. She was
crying. But she went on listening quite composedly to what he was saying, and
he went on talking, a little louder, a little angrily, as if he had seen her
cry often before; as if it were a painful habit. At last it got on his nerves.
He stopped abruptly, looked out of the window, then leant towards her as he had
been doing when I got in, and said in a bullying, menacing way, as if he would
not stand any more nonsense,
"So about that matter we
were discussing. It'll be all right? George will be there on Tuesday?"
"We shan't be late,"
said Mrs. Brown, gathering herself together with superb dignity.
Mr. Smith said nothing. He got
up, buttoned his coat, reached his bag down, and jumped out of the train before
it had stopped at Clapham Junction. He had got what he wanted, but he was
ashamed of himself; he was glad to get out of the old lady's sight.
Mrs. Brown and I were left alone
together. She sat in her corner opposite, very clean, very small, rather queer,
and suffering intensely. The impression she made was overwhelming. It came
pouring out like a draught, like a smell of burning. What was it composed
of—that overwhelming and peculiar impression? Myriads of irrelevant and
incongruous ideas crowd into one's head on such occasions; one sees the person,
one sees Mrs. Brown, in the centre of all sorts of different scenes. I thought
of her in a seaside house, among queer ornaments: sea-urchins, models of ships
in glass cases. Her husband's medals were on the mantelpiece. She popped in and
out of the room, perching on the edges of chairs, picking meals out of saucers,
indulging in long, silent stares. The caterpillars and the oak-trees seemed to
imply all that. And then, into this fantastic and secluded life, in broke Mr.
Smith. I saw him blowing in, so to speak, on a windy day. He banged, he
slammed. His dripping umbrella made a pool in the hall. They sat closeted
together.
And then Mrs. Brown faced the
dreadful revelation. She took her heroic decision. Early, before dawn, she
packed her bag and carried it herself to the station. She would not let Smith
touch it. She was wounded in her pride, unmoored from her anchorage; she came
of gentlefolks who kept servants—but details could wait. The important thing
was to realise her character, to steep oneself in her atmosphere. I had no time
to explain why I felt it somewhat tragic, heroic, yet with a dash of the
flighty, and fantastic, before the train stopped, and I watched her disappear,
carrying her bag, into the vast blazing station. She looked very small, very
tenacious; at once very frail and very heroic. And I have never seen her again,
and I shall never know what became of her.
The story ends without any point
to it. But I have not told you this anecdote to illustrate either my own
ingenuity or the pleasure of travelling from Richmond to Waterloo. What I want
you to see in it is this. Here is a character imposing itself upon another
person. Here is Mrs. Brown making someone begin almost automatically to write a
novel about her. I believe that all novels begin with an old lady in the corner
opposite. I believe that all novels, that is to say, deal with character, and
that it is to express character—not to preach doctrines, sing songs, or
celebrate the glories of the British Empire, that the form of the novel, so
clumsy, verbose, and undramatic, so rich, elastic, and alive, has been evolved.
To express character, I have said; but you will at once reflect that the very
widest interpretation can be put upon those words. For example, old Mrs.
Brown's character will strike you very differently according to the age and
country in which you happen to be born. It would be easy enough to write three
different versions of that incident in the train, an English, a French, and a
Russian. The English writer would make the old lady into a 'character'; he
would bring out her oddities and mannerisms; her buttons and wrinkles; her
ribbons and warts. Her personality would dominate the book. A French writer
would rub out all that; he would sacrifice the individual Mrs. Brown to give a
more general view of human nature; to make a more abstract, proportioned, and
harmonious whole. The Russian would pierce through the flesh; would reveal the
soul—the soul alone, wandering out into the Waterloo Road, asking of life some
tremendous question which would sound on and on in our ears after the book was
finished. And then besides age and country there is the writer's temperament to
be considered. You see one thing in character, and I another. You say it means
this, and I that. And when it comes to writing each makes a further selection
on principles of his own. Thus Mrs. Brown can be treated in an infinite variety
of ways, according to the age, country, and temperament of the writer.
But now I must recall what Mr.
