Not
everything worth reading is hot off the press. In this section, we recommend "something old" that is still well worth
reading. "Something old" can mean anything from a venerable and antique
classic to a good book first published four or more years ago.
“THE
PRIVATE PAPERS OF HENRY RYCROFT” by George Gissing (first published in 1903)
If
you look up George Gissing, you will
find that previously on this blog I have dealt with three of the
late-Victorian’s social realist novels – New
Grub Street (1891), Born in Exile
(1892) and the posthumously-published Will
Warburton (1905). On the whole, the novels of Gissing (1857-1903) are grim
and unforgiving. Though often embraced by Marxist and left-wing critics for his
accounts of oppressed working-class and lower-middle-class lives, Gissing was
no socialist. Indeed, more than once in his novels there is a sense of disgust
that he has had to spend much of his life rubbing shoulders with the lower
orders. And – because of specific events in his own formation – there is often
a strong mood of frustration that he, a man with a university education, has
never been able to claim his true place in the world as an academic
intellectual. Gissing was mired in the real New Grub Street of having to crank
out three-decker novels on demand for publishers.
But,
like so many struggling literary people, Gissing had a fantasy life. In it, he
was a gentleman of leisure, living in pleasant bucolic surroundings, with
nothing to do but take country walks, re-read his favourite books and keep a
reflective diary.
It is this
fantasy that is the basis of The Private
Papers of Henry Ryecroft. First published in the year of Gissing’s death,
it was once his most popular book. The first copy of The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft that I owned was printed in
1914. I gave it away to a bibliophile brother. The copy that now sits on my
shelf was printed in 1915. The back of the title page informs me that it had
already gone through seventeen re-printings in the 13 years since its first
publication. Because of its dated attitudes – and perhaps because of its
artificiality - The Private Papers of
Henry Ryecroft has sunk in public esteem since then. (New Grub Street and The
Nether World now tend to be regarded as Gissing’s best work). Even so, book
lovers still like it for its pithy observations on literature in general and
the love of books in particular. I remember the late craft-printer Ronald
Holloway often pulling out a copy, when I visited him, to read out favourite
passages. He was particularly enamoured of the section (“Spring” Parts XII-XIV)
in which Gissing speaks of the joy of finding old books, smelling their
particular odours and so forth.
The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft was written when Gissing was in his mid-forties. Henry Ryecroft –
transparently a projection of Gissing himself – is a retired and widowed
literary gentleman in his mid-fifties, living on an annuity in a country
cottage in Devon. The book, divided neatly into the four seasons, gives his
reflections over one year as he takes his walks, observes the country flora and
fauna, remembers his youth, boastfully drops in the odd Greek or Latin tag and
reflects on his favourite books. It would all seem very smug if the memories of
garret-living city poverty in London did not seem so genuine. This reflective
man has earned his rest.
Even so, much of
this book is irredeemably of its age. Gissing’s “Ryecroft” will, for example,
deplore English cookery, the degeneration of English inns and of English sexual
morality, with a “decline of conventional
religion, free discussion of the old moral standards; therewith, a growth of
materialism which favours every anarchic tendency.” (“Winter” Part XXI). But
at the same time Ryecroft drops sufficient comments to suggest that English
food is the best in Europe and English civilization the only criterion by which
to measure other lands.
He will say that
English farm labourers and working men have sterling qualities; but also advise
us repeatedly that he is not “democratic” and can see nothing genuinely creative
in the lower orders. “Agriculture is one
of the most exhausting forms of toil, and, in itself, by no means conducive to
spiritual development”, he remarks. (“Autumn” Part XVII). [This observation
reminds me of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s comment on farming, in The Blithedate Romance, that “intellectual
activity is incompatible with any large amount of bodily exercise.”]
Ryecroft, after all, has known the labouring poor at close quarters and they
are not thinking creatures like “us”.
He will speak
with broad disparagement of mysticism and spiritualism, suggest that Positivism
might at least wipe out the religious impulse – and yet still tells us how much
he loathes and fears “science”. The book’s initial huge popularity in England
is fully understandable, as parts of it so closely reflect the feelings and
prejudices of its early 20th century English middle-class readers.
