In the shadow of the atomic bomb it is not easy to talk confidently
about progress. However, if it can
be assumed that we are not going to be blown to pieces in about
ten years' time, there are many
reasons, and George Gissing's novels are among them, for thinking
that the present age is a good
deal better than the last one. If Gissing were still alive he would
be younger than Bernard Shaw, and
yet already the London of which he wrote seems almost as distant
as that of Dickens. It is the
fog-bound, gas-lit London of the 'eighties, a city of drunken puritans,
where clothes, architecture and
furniture had reached their rock-bottom of ugliness, and where it
was almost normal for a
working-class family of ten persons to inhabit a single room. On
the whole Gissing does not write of
the worst depths of poverty, but one can hardly read his descriptions
of lower-middle-class life, so
obviously truthful in their dreariness, without feeling that we
have improved perceptibly on that
black-coated, money-ruled world of only sixty years ago.
Everything of Gissing's - except perhaps one or two books written
towards the end of his life -
contains memorable passages, and anyone who is making his acquaintance
for the first time might
do worse than start with In the Year of the Jubilee. It was rather
a pity, however, to use up paper in
reprinting two of his minor works when the books by which he ought
to be remembered are and
have been for years completely unprocurable. The Odd Women, for
instance, is about as thoroughly
out of print as a book can be. I possess a copy myself, in one of
those nasty little red-covered cheap
editions that flourished before the 1914 war, but that is the only
copy I have ever seen or heard of.
New Grub Street, Gissing's masterpiece, I have never succeeded in
buying. When I have read it, it
has been in soupstained copies borrowed from public lending libraries:
so also with Demos, The
Nether World and one or two others. So far as I know only The Private
Papers of Henry Ryecroft, the
book on Dickens, and A Life's Morning, have been in print at all
recently. However, the two now
reprinted are well worth reading, especially In the Year of the
Jubilee, which is the more sordid and
therefore the more characteristic.
In his introduction Mr William Plomer remarks that "generally speaking,
Gissing's novels are about
money and women," and Miss Myfanwy Evans says something very similar
in introducing The
Whirlpool. One might, I think, widen the definition and say that
Gissing's novels are a protest against
the form of self-torture that goes by the name of respectability.
Gissing was a bookish, perhaps
over-civilised man, in love with classical antiquity, who found
himself trapped in a cold, smoky,
Protestant country where it was impossible to be comfortable without
a thick padding of money
between yourself and the outer world. Behind his rage and querulousness
there lay a perception that
the horrors of life in late-Victorian England were largely unnecessary.
The grime, the stupidity, the
ugliness, the sex-starvation, the furtive debauchery, the vulgarity,
the bad manners, the
censoriousness - these things were unnecessary, since the puritanism
of which they were a relic no
longer upheld the structure of society. People who might, without
becoming less efficient, have been
reasonably happy chose instead to be miserable, inventing senseless
taboos with which to terrify
themselves. Money was a nuisance not merely because without it you
starved; what was more
important was that unless you had quite a lot of it - £300
a year, say - society would not allow you to
live gracefully or even peacefully. Women were a nuisance because
even more than men they were
the believers in taboos, still enslaved to respectability even when
they had offended against it.
Money and women were therefore the two instruments through which
society avenged itself on the
courageous and the intelligent. Gissing would have liked a little
more money for himself and some
others, but he was not much interested in what we should now call
social justice. He did not admire
the working class as such, and he did not believe in democracy.
He wanted to speak not for the
multitude, but for the exceptional man, the sensitive man, isolated
among barbarians.
