Tag: world war two

  • Notes on Olivia Manning’s “School for Love”

    “School for Love” (nyrb 2009) is a 1951 novel by the British writer Olivia Manning. The title comes from a conversation between the main character, Felix, and one of his housemates, Mrs Ellis, after she quotes from memory for Felix from the William Blake poem “The Little Black Boy,” from “Songs of Innocence”:

    Look on the rising sun – there God does live,
    And gives His light, and gives His heat away;
    And flowers and trees and beasts and men receive
    Comfort in morning, joy in the noonday.
    And we are put on earth a little space
    That we may learn to bear the beams of love… (166)

    Felix asks what it means, and Mrs Ellis says, “I suppose it means that life is a sort or school for love.” She doesn’t mention Blake by name, and is surprised Felix doesn’t know the poem, presumably mandatory reading for English schoolkids, but Felix has not had a typical British education. The reference comes in the last chapter, when Felix is about to complete his studies in this book that is a school for irony. The novel is set in Jerusalem at the end of World War II, where Felix, a young and naive teenager, having lost his father to an absurd fighting tangent and his mother to typhoid, comes to live in the house Miss Bohun has craftily usurped and uses like some evil landlord to manipulate and take advantage of her tenants. Finally, Mrs Ellis boldly confronts Miss Bohun:

    Mrs Ellis, breathless, her voice having about it a sort of glow and confidence of fury, said: ‘There you are Miss Bohun! I hear you are plotting to let my room….I thought I’d let you know you’re not getting rid of me so easily….’

    Miss Bohun’s voice was still mild, but her pleasantness had about it a quiet venom: ‘I thought when I saw you there was something about you . . . something vulgar and immoral. . .’

    Mrs Ellis broke in furiously: ‘I wouldn’t bring up morality or immorality, if I were you, Miss Bohun. What about you? A hypocrite, a liar, a cheat, a dirty-minded old maid’ (182-183).

    Miss Bohun of course tries to sell herself to others in terms opposite those characteristics. She does appear to have helped others, appears to hold an active and positive role in her community, and Felix is reluctant to revoke his loyalty to her for taking care of him when it seemed he had no one else to turn to and nowhere else to go. But he undergoes a slow awakening at the charges gradually revealed against Miss Bohun brought by Mrs Ellis. And Miss Bohun does not own the house in question, but has in effect stolen (saved, she would argue) the lease from a prior tenant whose family she then forces first into servitude and then out altogether. And she’s getting paid by the British for Felix’s room and board, while an element of absurdity is added to the plot when it’s divulged the curious, carefully furnished and clean but vacant front room is being saved for the Second Coming. And then it’s uncovered that Miss Bohun is receiving rent for that room also. She’s a kind of carpetbagger opportunist, and she’s very good at it, and she’s very good at explaining why she feels put upon and unappreciated.

    The characters live close to the weather and flowers and trees and one another, hungry and cold, hungry and hot, victims and refugees, and even when news comes the war is over in Europe, they can’t celebrate, because it’s assumed the local political friction will now grow much worse. Perhaps it’s too simple to say “life goes on,” but it does, and these are the people who see to it that it does, in spite of their losses or their measly gains that often come at disastrous costs to others. Miss Bohun hides all her deceitful behavior behind a facade of do-good intentions. Does she herself believe her intentions are good? Everything she’s taken she argues was a win-win. One wonders in the end what Mr. Jewel will have won. But he seems to be entering the renewed relationship with Miss Bohun with a clear vision of its costs and rewards.

    “I’m a lonely old man; she’s a lonely old woman,” Mr. Jewel tells Felix. A match made in heaven, though one can hardly imagine two people less compatible. In any case, as Mr. Jewel has already told Felix, “a wife and a fortune, they go together” (192).

    The book begins with winter snow when Felix arrives in Jerusalem and ends in summer as he’s preparing to leave for London, and throughout, Olivia Manning describes the changing weather, the landscape, walks through the colonies and to the cafes and hotels and gates and courtyards, with deft brush strokes, like impressionistic water colors, and the weather and plants are melded with the characters:

    On either side of the road the rocks were like great flints, the earth pinkish and bare as desert, and over all a silver glimmer fell from a dark sky (8).

    The garden was green and cold; the house colder. Most days the sky was stormy (24).

    Here the rains, following one another at intervals through the winter, carpeted the naked spring earth with a green as vivid as light. Later the grasses were enriched by the intricate leaves of trefoils, ranunculuses, anemones and vetches, and the spears of the bulb and tuber plants. Shortly before Mr Jewel was taken I’ll Felix saw the green cyclamen buds open, each dropping a screw of petals like a wrung-out cloth. In a day these had become flowers, alert and delicate as the ears of a gazelle (81).

    The summer was coming. There was no more rain; the sun’s heat grew, the spring flowers wilted, dried, turned to dust, and the fields grew bare. Now the beauty of the day came with the sunset and the sky turned from a pure, bright green to a peacock blue in which the stars shone each evening larger and more brilliant. The sunset translucence and colour lingered, perhaps until dawn (138).

    And there is the cat, Faro, another character in the book, that Felix loves, who gave him comfort night and day when he missed his mother so he cried helplessly alone:

    She was lying dozing along a bough shaded by ferns. Her fur, extremely soft and fitting like a loose glove, was pressed into folds along her legs and the line of her belly. Her summer coat had come in pale; there was a sheen over her whole body and a glisten of silver-white at her throat (172).