At its heart
there seems a dreadful sadness – I would almost call it hollowness. Ryecroft’s
life is so solitary. All his reflections relate to himself. Nobody shares his
house but a complacent housekeeper and he congratulates himself at one stage
for the tranquillity he has found. Surely it is the tranquillity of
disengagement. Repeatedly he implies that his soothing impressions of the countryside,
or of the re-reading of his favourite books by the fireside, are his only hopes
before death claims him.
As a New
Zealander who has made only a few visits to England – and then not to Devon – I
can’t help finding alien much of the landscape that Ryecroft describes. I
simply do not “get” many of the prose-pictures he paints of English vegetation
and foliage, whose names are merely names to me. On the other hand, there
is a certain poignancy in reading a book published a decade before the First World
War which speaks so angrily against conscription and predicts that science will
create bigger and bloodier wars.
In the end, like
so many books of reflections, this one can best be mined for its individual
self-revelations.
Here is a
typical piece of Ryecroft-ian anti-democracy:
“Nothing is more rooted in my mind than the
vast distinction between the individual and the class. Take a man by himself
and there is generally some reason to be found in him, some disposition for
good; mass him with his fellows in the social organism, and ten to one he
becomes a blatant creature, without a thought of his own, ready for any evil to
which contagion prompts him. It is because nations tend to baseness and
stupidity that mankind moves so slowly; it is because individuals have a
capacity for better things that it moves at all.” (“Spring” Part XVI).
However, when he
refers to the real reading public as a small elite, I find myself agreeing with
him. Sad though it may be to contemplate them, perhaps the following words should
be remembered amidst the current agonising over how few New Zealanders actually
read New Zealand fiction:
“….the public which reads in any sense of the
word worth considering, is very, very small; the public which would feel no
lack if all book-printing ceased tomorrow is enormous.” (“Spring” Part
XXII)
Ryecroft can
sometimes turn out a nice aphorism, as in:
“Persistent prophecy is a familiar way of
assuring the event.” (“Summer” Part VII).
Or in:
“…. there is a rare beauty in the structure of
trees ungarmented.” (“Winter” Part XII)
He makes a very
sad, but probably true, observation on the solipsistic universe:
“…it is the mind which creates the world
around us, and, even though we stand side by side in the same meadow, my eyes
will never see what is beheld by yours, my heart will never stir with the
emotions with which yours is touched.” (“Summer” Part X)
Even so, this
does not make him a complete rationalist in the Cartesian sense, as he is fully
aware that much of what his mind observes is beyond his control; and besides,
his mind inhabits a body, which is easily influenced even by the small physical
things that impinge on it:
“Even in its normal condition (if I can
determine what that is) my mind is obviously the slave of trivial accidents; I
eat something that disagrees with me, and of a sudden the whole aspect of life
is changed; this impulse has lost its force, and another which before I should
not for a moment have entertained, is all-powerful over me. In short, I know
just as little about myself as I do about the Eternal essence; and I have a
haunting suspicion that I may be a mere automaton, my every thought and act due
to some power which uses and deceives me.” (“Autumn” Part XIV).
He therefore
adopts a robustly sceptical view of ideas of human knowledge:
“So far am I from feeling satisfied with any
explanation, scientific or other, of myself and of the world about me, that not
a day goes by but I fall a-marvelling before the mystery of the universe. To
trumpet the triumph of human knowledge seems to me worse than childishness;
now, as of old, we know but one thing – that we know nothing.” (“Autumn”
Part IX).
There are
moments when he rejoices in advertising his prejudices and tastes, as when,
deriding vegetarianism, he cries:
“I hate with a bitter hatred the names of
lentils and haricots – those pretentious cheats of the appetite, those
tabulated humbugs, those certificated aridities calling themselves human food.”
(“Winter” Part IX)
Yet prejudices,
solipsism and scepticism about human knowledge ride on the back of one
certainty, which informs this book’s sense of place:
“There can be no home without the sense of
permanence, and without home there is no civilization – as England will
discover when the greater part of her population have become flat-inhabiting
nomads.” (“Winter” Part XXI).
And perhaps as
New Zealand is now discovering.
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