In The Odd Women there is not a single major character whose life
is not ruined either by having too
little money, or by getting it too late in life, or by the pressure
of social conventions which are
obviously absurd but which cannot be questioned. An elderly spinster
crowns a useless life by
taking to drink; a pretty young girl marries a man old enough to
be her father; a struggling
schoolmaster puts off marrying his sweetheart until both of them
are middle-aged and withered; a
good-natured man is nagged to death by his wife; an exceptionally
intelligent, spirited man misses
his chance to make an adventurous marriage and relapses into futility;
in each case the ultimate
reason for the disaster lies in obeying the accepted social code,
or in not having enough money to
circumvent it. In A Life's Morning an honest and gifted man meets
with ruin and death because it is
impossible to walk about a big town with no hat on. His hat is blown
out of the window when he is
travelling in the train, and as he has not enough money to buy another,
he misappropriates some
money belonging to his employer, which sets going a series of disasters.
This is an interesting
example of the changes in outlook that can suddenly make an all-powerful
taboo seem ridiculous.
Today, if you had somehow contrived to lose your trousers, you would
probably embezzle money
rather than walk about in your underpants. In the 'eighties the
necessity would have seemed equally
strong in the case of a hat. Even thirty or forty years ago, indeed,
bare-headed men were booed at in
the street. Then, for no very clear reason, hatlessness became respectable,
and today the particular
tragedy described by Gissing - entirely plausible in its context
- would be quite impossible.
The most impressive of Gissing's books is New Grub Street. To a professional
writer it is also an
upsetting and demoralising book, because it deals among other things
with that much-dreaded
occupational disease, sterility. No doubt the number of writers
who suddenly lose the power to write
is not large, but it is a calamity that might happen to anybody
at any moment, like sexual impotence.
Gissing, of course, links it up with his habitual themes - money,
the pressure of the social code, and
the stupidity of women.
Edwin Reardon, a young novelist - he has just deserted a clerkship
after having a fluky success with
a single novel - marries a charming and apparently intelligent young
woman, with a small income of
her own. Here, and in one or two other places, Gissing makes what
now seems the curious remark
that it is difficult for an educated man who is not rich to get
married. Reardon brings it off, but his less
successful friend, who lives in an attic and supports himself by
ill-paid tutoring jobs, has to accept
celibacy as a matter of course. If he did succeed in finding himself
a wife, we are told, it could only be
an uneducated girl from the slums. Women of refinement and sensibility
will not face poverty. And
here one notices again the deep difference between that day and
our own. Doubtless Gissing is right
in implying all through his books that intelligent women are very
rare animals, and if one wants to
marry a women who is intelligent and pretty, then the choice is
still further restricted, according to a
well-known arithmetical rule. It is like being allowed to choose
only among albinos, and left-handed
albinos at that. But what comes out in Gissing's treatment of his
odious heroine, and of certain
others among his women, is that at that date the idea of delicacy,
refinement, even intelligence, in the
case of a woman, was hardly separable from the idea of superior
social status and expensive
physical surroundings. The sort of woman whom a writer would want
to marry was also the sort of
woman who would shrink from living in an attic. When Gissing wrote
New Grub Street that was
probably true, and it could, I think, be justly claimed that it
is not true today.
Almost as soon as Reardon is married it becomes apparent that his
wife is merely a silly snob, the
kind of woman in whom "artistic tastes" are no more than a cover
for social competitiveness. In
marrying a novelist she has thought to marry someone who will rapidly
become famous and shed
reflected glory upon herself. Reardon is a studious, retiring, ineffectual
man, a typical Gissing hero.
He has been caught up in an expensive, pretentious world in which
he knows he will never be able to
maintain himself, and his nerve fails almost immediately. His wife,
of course, has not the faintest
understanding of what is meant by literary creation. There is a
terrible passage - terrible, at least, to
anyone who earns his living by writing - in which she calculates
the number of pages that it would be
possible to write in a day, and hence the number of novels that
her husband may be expected to
produce in a year - with the reflection that really it is not a
very laborious profession. Meanwhile
Reardon has been stricken dumb. Day after day he sits at his desk;
nothing happens, nothing
comes. Finally, in panic, he manufactures a piece of rubbish; his
publisher, because Reardon's
previous book had been successful, dubiously accepts it. Thereafter
he is unable to produce
anything that even looks as if it might be printable. He is finished.