Arnold Bennett says. He says that it is only if the characters are real that
the novel has any chance of surviving. Otherwise, die it must. But, I ask
myself, what is reality? And who are the judges of reality? A character may be
real to Mr. Bennett and quite unreal to me. For instance, in this article he
says that Dr. Watson in Sherlock Holmes is real to him: to me Dr. Watson is a sack
stuffed with straw, a dummy, a figure of fun. And so it is with character after
character—in book after book. There is nothing that people differ about more
than the reality of characters, especially in contemporary books. But if you
take a larger view I think that Mr. Bennett is perfectly right. If, that is,
you think of the novels which seem to you great novels—War and Peace, Vanity
Fair, Tristram Shandy, Madame Bovary, Pride and Prejudice, The Mayor of
Casterbridge, Villette—if you think of these books, you do at once think of
some character who has seemed to you so real (I do not by that mean so
lifelike) that it has the power to make you think not merely of it itself, but
of all sorts of things through its eyes—of religion, of love, of war, of peace,
of family life, of balls in county towns, of sunsets, moonrises, the
immortality of the soul. There is hardly any subject of human experience that
is left out of War and Peace it seems to me. And in all these novels all these
great novelists have brought us to see whatever they wish us to see through
some character. Otherwise, they would not be novelists; but poets, historians,
or pamphleteers.
But now let us examine what Mr.
Bennett went on to say—he said that there was no great novelist among the Georgian
writers because they cannot create characters who are real, true, and
convincing. And there I cannot agree. There are reasons, excuses, possibilities
which I think put a different colour upon the case. It seems so to me at least,
but I am well aware that this is a matter about which I am likely to be
prejudiced, sanguine, and near-sighted. I will put my view before you in the
hope that you will make it impartial, judicial, and broad-minded. Why, then, is
it so hard for novelists at present to create characters which seem real, not
only to Mr. Bennett, but to the world at large? Why, when October comes round,
do the publishers always fail to supply us with a masterpiece?
Surely one reason is that the men
and women who began writing novels in 1910 or thereabouts had this great
difficulty to face—that there was no English novelist living from whom they
could learn their business. Mr. Conrad is a Pole; which sets him apart, and
makes him, however admirable, not very helpful. Mr. Hardy has written no novel
since 1895. The most prominent and successful novelists in the year 1910 were,
I suppose, Mr. Wells, Mr. Bennett, and Mr. Galsworthy. Now it seems to me that
to go to these men and ask them to teach you how to write a novel—how to create
characters that are real—is precisely like going to a bootmaker and asking him
to teach you how to make a watch. Do not let me give you the impression that I
do not admire and enjoy their books. They seem to me of great value, and indeed
of great necessity. There are seasons when it is more important to have boots
than to have watches. To drop metaphor, I think that after the creative
activity of the Victorian age it was quite necessary, not only for literature
but for life, that someone should write the books that Mr. Wells, Mr. Bennett,
and Mr. Galsworthy have written. Yet what odd books they are! Sometimes I
wonder if we are right to call them books at all. For they leave one with so
strange a feeling of incompleteness and dissatisfaction. In order to complete
them it seems necessary to do something—to join a society, or, more
desperately, to write a cheque. That done, the restlessness is laid, the book
finished; it can be put upon the shelf, and need never be read again. But with
the work of other novelists it is different. Tristram Shandy or Pride and
Prejudice is complete in itself; it is self-contained; it leaves one with no
desire to do anything, except indeed to read the book again, and to understand
it better. The difference perhaps is that both Sterne and Jane Austen were
interested in things in themselves; in character in itself; in the book in
itself. Therefore everything was inside the book, nothing outside. But the
Edwardians were never interested in character in itself; or in the book in
itself. They were interested in something outside. Their books, then, were
incomplete as books, and required that the reader should finish them, actively
and practically, for himself.
Perhaps we can make this clearer
if we take the liberty of imagining a little party in the railway carriage—Mr.
Wells, Mr. Galsworthy, Mr. Bennett are travelling to Waterloo with Mrs. Brown.
