“The Library was connected with the public wash-house
by the municipal fumigation rooms, where books could be disinfected after an
outbreak of disease and old clothes could be boiled for redistribution to the
needy.”
This brisk description
immediately captured a time when Public Libraries – as opposed to Subscription
Libraries - were seen as slightly dangerous places and when books,
borrowed by the great unknown public, were once objects of suspicion and possible
infection in themselves and not just a worrying way of spreading ideas to the
poorer classes. I recall a time when children’s hands and nails were inspected before
they were allowed a ticket to borrow books from the library, though that
continued much later than the setting of this book.
The description above comes
from a delight of a novel and a treat of a novelist. THE GATE OF ANGELS, set in 1912, is a work of historical fiction. The
author, as I’m sure many of you will know, is Penelope Fitzgerald, and the
novel published in 1990. My weak excuse for not having reading her work before
is that we share the same first name, which is hardly evidence of a sound
critical judgement on my part. In mitigation, Penelope, with all its weight of marital fidelity, is a terrible imposition
on a child.
Fortunately, THE GATE OF ANGELS surfaced from a pile of
dusty paperbacks at about the same moment the title was praised somewhere else.
Thank you, revered reader! So I set the battered second-hand copy (“brought to me by Woman’s Journal”) by my
bedside. That night I opened the pages and read myself into an unimaginably violent
gale, bringing havoc to Cambridge:
colleges, townsfolk and landscape alike.
What a wonderfully brisk and compact
piece of writing it is, sharp as the East Anglian wind. The tightly witty prose
carries a strong sense of the author’s voice and a world-sharpened understanding.
She does not offer history as a sentimental or stirring recreation but writes
with an observant, lively bustle, choosing a moment when all manner of social
relationships, newly proposed scientific theories and religious beliefs were
there to be questioned.
The characters, young and
old, feel the drive of the new era that is underway, welcome or unwelcome: there
are aged academics within the College
of St Angelus and
elsewhere keen to preserve ancient, pointless traditions and idle young men
caught by curious rulings of the Disobligers Society and forced to argue for
subjects they do not believe. Indeed, the whole novel seems filled with questioning
people, Fitzgerald delights, too, in pointing out the small absurdities and
trials of human living:
“The fire was banked up like a furnace,
dividing the room into dismaying areas of heat and cold. . . .The college had
never been thoroughly dried out since its foundation, but Fred, who had been
brought up in a rectory, saw no reason to complain.” I do so enjoy that use of “dismaying.”
The plot is about a romance that
strikes Fred Fairly, a brilliant young physicist and Fellow of the all-male St
Angelicus College in the middle of his anxieties about the great debates about
science, mathematical certainty and philosophy of that time. Fred’s life is
clearly one of upper-middle class privilege, although his sisters nicely
conspire to keep him in his place. There is a wonderful scene near the start where
Fred returns home to his father Rectory, only to be greeted by a roomful of
women – his mother, siblings and the housekeeper – too busy to pay him any attention
because they are all sewing suffragette banners for a next march.
Fitzgerald may have inherited
a sense of that time as she was born in 1916 and grew up in the Archbishop’s
Palace in Lincoln.
Her mother, an Archbishop’s daughter, was one of the first women students at Oxford and her father was
editor of Punch. The famous Knox brothers: the theologian and crime writer
Ronald Knox, the cryptographer Dilwyn Knox and the biblical scholar Wilfrid Knox
– were her uncles and also the subject of one of her biographies.
At the start of THE GATE OF ANGELS, the amiable Fred has
lost his Christian faith; he is also rather lonely while knowing that, by the
terms of his Fellowship, he is forbidden from marrying, particularly women of
an unsuitable nature. Quiet moments of humour illuminate his bleak bachelor life.
Fitzgerald reminds us that, being brought up in a Rectory, Fred can withstand
the lack of heating within the dank, damp Saint Angelus. Fred endures.
However, as he cycles up a country road, a horse and cart charge out from a farm drive and two – or was it three? – cyclists collide with the vehicle.
Due to a misunderstanding, the unconscious Fred Fairly and the bold and practical heroine, Daisy Saunders – also unconscious - are lain down close together in the same room. Waking so physically close to this warmly attractive young woman, Fred is overcome with love and tenderness: how can he not dream of marrying her?
A courtship of a kind begins, with Daisy very much a forthright thinker:
“Fred, quite honestly, did you never
take a girl out before?” said Daisy.
He seemed to find this difficult but
only for a few moments. “I’ve never taken a girl out I’ve wanted to marry
before.”
“She mayn’t have known that though,”said
Daisy.
Alongside, the reader hears
the story of Daisy’s life and her hand-to-mouth childhood, flitting with her
ailing mother through the mean terraces of South London.
She is definitely not of Fred’s social class. Orphaned at sixteen, Daisy has tried
to find and keep clerical jobs, despite horrid yet understated male harassment.
Despite all this, Daisy’s energy and confidence are bracing; one is cheered by
her practical, pragmatic and rational self and feels for her when, having reached
the status of a nursing student, things go awry.
In Fitzgerald’s world, I suspect
things often go awry. Although the couple enjoy a short relationship, that third
cyclist’s disappearance leads to local rumours, to donnish tales of ghostly haunting,
and on to word of a concealed murder and finally a full-scale investigation of
witnesses and an uncovering of a very awkward truth for Daisy and poor Fred.
Even so, just as all seems
collapsed into catastrophe, Fitzgerald ends the novel with a moment of hope: just a
glimpse of brightness rather than any confirmation, a small optimism that breaks out
despite all one expects, and typical of the mix of dark and light that made this
novel so very different and such an unexpected surprise.
Now I cannot say that the content, as described above, would
have made me hurry to take these novels off the shelf – especially with my
afore-mentioned name phobia - but if the
pages have anything of the skill, flavour and bright, quiet wit of Penelope Fitzgerald’s THE GATE OF ANGELS, I am sure these novels
will be a delight too.
Moreover, as much of Fitzgerald's work
has been newly published by Fourth Estate, it will be quite possible to find out.
Penny Dolan.
Note: Fitzgerald’s earlier books
were inspired on her own experiences: THE BOOKSHOP reflects her knowledge of
helping to run a bookshop in Southwold; OFFSHORE draws on life among the
houseboat community in Battersea; HUMAN VOICES comes from her war-time life at
the BBC while AT FREDDIE’S depicts life at a drama school. Then, feeling she
had written out her own life, Fitzgerald began writing about other places and
other times. She said she enjoyed the research more than the writing. She died in 2000.
Thanks for the book recommendation, Penny - I'm also a newcomer to the other Penny's work, for new reason at all!
ReplyDeleteWonderful review, Penny. Makes me want to flit over to Amazon and find it straight away.
ReplyDeleteThe novel's short and quietly quirky, and I really liked P.F's unique voice and attitude, Sue.
ReplyDeleteHermione's Lee's biography of PF sounds interesting too, if you like oddly bohemian lives where there's little bright glamour involved.
Thank you for this, Penny - like Susan, I shall look for it on Amazon!
ReplyDelete