The desolating thing is that if only he could get back to his clerkship
and his bachelorhood, he would
be all right. The hard-boiled journalist who finally marries Reardon's
widow sums him up accurately
by saying that he is the kind of man who, if left to himself, would
write a fairly good book every two
years. But, of course, he is not left to himself. He cannot revert
to his old profession, and he cannot
simply settle down to live on his wife's money: public opinion,
operating through his wife, harries
him into impotence and finally into the grave. Most of the other
literary characters in the book are not
much more fortunate, and the troubles that beset them are still
very much the same today. But at
least it is unlikely that the book's central disaster would now
happen in quite that way or for quite
those reasons. The chances are that Reardon's wife would be less
of a fool, and that he would have
fewer scruples about walking out on her if she made life intolerable
for him. A woman of rather similar
type turns up in The Whirlpool in the person of Alina Frothingham.
By contrast there are the three
Miss Frenches in The Year of Jubilee, who represent the emerging
lower-middleclass - a class which,
according to Gissing, was getting hold of money and power which
it was not fitted to use - and who
are quite surprisingly coarse, rowdy, shrewish and immoral. At first
sight Gissing's "ladylike" and
"unladylike" women seem to be different and even opposite kinds
of animal, and this seems to
invalidate his implied condemnation of the female sex in general.
The connecting link between them,
however, is that all of them are miserably limited in outlook. Even
the clever and spirited ones, like
Rhoda in The Odd Women (an interesting early specimen of the New
Woman), cannot think in terms
of generalities, and cannot get away from ready-made standards.
In his heart Gissing seems to feel
that women are natural inferiors. He wants them to be better educated,
but on the other hand he does
not want them to have freedom, which they are certain to misuse.
On the whole the best women in
his books are the self-effacing, home-keeping ones.
There are several of Gissing's books that I have never read, because
I have never been able to get
hold of them, and these unfortunately include Born in Exile, which
is said by some people to be his
best book. But merely on the strength of New Grub Street, Demos
and The Odd Women I am ready to
maintain that England has produced very few better novelists. This
perhaps sounds like a rash
statement until one stops to consider what is meant by a novel.
The word "novel" is commonly used
to cover almost any kind of story - The Golden Ass, Anna Karenina,
Don Quixote, The Improvisatore,
Madame Bovary, King Solomon's Mines or anything else you like -
but it also has a narrower sense in
which it means something hardly existing before the nineteenth century
and flourishing chiefly in
Russia and France. A novel, in this sense, is a story which attempts
to describe credible human
beings, and - without necessarily using the technique of naturalism
- to show them acting on
everyday motives and not merely undergoing strings of improbable
adventures. A true novel,
sticking to this definition, will also contain at least two characters,
probably more, who are described
from the inside and on the same level of probability - which, in
effect, rules out the novels written in
the first person. If one accepts this definition, it becomes apparent
that the novel is not an art-form in
which England has excelled. The writers commonly paraded as "great
English novelists" have a way
of turning out either not to be true novelists, or not to be Englishmen.
Gissing was not a writer of
picaresque tales, or burlesques, or comedies, or political tracts:
he was interested in individual
human beings, and the fact that he can deal sympathetically with
several different sets of motives,
and makes a credible story out of the collision between them, makes
him exceptional among English
writers.
Certainly there is not much of what is usually called beauty, not
much lyricism, in the situations and
characters that he chooses to imagine, and still less in the texture
of his writing. His prose, indeed, is
often disgusting. Here are a couple of samples:
Not with impunity could her thought accustom itself to stray in
regions forbidden, how firm soever
her resolve to hold bodily aloof. (The Whirlpool.)
The ineptitude of uneducated Englishwomen in all that relates to
their attire is a fact that it boots not
to enlarge upon. (In the Year of the Jubilee.)
However, he does not commit the faults that really matter. It is
always clear what he means, he never
"writes for effect", he knows how to keep the balance between recit
and dialogue and how to make
dialogue sound probable while not contrasting too sharply with the
prose that surrounds it. A much
more serious fault than his inelegant manner of writing is the smallness
of his range of experience.