Mrs. Brown, I have said, was poorly dressed and very small. She had an anxious,
harassed look. I doubt whether she was what you call an educated woman. Seizing
upon all these symptoms of the unsatisfactory condition of our primary schools
with a rapidity to which I can do no justice, Mr. Wells would instantly project
upon the windowpane a vision of a better, breezier, jollier, happier, more
adventurous and gallant world, where these musty railway carriages and fusty
old women do not exist; where miraculous barges bring tropical fruit to
Camberwell by eight o'clock in the morning; where there are public nurseries,
fountains, and libraries, dining-rooms, drawing-rooms, and marriages; where
every citizen is generous and candid, manly and magnificent, and rather like
Mr. Wells himself. But nobody is in the least like Mrs. Brown. There are no
Mrs. Browns in Utopia. Indeed I do not think that Mr. Wells, in his passion to
make her what she ought to be, would waste a thought upon her as she is. And
what would Mr. Galsworthy see? Can we doubt that the walls of Doulton's factory
would take his fancy? There are women in that factory who make twenty-five
dozen earthenware pots every day. There are mothers in the Mile End Road who
depend upon the farthings which those women earn. But there are employers in
Surrey who are even now smoking rich cigars while the nightingale sings.
Burning with indignation, stuffed with information, arraigning civilisation,
Mr. Galsworthy would only see in Mrs. Brown a pot broken on the wheel and
thrown into the corner.
Mr. Bennett, alone of the
Edwardians, would keep his eyes in the carriage. He, indeed, would observe
every detail with immense care. He would notice the advertisements; the
pictures of Swanage and Portsmouth; the way in which the cushion bulged between
the buttons; how Mrs. Brown wore a brooch which had cost three-and-ten-three at
Whitworth's bazaar; and had mended both gloves—indeed the thumb of the
left-hand glove had been replaced. And he would observe, at length, how this
was the non-stop train from Windsor which calls at Richmond for the convenience
of middle-class residents, who can afford to go to the theatre but have not
reached the social rank which can afford motor-cars, though it is true, there
are occasions (he would tell us what), when they hire them from a company (he
would tell us which). And so he would gradually sidle sedately towards Mrs.
Brown, and would remark how she had been left a little copyhold, not freehold,
property at Datchet, which, however, was mortgaged to Mr. Bungay the
solicitor—but why should. I presume to invent Mr. Bennett? Does not Mr. Bennett
write novels himself? I will open the first book that chance puts in my
way—Hilda Lessways. Let us see how he makes us feel that Hilda is real, true,
and convincing, as a novelist should. She shut the door in a soft, controlled
way, which showed the constraint of her relations with her mother. She was fond
of reading Maud; she was endowed with the power to feel intensely. So far, so
good; in his leisurely, surefooted way Mr. Bennett is trying in these first
pages, where every touch is important, to show us the kind of girl she was.
But then he begins to describe,
not Hilda Lessways, but the view from her bedroom window, the excuse being that
Mr. Skellorn, the man who collects rents, is coming along that way. Mr. Bennett
proceeds:
"The bailiwick of Turnhill
lay behind her; and all the murky district of the Five Towns, of which Turnhill
is the northern outpost, lay to the south. At the foot of Chatterley Wood the
canal wound in large curves on its way towards the undefiled plains of Cheshire
and the sea. On the canal-side, exactly opposite to Hilda's window, was a flour-mill,
that sometimes made nearly as much smoke as the kilns and the chimneys closing
the prospect on either hand. From the flour-mill a bricked path, which
separated a considerable row of new cottages from their appurtenant gardens,
led straight into Lessways Street, in front of Mrs. Lessways' house. By this
path Mr. Skellorn should have arrived, for he inhabited the farthest of the
cottages."
