A
BRIEF BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
The details
of Gissing's frequently miserable private life -- miserable largely because of
his stunning capacity for self-punishment -- have fascinated generations of
readers ever since his friend Morley Roberts published the first biography,
thinly disguised under the title The Private Life of Henry Maitland. Roberts'
memory failed him over some details and some of his judgements are more than
dubious; but fortunately Gissing assiduously chronicled his own life, though
the records were damaged before and after his death. Taken together, the new
superb edition of his Collected Letters, his Diary and the
semi-fictional memoirs The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft give us a
unique and touching insight into a very distinctive personality, and the life
he struggled through as a moderately successful novelist in late Victorian
England. He has also been the subject of two modern biographies, and the
definitive biography is currently being written by Pierre Coustillas.
George Gissing was born at
Gissing's marriage was unhappy: his
wife was a drunkard and intermittently returned to prostitution; eventually he
paid her to live apart from him. The relationship in Workers between the
idealistic Arthur Golding and the sluttish and invincibly stupid Carrie
Mitchell is clearly autobiographical. The other female character in Workers,
Helen Norman, is a first study for a long line of ladylike, virtuous and
intellectual woman, distant as stars and just as unattainable for the Gissing
hero. 'My one supreme desire is to marry a perfectly refined woman' says one of
his many alter egos,
Nell Gissing died, of drink and
(probably) venereal disease, early in 1888; the account in his diary of being
called to identify her body in a room in a Lambeth slum is one of Gissing's
most moving passages. His investigations into, and personal experience of, the
lowest stratum of London working class life had stood him in good stead and
supplied him with the materials for four other slum novels, of which the best,
unforgettable for its superb evocation of tragic squalor, is the last, The
Nether World. On the proceeds of this book, he fulfilled his dearest
ambition by paying a long visit to
Gissing never knew wide fame or
considerable prosperity. He was compelled to sell the copyright of most of his
novels outright to publishers, which meant that even his occasional successes
were often unrewarding. Nevertheless, from 1884 onwards, he earned a modest if
precarious living from novels and tutoring. For six years he lived alone,
drawing inspiration, as he said sardonically, from his apartment's proximity to
the Marylebone workhouse. He was oppressed by his 'guilty secret' -- his having
gone to prison for a disgraceful proletarian crime -- and he had few literary
associates or, indeed, friends of any kind. He was often desperately lonely,
spending many punishing hours a day at his desk and rarely speaking to anyone
congenial. The 'secret' moulded his relations with women also: Gissing was
attractive to, and powerfully attracted by, women, but he believed no woman of
his own kind could possibly be content to share his life, and that anyone in
his position -- a struggling intellectual whose books were destined never to
have a wide sale -- was forced to choose for a partner either an heiress or a
work-girl. How far this was a rationalisation for deeper impulses, including a
sexual appetite for lower-class women, and how far from a fear that his past
would be exposed, is a matter of dispute. Certainly he explores the theme of
exogamy obsessively in his novels, though he was incapable of taking the
hard-headed advice he put into the mouths of his own characters.
For, undeterred by his own prophecy
in New Grub Street of the inevitable outcome of another such marriage,
he was prepared to pay the price a second time. He picked up his second wife,
Edith Underwood, daughter of a respectable artisan -- in the street, according
to Roberts. As soon as they had married in February 1891 they moved to
Domestic and other kinds of miseries
seemed to feed Gissing's genius. The novels of his middle period in the 1890s,
some of which have been severely underrated, deal with the various levels of
English middle class life (usually the lowest levels) and the social problems
of the day. His themes are struggling authors and their financial and marital
difficulties in his masterpiece, New Grub Street; the lack of
opportunities for well-educated single women in The Odd Women; the
attempt, in Born in Exile, of an intelligent but poor man to ingratiate
himself with, and to marry the daughter of, a upper class cultured family by
pretending to have religious views which he really despises; an attack on
conventional marriage and on suburban pretension in In the Year of Jubilee;
and a study of various kinds of corruption among the artistic moneyed classes
in The Whirlpool. These novels, some of which sold and were reviewed
well, rapidly increased Gissing's reputation and expanded his income, which he
augmented by the rapid production of unsophisticated short stories and
pot-boiling forgettable short fictions. And for the first time he acquired some
literary and educated acquaintances: Grant Allen, George Meredith, W.H. Hudson
and especially H.G. Wells, who became a close friend; though he still refused
to be seen with his wife or to invite people to his house.
After the publication in 1897 of The
Whirlpool, which is probably the most formally satisfying of his novels,
Gissing's creative energy for fiction seemed to be mined out. He did, however,
write two more novels and a number of stories. He spent some months in
After the turn of the century
Gissing's illness grew acute. He moved restlessly from place to place as a
semi-invalid, always sure that happiness was to be found elsewhere. His third
marital relationship was starting to show some signs of strain: he complained
bitterly in letters about French cooking and developed an unlikely and neurotic
fascination with English food: the thought of an English potato, he said, made
him "frantic with homesickness". His last complete novel, Will
Warburton, in part treats the guilty secret theme yet again; the hero runs
a grocery store when he loses his money, thereby potentially suffering the
humiliation in middleclass eyes that Gissing always feared.
Gissing died in a rented villa at
Ispoure near St Jean Pied de Port in south-west
Source: THE GEORGE
GISSING WEBSITE