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 NETHER WORLD” by George Gissing (first
published in 1889)
I
found this to be the case when I read George Gissing’s The Nether World.
Well into the text, there occurs this
paragraph:
“Mrs Eagles, a middle-aged woman of something
more than average girth, always took her time in ascending to that fifth storey
where she and her husband shared a tenement with the Hewett family. This
afternoon her pause at each landing was longer than usual, for a yellow fog,
which mocked the pale glimmer of gas-jets on the staircase, made her gasp
asthmatically.” (Chapter 27)
And
there you get in one paragraph the grim, gloomy social realism of Gissing – the
crowded tenement, the polluted sky, the disease-inducing living conditions and
the whole hopeless catastrophe of London’s late-Victorian urban poor. There are
many, many other moments in the novel where physical pain and discomfort, related
to poverty and toil, are delineated. When a cab-driver staggers up the stairs,
we are told: “A daily sixteen hours of
sitting on the box left his legs in a numb and practically useless condition.”
(Chapter 4) But Mrs Eagles’ painful ascent is the one that sticks in my mind.
As
I’ve noted before on this blog in various posts about George Gissing
(1857-1903), I join the “common reader” in seeing New Grub Street, his tale of hack-writing, as Gissing’s
masterpiece. I see Born in Exile as
his most autobiographical (and perhaps self-pitying) novel, and the loose
essay-like reflections of The PrivatePapers of Henry Ryecroft as his most escapist book. Will Warburton is not one of his best, yet it is an interesting
tale of class-conscious humiliation. But perhaps The Nether World, which critics now place next to New Grub Street as one of his best, is
the most typical Gissing novel. Here we are confronted with dire,
scrabbling poverty – and no solutions are offered.
It is very hard
to offer a continuous synopsis of what happens in this novel, because it really
has two separate, and only occasionally interlocking, strands of plot, and
there is the continuous, clumsy introduction to new characters until at least a
third of the way into the novel. There is also evidence of the way Gissing was
tied to three-volume publication when three years go by exactly a third of the
way through the novel, and there are hasty and melodramatic exits for some
characters.
It is set in the
London slum area of Clerkenwell. Little Jane Snowdon acts as “slavey” to the
Peckover family, and is particularly ill-treated by the fierce “Clem”
(Clementine) Peckover. John Hewett is a respectable working man with little
additional income, who hopes to advance humanity and bring up his children to
do good works. Sidney Kirkwood (who may have been intended by Gissing as
the novel’s centre of consciousness, but who never develops much) is a
respectable workman with artistic leanings, in love with Clara Hewett.
One major
skein of plot concerns the Hewett family – how John
Hewett’s hopes are dashed. His son Bob Hewett turns to crime (counterfeiting;
coining), marries the luckless “Pennyloaf” (Penelope) Candy and comes to a
sticky end. His daughter Clara, corrupted by ambitions inspired by her
elementary education, runs off to be an actress (under the stage name “Clara
Vale”). She has vitriol thrown in her face by a jealous rival actress and
returns home disfigured. Sidney Kirkwood marries her in spite of this, and ends
up struggling to support the Hewett family, old John Hewett having sunk into
dependence on meagre charity.
The other
major skein of plot, only occasionally intersecting with the first, concerns
little Jane Snowdon. There is the prospect that she might inherit wealth.
Her old humanitarian grandfather Michael Snowdon takes her into his care. When,
one third of the way through the novel, Jane’s worthless widower father Joseph
Snowdon returns, “Clem” Peckover marries him purely in the hope of gain. Old
Michael hopes to train little Jane to be a humanitarian server of the poor.
However, when old Michael dies, Joseph Snowden cheats everyone out of the
inheritance and disappears, leaving “Clem” trying to take out her vengeance on
the whole world.
You will note
that both strands of plot conclude with idealistic hopes dashed and people
reduced to something like destitution.
The novel ends
with Sidney Kirkwood (who charitably supports the Hewett family) and Jane
Snowdon (who comforts her bereaved friend “Pennyloaf” Candy) meeting at old
Michael Snowdon’s grave on the anniversary of his death, with the implication
that, despite their continued poverty, that both have at least some concern for
others.
(I admit this is
a very truncated synopsis, as I have left out many subplots, not least Joseph
Snowdon’s relations with semi-criminal characters such as Scawthorne; and Bob
Hewett’s association with genuine criminals such as Jack Bartley.)
Despite its
(very mildly) uplifting ending, this is a novel which tells us that poverty
degrades; that the system is irredeemable; that rascals win wealth and that idealistic
schemes for social reform come to nothing; but that there may be some grounds
for hope in the innate goodness of a few individuals.
The fact that
some commentators batten on “Clem” Peckover as the novel’s most vital
character, for all her manifest evil (she ends up trying to poison her mother)
says much about what is wrong with this structurally messy novel; for “Clem”
would be present in less than a quarter of it. I suggest that critics, finding
no unifying narrative thread, do what they often do with Dickens’ longer novels,
and find the merit of The Nether World
in its self-contained vignettes.