One line of insight would have
done more than all those lines of description; but let them pass as the
necessary drudgery of the novelist. And now—where is Hilda? Alas. Hilda is
still looking out of the window. Passionate and dissatisfied as she was, she
was a girl with an eye for houses. She often compared this old Mr. Skellorn
with the villas she saw from her bedroom window. Therefore the villas must be
described. Mr. Bennett proceeds:
"The row was called Freehold
Villas: a consciously proud name in a district where much of the land was
copyhold and could only change owners subject to the payment of 'fines,' and to
the feudal consent of a 'court' presided over by the agent of a lord of the
manor. Most of the dwellings were owned by their occupiers, who, each an
absolute monarch of the soil, niggled in his sooty garden of an evening amid
the flutter of drying shirts and towels. Freehold Villas symbolised the final
triumph of Victorian economics, the apotheosis of the prudent and industrious
artisan. It corresponded with a Building Society Secretary's dream of paradise.
And indeed it was a very real achievement. Nevertheless, Hilda's irrational
contempt would not admit this."
Heaven be praised, we cry! At
last we are coming to Hilda herself. But not so fast. Hilda may have been this,
that, and the other; but Hilda not only looked at houses, and thought of
houses; Hilda lived in a house. And what sort of a house did Hilda live in? Mr.
Bennett proceeds:
"It was one of the two
middle houses of a detached terrace of four houses built by her grandfather
Lessways, the teapot manufacturer; it was the chief of the four, obviously the
habitation of the proprietor of the terrace. One of the corner houses comprised
a grocer's shop, and this house had been robbed of its just proportion of
garden so that the seigneurial garden-plot might be triflingly larger than the
other. The terrace was not a terrace of cottages, but of houses rated at from
twenty-six to thirty-six pounds a year; beyond the means of artisans and petty
insurance agents and rent-collectors. And further, it was well built,
generously built; and its architecture, though debased, showed some faint
traces of Georgian amenity. It was admittedly the best row of houses in that
newly settled quarter of the town. In coming to it out of Freehold Villas Mr.
Skellorn obviously came to something superior, wider, more liberal. Suddenly
Hilda heard her mother's voice. . . ."
But we cannot hear her mother's
voice, or Hilda's voice; we can only hear Mr. Bennett's voice telling us facts
about rents and freeholds and copyholds and fines. What can Mr. Bennett be
about? I have formed my own opinion of what Mr. Bennett is about—he is trying
to make us imagine for him; he is trying to hypnotise us into the belief that,
because he has made a house, there must be a person living there. With all his
powers of observation, which are marvellous, with all his sympathy and
humanity, which are great, Mr. Bennett has never once looked at Mrs. Brown in
her corner. There she sits in the corner of the carriage—that carriage which is
travelling, not from Richmond to Waterloo, but from one age of English
literature to the next, for Mrs. Brown is eternal, Mrs. Brown is human nature,
Mrs. Brown changes only on the surface, it is the novelists who get in and
out—there she sits and not one of the Edwardian writers has so much as looked
at her. They have looked very powerfully, searchingly, and sympathetically out
of the window; at factories, at Utopias, even at the decoration and upholstery
of the carriage; but never at her, never at life, never at human nature. And so
they have developed a technique of novel-writing which suits their purpose;
they have made tools and established conventions which do their business. But
those tools are not our tools, and that business is not our business. For us
those conventions are ruin, those tools are death.
You may well complain of the
vagueness of my language. What is a convention, a tool, you may ask, and what
do you mean by saying that Mr. Bennett's and Mr. Wells's and Mr. Galsworthy's
conventions are the 'wrong conventions for the Georgian's? The question is
difficult: I will attempt a short cut. A convention in writing is not much
different from a convention in manners. Both in life and in literature it is
necessary to have some means of bridging the gulf between the hostess and her
unknown guest on the one hand, the writer and his unknown reader on the other.
