Arnold Bennett
The English novelist and dramatist Arnold Bennett
(1867-1931) was the author of "The Old Wives' Tale", a masterpiece of
realism.
Arnold
Bennett was born on May 27, 1867, in Hanley, one of the pottery-making
"Six Towns" of central England. The youth, called Enoch,
spoke with a stammer and was determined to make his living in
literature. After attending local schools and working in his father's law
office, he moved to London
in 1888 to become a writer. In 1893 he was employed by the magazine Woman,
and in 1898 he published his first novel, A Man from the North. During
these years he began to call himself Arnold Bennett. In 1902 Bennett published
two novel, Anna of the Five Towns and The Grand Babylon Hotel -
the first realistic, the second sensational. They represent the pattern of his
work: fiction of serious artistic purpose produced at the same time as material
of no artistic value.
Bennett
lived in France
from 1902 to 1913. Shortly after his fortieth birthday he married Marguerite Soulié. The couple seemed happy but within a few years
proved incompatible. During these years Bennett wrote
magazine articles, self-help books, plays, short stories, and novels - a
tremendous output. Most of it, however, was written only to make money. But Tales
of the Five Towns and the trilogy Anna of the Five Towns (1902), Leonora
(1903), and Sacred and Profane Love (1904) are worth mention, for in
them Bennett began his realistic studies of life in the industrial "Five
Towns," changed from the actual "Six Towns" for reasons of euphony.
The Old Wives' Tale
The
sight of an old woman in a restaurant in Paris
in 1903 gave Bennett the idea for a novel that would, as he wrote, "go one
better" than Guy de Maupassant's realistic novel Une
Vie. While writing other books he nourished the idea, and in 1907 he began to write it.
The novel came quickly, a thousand words or more each day. After various
interruptions, including the writing of Buried Alive (1908) and the
production of his play Cupid and Commonsense (1908), The Old Wives'
Tale was completed and published in 1908. It is the story of the sisters
Constance and Sophia Baines from their girlhood in Bursley, one of
the "Five Towns," to their deaths 50 years later. Constance stayed at
home; Sophia, like Bennett, escaped to Paris.
The story realistically depicts the minute changes by which the girls become
old women.
The Old Wives' Tale brought Bennett fame and money. He secured his position as an eminent
author with the "Clayhanger" novels (Clayhanger, 1910; Hilda Lessways, 1911; These Twain, 1916), which are meticulous studies of love, marriage, and society in the
"Five Towns." Meanwhile, he capitalized on his position with light
novels, a travel book about the United States, and several plays, of which Milestones
(1912), written with E. Knoblock, is best known.
During
World War I Bennett served his country as a journalist and civil servant. He
separated from his wife in 1921, and in 1922 he met Dorothy Cheston,
an actress, by whom he had a daughter in 1926. In the 1920s Bennett's critical
reputation declined, and his carefully objective realism became old-fashioned.
During this period his literary productions were not equal to his best, though Riceyman Steps (1923) evinced a brief return
of his talent. His popular reputation, however, was never higher, and his
novels and journalistic work made him one of the highest-paid writers of his
day. Displays of his portrait on posters advertising his works made his
pleasantly distinctive face with its heavy-lidded gaze and prominent teeth familiar to thousands.
After a trip to France
during which he caught typhoid fever, Bennett died on March 31, 1931.
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