If The Nether World has any unity at all,
it comes from its expression of disgust. Gissing is horrified at the
brutalisation wrought by poverty, but basically comes to see the poor as
beasts, constantly resorting to drink. By attaching his plot to out-and-out
crime and the (creaky) device of the prospect of a contested will, Gissing
avoids more than passing references to real social analysis – only occasionally
do we have hints of how these characters are made poor. I suppose this
could be interpreted as a literary merit. The characters are so exhausted and
brutalised, they do not have the energy, time or will to build a better world.
Mere survival is their priority.
Some of
Gissing’s aspirations are consciously Dickensian. Noble Jane Snowdon and her
grandfather (with his hint of fanaticism) have a touch of the Little Nells.
There is hearty comic relief in the married couple Sam and Bessie Byass. In the
tradition of Dickens mocking the Chadbands and Pardiggles, Gissing mocks
refined charities to the poor in a chapter called “The Soup Kitchen” which is
almost self-contained. He remarks “Of all
forms of insolence there is none more flagrant than that of the degraded poor
receiving charity which they have come to regard as a right.” (Chapter 28)
Chapter 12 is
entitled “Io Saturnalia!”. It is a bitter and scornful account of the
entertainments of the poor and, again, is almost self-contained. Poor
“Pennyloaf” Candy has just married Bob Hewett, and goes to the Crystal Palace
on her wedding-day. Vindictive “Clem” Peckover (who had her eye on Bob) and her
cronies trail along. Bob gets drunk. “Pennyloaf” is publicly humiliated. We see
the barbarous masses taking their pleasures, before returning to their slums.
“Clem” and company squirt “Pennyloaf’s” wedding dress with dirty water and the
day of pleasures ends with a violent flesh-scratching catfight between “Clem”
and “Pennyloaf”. Behold the animals at play! Gissing remarks sardonically:
“What a joy to observe the tendencies of
these diversions! How characteristic of a high-spirited people that nowhere
could be found any amusement appealing to the mere mind, or calculated to
effeminate by encouraging a love of beauty…. There reigned a spirit of imbecile
joviality…. Mark the men: four in every six have visages so deformed by
ill-health that they excite disgust; their hair is cut down to within half an
inch of the scalp; their legs are twisted out of shape by evil conditions of
life from birth upwards.” (Chapter 12)
And yet Gissing
is aware that it is all too easy to regard as barbarism the pleasures of the
poor when one is well-off. Later he writes of Sidney Kirkwood’s realization,
once he himself has to toil to support other people, that
“It was easy to preach a high ideal of
existence to the poor, as long as one had a considerable margin over the week’s
expenses; easy to rebuke the men and women who had tried to forget themselves
in beer-shops and gin-houses, as long as one could take up some rational
amusement with a quiet heart. Now, on his return home from labour, it was all
he could do not to sink in exhaustion and defeat of spirit. Shillings and
pence; shillings and pence…” (Chapter 39)
By this stage
Sidney Kirkwood, like the author, has long since abandoned the idea that
radical reform will improve anyone’s life. Gissing says of him much earlier in
the novel:
“He reached the stage of confident and
aspiring Radicalism, believing in the perfectability of man, in human
brotherhood, in – anything you like that is the outcome of a noble heart
sheltered by ignorance. It had its turn and passed.” (Chapter 6)
I gain the
impression of George Gissing in this novel as a man who was consciously
correcting himself of what he knew to be snobbish and uncharitable impulses.
His rational mind tells him that it is too easy to criticise and caricature the
dirty and uneducated poor, and that the poor are as they are because of gross
deprivation. Hence his mitigating phrases in Sidney Kirkwood’s later
reflexions. And yet his deepest impulse (as a middle-class, educated man forced
to live in straitened circumstances) is still one of disgust. The poor are a
plague. Where they live is “the nether world” (the phrase is repeated often in
the novel), like one of the lower circles of Dante’s Inferno.
He reaches the
point, adopted by so many middle-class Social Darwinians, of saying that it
would be better if the poor were not born at all. Of John Hewett’s wife, he
remarks sarcastically: “I suppose she
must not be blamed for bringing children into the world when those already born
to her were but half-clothed, half-fed; she increased the sum total of the
world’s misery in obedience to the laws of the Book of Genesis.” (Chapter
6). Much later, when Bob Hewett is told his infant child has died, he says “Thank goodness for that, anyway!”
(Chapter 34); a sentiment which Gissing seems to share.
In much of this
novel, then, we have that odd mixture of sympathy for the urban poor mixed with
fierce contempt, which I often find in EmileZola and certainly find in Jack London’s London-slum expose The People of the Abyss. (Arthur
Morrison’s A Child of the Jago is as
brutal as a London slum novel can be, but shows more real human sympathy.)
Snarky
and superior footnote: In the introduction to the
old Everyman’s edition of this novel, the distinguished critic Walter Allen
erroneously refers to the character Sidney Kirkwood as “Sidney Kirkland”, and
the blurb of the edition proceeds to do the same thing. I am surprised at the
failure of an Everyman’s copy-editor.
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