The hostess bethinks her of the weather, for generations of hostesses have
established the fact that this is a subject of universal interest in which we
all believe. She begins by saying that we are having a wretched May, and,
having thus got into touch with her unknown guest, proceeds to matters of
greater interest. So it is in literature. The writer must get into touch with
his reader by putting before him something which he recognises, which therefore
stimulates his imagination, and makes him willing to co-operate in the far more
difficult business of intimacy. And it is of the highest importance that this
common meeting-place should be reached easily, almost instinctively, in the
dark, with one's eyes shut. Here is Mr. Bennett making use of this common
ground in the passage which I have quoted. The problem before him was to make
us believe in the reality of Hilda Lessways. So he began, being an Edwardian,
by describing accurately and minutely the sort of house Hilda lived in, and the
sort of house she saw from the window. House property was the common ground
from which the Edwardians found it easy to proceed to intimacy. Indirect as it
seems to us, the convention worked admirably, and thousands of Hilda Lessways
were launched upon the world by this means. For that age and generation, the
convention was a good one.
But now, if you will allow me to
pull my own anecdote to pieces, you will see how keenly I felt the lack of a
convention, and how serious a matter it is when the tools of one generation are
useless for the next. The incident had made a great impression on me. But how
was I to transmit it to you? All I could do was to report as accurately as I
could what was said, to describe in detail what was worn, to say, despairingly,
that all sorts of scenes rushed into my mind, to proceed to tumble them out
pell-mell, and to describe this vivid, this overmastering impression by
likening it to a draught or a smell of burning. To tell you the truth, I was also
strongly tempted to manufacture a three-volume novel about the old lady's son,
and his adventures crossing the Atlantic, and her daughter, and how she kept a
milliner's shop in Westminster, the past life of Smith himself, and his house
at Sheffield, though such stories seem to me the most dreary, irrelevant, and
humbugging affairs in the world.
But if I had done that I should
have escaped the appalling effort of saying what I meant. And to have got at
what I meant I should have had to go back and back and back; to experiment with
one thing and another; to try this sentence and that, referring each word to my
vision, matching it as exactly as possible, and knowing that somehow I had to
find a common ground between us, a convention which would not seem to you too
odd, unreal, and far-fetched to believe in. I admit that I shirked that arduous
undertaking. I let my Mrs. Brown slip through my fingers. I have told you
nothing whatever about her. But that is partly the great Edwardians' fault. I
asked them—they are my elders and betters—How shall I begin to describe this
woman's character? And they said, "Begin by saying that her father kept a
shop in Harrogate. Ascertain the rent. Ascertain the wages of shop assistants
in the year 1878. Discover what her mother died of. Describe cancer. Describe
calico. Describe——" But I cried, "Stop! Stop!" And I regret to
say that I threw that ugly, that clumsy, that incongruous tool out of the
window, for I knew that if I began describing the cancer and the calico, my
Mrs. Brown, that vision to which I cling though I know no way of imparting it
to you, would have been dulled and tarnished and vanished for ever.
That is what I mean by saying
that the Edwardian tools are the wrong ones for us to use. They have laid an
enormous stress upon the fabric of things. They have given us a house in the
hope that we may be able to deduce the human beings who live there. To give
them their due, they have made that house much better worth living in. But if
you hold that novels are in the first place about people, and only in the
second about the houses they live in, that is the wrong way to set about it.
Therefore, you see, the Georgian writer had to begin by throwing away the
method that was in use at the moment. He was left alone there facing Mrs. Brown
without any method of conveying her to the reader. But that is inaccurate. A
writer is never alone. There is always the public with him—if not on the same
seat, at least in the compartment next door. Now the public is a strange
travelling companion. In England it is a very suggestible and docile creature,
which, once you get it to attend, will believe implicitly what it is told for a
certain number of years. If you say to the public with sufficient conviction,
"All women have tails, and all men humps," it will actually learn to
see women with tails and men with humps, and will think it very revolutionary
and probably improper if you say "Nonsense. Monkeys have tails and camels
humps. But men and women have brains, and they have hearts; they think and they
feel,"—that will seem to it a bad joke, and an improper one into the
bargain.
But to return. Here is the
British public sitting by the writer's side and saying in its vast and
unanimous way, "Old women have houses. They have fathers. They have
incomes. They have servants. They have hot water bottles. That is how we know
that they are old women. Mr. Wells and Mr. Bennett and Mr. Galsworthy have
always taught us that this is the way to recognise them. But now with your Mrs.