    A coming of age book, even if Felix does decide to keep the cat, adopt her as his own, and take her with him to London, another displaced, lower deck passenger, which is where Olivia Manning seems to find most of her characters:

    The liners had been turned into troop transports and perhaps the pets’ quarters had been dismantled – if so, there would be nowhere where he could shut her up at night. As a male civilian he would have no cabin. The army officers would have cabins to themselves in ‘A’ deck; the women and children would sleep about nine a cabin on ‘B’ deck; the civilian men, of whatever age and rank, would be allotted hammocks with the troops on the lower deck (175).

  • Memoir

    One might approach the memoir form, one’s own memoir, with a casual indifference, for no doubt everyone else will, while it takes a bit of faith to trust as total fact any stranger’s avowed remembrances. There’s also the problem of what’s to be left unsaid, for any deletion – deliberate, determinate, accidental – turns down the path of fiction, yet all of experience, the universe of one’s life from its big bang forward or the unexpurgated version of the time one visited (fill in your personal fave), will take way too long. Even Proust must have left some stuff out, and Knausgard, if for no other reason that they had not eyes in the back of their heads. It’s not what we remember, but how that fills dreams and notebooks. And most folks are quickly bored hearing one’s dreams recast in words over morning coffee. While the day-book or journal is not quite yet a memoir, often neither the what nor how of memory but the immediate reaction to a still unfolding event.

    I’m looking into again Edmund Wilson’s “The Thirties: From Notebooks and Diaries of the Period, Edited with an Introduction by Leon Edel” (First printing, 1980). From the Editor’s Foreword:

    “Wilson intended his journals to be edited as ‘trade’ books, not as scholarly editions; he wanted no scholarly apparatus and in particular no treatment of his text as if it were sacrosanct. Journals are written in the rough; and he knew journal keepers repeat themselves. He wanted his slips of the pen silently corrected without the inevitable sic and explanatory notes.”

    xi

    Fortunately for this reader, L. E. ignored Wilson’s want and provided copious explanatory notes as to who’s being talked about, why important to the era, and what’s going on around them at the time. Though Wilson also logs enough everyday observation to make notes unnecessary:

    July 18 [Journey to the Soviet Union, 1935]. Rowing on the river at Marmontovka, Free Day – little curling river with grass-green banks, with people, largely naked, on the banks: they look better without their clothes because the clothes are no good – very nice to see them – blond girls with white skin, thick round legs, and big round breasts, boys burned brown except around the hips, where they had been wearing trunks, where it was comparatively white – bathing suits seemed to be becoming more and more perfunctory, they seemed more and more to be leaving them off – the factory, where a very rudimentary little swimming dock of planks had been built; at the end a dam and falls, beyond which you couldn’t go any farther, a flock of white goats; two men in a pup tent, a man in a shack; an elderly man and woman sitting on something, turned away from each other reading the papers.

    574-575

    I pulled Wilson’s “The Thirties” off the “now reading” shelf (aka books with bookmarks still somewhere in them), looking for parallels to today’s “The Twenties,” though we are of course only just into them. In a long note, Edel says “He [Wilson] could not see why the American leftists should not be as critical of this [the Stalinist regime] as they were of other tyrannies – Hitler’s, Mussolini’s, Franco’s” (714).

    Of closer if not exact parallel is Irene Nemirovsky’s “Suite Francaise,” which begins with:

    “It was night, they were at war and there was an air raid. But dawn was near and the war very far away. The first to hear the hum of the siren were those who couldn’t sleep – the ill and bedridden, mothers with sons at the front, women crying for the men they loved.”

    3. First Vintage International Edition, May 2007.

    “Appendix I,” which includes Nemirovsky’s notes taken from her notebooks, begins:

    “My God! what is this country doing to me? Since it is rejecting me, let us consider it coldly, let us watch as it loses its honour and its life. And the other countries? What are they to me? Empires are dying. Nothing matters. Whether you look at it from a mystical or a personal point of view, it’s just the same. Let us keep a cool head. Let us harden our heart. Let us wait.

    21 June [1941]. Conversation with Pied-de-Marmite. France is going to join hands with Germany. Soon they will be calling up people here but ‘only the young ones.’ This was no doubt out of consideration towards Michel. One army is crossing Russia, the other is coming from Africa. Suez has been taken. Japan with its formidable fleet is fighting America. England is begging for mercy.

    25 June. Unbelievable heat. The garden is decked out with the colours of June – azure, pale-green and pink. I lost my pen. There are still many other worries such as the threat of a concentration camp, the status of Jews etc. Sunday was unforgettable. The thunderbolt about Russia* hit our friends after their ‘mad night’ down by the lake. And in order to [?] with them, everyone got drunk. Will I write about it one day?”

    373, *Footnote 2: “Germany invaded the USSR on 22 June 1941.”
  • It’s “After Midnight” at Berfrois

    The Toads review, posted back in May, of “After Midnight” was reposted today on Berfrois. After the last few weeks of more unrest around the contemporary world – on the ground, in the air, on-line – Irmgard Keun’s short novel about the life of a young woman in Germany during the build up toward World War Two feels increasingly relevant. Whatever time it is locally, cruise on over to Berfrois and check out the review and more.