He is only acquainted with a few strata of society, and, in spite
of his vivid understanding of the
pressure of circumstance on character, does not seem to have much
grasp of political or economic
forces. In a mild way his outlook is reactionary, from lack of foresight
rather than from ill-will. Having
been obliged to live among them, he regarded the working class as
savages, and in saying so he
was merely being intellectually honest; he did not see that they
were capable of becoming civilised if
given slightly better opportunities. But, after all, what one demands
from a novelist is not prophecy,
and part of the charm of Gissing is that he belongs so unmistakably
to his own time, although his
time treated him badly.
The English writer nearest to Gissing always seems to be his contemporary,
or near-contemporary,
Mark Rutherford. If one simply tabulates their outstanding qualities,
the two men appear to be very
different. Mark Rutherford was a less prolific writer than Gissing,
he was less definitely a novelist, he
wrote much better prose, his books belong less recognisably to any
particular time, and he was in
outlook a social reformer and, above all, a puritan. Yet there is
a sort of haunting resemblance,
probably explained by the fact that both men lack that curse of
English writers, a "sense of humour".
A certain low- spiritedness, and air of loneliness, is common to
both of them. There are, of course,
funny passages in Gissing's books, but he is not chiefly concerned
with getting a laugh - above all,
he has no impulse towards burlesque. He treats all his major characters
more or less seriously, and
with at least an attempt at sympathy. Any novel will inevitably
contain minor characters who are mere
grotesques or who are observed in a purely hostile spirit, but there
is such a thing as impartiality,
and Gissing is more capable of it than the great majority of English
writers. It is a point in his favour
that he had no very strong moral purpose. He had, of course, a deep
loathing of the ugliness,
emptiness and cruelty of the society he lived in, but he was concerned
to describe it rather than to
change it. There is usually no one in his books who can be pointed
to as the villain, and even when
there is a villain he is not punished. In his treatment of sexual
matters Gissing is surprisingly frank,
considering the time at which he was writing. It is not that he
writes pornography or expresses
approval of sexual promiscuity, but simply that he is willing to
face the facts. The unwritten law of
English fiction, the law that the hero as well as the heroine of
a novel should be virgin when married,
is disregarded in his books, almost for the first time since Fielding.
Like most English writers subsequent to the mid-nineteenth century,
Gissing could not imagine any
desirable destiny other than being a writer or a gentleman of leisure.
The dichotomy between the
intellectual and the lowbrow already existed, and a person capable
of writing a serious novel could
no longer picture himself as fully satisfied with the life of a
businessman, or a soldier, or a politician,
or what not. Gissing did not, at least consciously, even want to
be the kind of writer that he was. His
ideal, a rather melancholy one, was to have a moderate private income
and live in a small comfortable
house in the country, preferably unmarried, where he could wallow
in books, especially the Greek
and Latin classics. He might perhaps have realised this ideal if
he had not managed to get himself
into prison immediately after winning an Oxford scholarship: as
it was he spent his life in what
appeared to him to be hack work, and when he had at last reached
the point where he could stop
writing against the clock, he died almost immediately, aged only
about forty-five. His death,
described by H.G. Wells in his Experiment in Autobiography, was
of a piece with his life. The twenty
novels, or thereabouts, that he produced between 1880 and 1900 were,
so to speak, sweated out of
him during his struggle towards a leisure which he never enjoyed
and which he might not have used
to good advantage if he had had it: for it is difficult to believe
that his temperament really fitted him for
a life of scholarly research. Perhaps the natural pull of his gifts
would in any case have drawn him
towards novel writing sooner or later. If not, we must be thankful
for the piece of youthful folly which
turned him aside from a comfortable middle-class career and forced
him to become the chronicler of
vulgarity, squalor and failure.
This review-essay was written in 1948 for a magazine, but did not appear
in Orwell's lifetime.
URL : http://www.flinders.edu.au/topics/Morton/Gissing/Orwell.htm
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