Brown—how are we to believe in her? We do not even know whether her villa was
called Albert or Balmoral; what she paid for her gloves; or whether her mother
died of cancer or of consumption. How can she be alive? No; she is a mere
figment of your imagination."
And old women of course ought to
be made of freehold villas and copyhold estates, not of imagination.
The Georgian novelist, therefore,
was in an awkward predicament. There was Mrs. Brown protesting that she was
different, quite different, from what people made out, and luring the novelist
to her rescue by the most fascinating if fleeting glimpse of her charms; there
were the Edwardians handing out tools appropriate to house building and house
breaking; and there was the British public asseverating that they must see the
hot water bottle first. Meanwhile the train was rushing to that station where
we must all get out.
Such, I think, was the
predicament in which the young Georgians found themselves about the year 1910.
Many of them—I am thinking of Mr. Forster and Mr. Lawrence in particular—spoilt
their early work because, instead of throwing away those tools, they tried to
use them. They tried to compromise. They tried to combine their own direct
sense of the oddity and significance of some character with Mr. Galsworthy's
knowledge of the Factory Acts, and Mr. Bennett's knowledge of the Five Towns.
They tried it, but they had too keen, too overpowering a sense of Mrs. Brown
and her peculiarities to go on trying it much longer. Something had to be done.
At whatever cost of life, limb, and damage to valuable property Mrs. Brown must
be rescued, expressed, and set in her high relations to the world before the
train stopped and she disappeared for ever. And so the smashing and the
crashing began. Thus it is that we hear all round us, in poems and novels and
biographies, even in newspaper articles and essays, the sound of breaking and
falling, crashing and destruction. It is the prevailing sound of the Georgian
age—rather a melancholy one if you think what melodious days there have been in
the past, if you think of Shakespeare and Milton and Keats or even of Jane
Austen and Thackeray and Dickens; if you think of the language, and the heights
to which it can soar when free, and see the same eagle captive, bald, and
croaking.
In view of these facts—with these
sounds in my ears and these fancies in my brain—I am not going to deny that Mr.
Bennett has some reason when he complains that our Georgian writers are unable
to make us believe that our characters are real. I am forced to agree that they
do not pour out three immortal masterpieces with Victorian regularity every
autumn. But instead of being gloomy, I am sanguine. For this state of things
is, I think, inevitable whenever from hoar old age or callow youth the
convention ceases to be a means of communication between writer and reader, and
becomes instead an obstacle and an impediment. At the present moment we are
suffering, not from decay, but from having no code of manners which writers and
readers accept as a prelude to the more exciting intercourse of friendship. The
literary convention of the time is so artificial—you have to talk about the
weather and nothing but the weather throughout the entire visit—that,
naturally, the feeble are tempted to outrage, and the strong are led to destroy
the very foundations and rules of literary society. Signs of this are
everywhere apparent. Grammar is violated; syntax disintegrated; as a boy
staying with an aunt for the weekend rolls in the geranium bed out of sheer
desperation as the solemnities of the sabbath wear on. The more adult writers
do not, of course, indulge in such wanton exhibitions of spleen. Their
sincerity is desperate, and their courage tremendous; it is only that they do
not know which to use, a fork or their fingers. Thus, if you read Mr. Joyce and
Mr. Eliot you will be struck by the indecency of the one, and the obscurity of
the other. Mr. Joyce's indecency in Ulysses seems to me the conscious and
calculated indecency of a desperate man who feels that in order to breathe he must
break the windows. At moments, when the window is broken, he is magnificent.
But what a waste of energy! And, after all, how dull indecency is, when it is
not the overflowing of a superabundant energy or savagery, but the determined
and public-spirited act of a man who needs fresh air! Again, with the obscurity
of Mr. Eliot. I think that Mr. Eliot has written some of the loveliest single
lines in modern poetry. But how intolerant he is of the old usages and
politenesses of society—respect for the weak, consideration for the dull! As I
sun myself upon the intense and ravishing beauty of one of his lines, and
reflect that I must make a dizzy and dangerous leap to the next, and so on from
line to line, like an acrobat flying precariously from bar to bar, I cry out, I
confess, for the old decorums, and envy the indolence of my ancestors who,
instead of spinning madly through mid-air, dreamt quietly in the shade with a
book. Again, in Mr. Strachey's books, "Eminent Victorians" and
"Queen Victoria," the effort and strain of writing against the grain
and current of the times is visible too. It is much less visible, of course,
for not only is he dealing with facts, which are stubborn things, but he has
fabricated, chiefly from eighteenth-century material, a very discreet code of
manners of his own, which allows him to sit at table with the highest in the
land and to say a great many things under cover of that exquisite apparel
which, had they gone naked, would have been chased by the men-servants from the
room. Still, if you compare "Eminent Victorians" with some of Lord
Macaulay's essays, though you will feel that Lord Macaulay is always wrong, and
Mr. Strachey always right, you will also feel a body, a sweep, a richness in
Lord Macaulay's essays which show that his age was behind him; all his strength
went straight into his work; none was used for purposes of concealment or of
conversion. But Mr. Strachey has had to open our eyes before he made us see; he
has had to search out and sew together a very artful manner of speech; and the
effort, beautifully though it is concealed, has robbed his work of some of the
force that should have gone into it, and limited his scope.
For these reasons, then, we must
reconcile ourselves to a season of failures and fragments. We must reflect that
where so much strength is spent on finding a way of telling the truth the truth
itself is bound to reach us in rather an exhausted and chaotic condition.
Ulysses, Queen Victoria, Mr. Prufrock—to give Mrs. Brown some of the names she
has made famous lately—is a little pale and dishevelled by the time her
rescuers reach her. And it is the sound of their axes that we hear—a vigorous
and stimulating sound in my ears—unless of course you wish to sleep, when, in
the bounty of his concern. Providence has provided a host of writers anxious
and able to satisfy your needs.
Thus I have tried, at tedious
length, I fear, to answer some of the questions which I began by asking. I have
given an account of some of the difficulties which in my view beset the
Georgian writer in all his forms. I have sought to excuse him. May I end by
venturing to remind you of the duties and responsibilities that are yours as
partners in this business of writing books, as companions in the railway
carriage, as fellow travellers with Mrs. Brown? For she is just as visible to
you who remain silent as to us who tell stories about her. In the course of
your daily life this past week you have had far stranger and more interesting
experiences than the one I have tried to describe. You have overheard scraps of
talk that filled you with amazement. You have gone to bed at night bewildered
by the complexity of your feelings. In one day thousands of ideas have coursed
through your brains; thousands of emotions have met, collided, and disappeared
in astonishing disorder. Nevertheless, you allow the writers to palm off upon
you a version of all this, an image of Mrs. Brown, which has no likeness to
that surprising apparition whatsoever. In your modesty you seem to consider
that writers are of different blood and bone from yourselves; that they know
more of Mrs. Brown than you do. Never was there a more fatal mistake. It is
this division between reader and writer, this humility on your part, these
professional airs and graces on ours, that corrupt and emasculate the books
which should be the healthy offspring of a close and equal alliance between us.
Hence spring those sleek, smooth novels, those portentous and ridiculous
biographies, that milk and watery criticism, those poems melodiously celebrating
the innocence of roses and sheep which pass so plausibly for literature at the
present time.
Your part is to insist that
writers shall come down off their plinths and pedestals, and describe
beautifully if possible, truthfully at any rate, our Mrs. Brown. You should
insist that she is an old lady of unlimited capacity and infinite variety;
capable of appearing in any place; wearing any dress; saying anything and doing
heaven knows what. But the things she says and the things she does and her eyes
and her nose and her speech and her silence have an overwhelming fascination,
for she is, of course, the spirit we live by, life itself.
But do not expect just at present
a complete and satisfactory presentment of her. Tolerate the spasmodic, the
obscure, the fragmentary, the failure. Your help is invoked in a good cause.
For I will make one final and surpassingly rash prediction—we are trembling on
the verge of one of the great ages of English literature. But it can only be
reached if we are determined never, never to desert Mrs. Brown.
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