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.
“A MUMMER’S WIFE” by George Moore (first
published in 1884)
More than once
on this blog I have dealt with the Irish-turned-English author George Moore (1852-1933).
So far, I have discussed those of his books that are most often reprinted, and
regarded as his best work, the novels EstherWaters (1894) and The Lake
(1902); and the three-volume autobiography Hailand Farewell (1911-1914). These were all written when George Moore was
well-established as a literary figure.
But it is
sometimes interesting to consider what an author was like nearer the beginning
of his career. Written when he was in his early 30s, A Mummer’s Wife was only Moore’s second novel, coming after the
mediocre A Modern Lover. Up to that
time, Moore had mainly written (now forgotten) poetry or had tried to make
himself a painter. There are moments of vigour in A Mummer’s Wife, and some of the action is vivid. But it is also a
rocky ride of melodrama harnessed to social comment and some heavy-duty
moralising.
The action of
the novel takes place over four years.
In the
Staffordshire potteries town of Hanley, 27-year-old Kate Ede is married to
asthmatic Ralph Ede the linen-draper. Her mother-in-law, Mrs Ede, is a severe
Wesleyan and strongly disapproves of all things theatrical. Ralph requires
Kate’s constant nursing.
Kate finds the
town where she lives oppressive and nasty, and George Moore piles on the
figurative language to express her disgust, as in “The crescent-shaped suburb slept like a scaly reptile just crawled from
out of its bed of slime.” (Chapter 10) Or as in “There were long lines of coal-wagons… These were covered with black
tarpaulin, and the impression produced was that of a funeral procession
marching through a desert whose colour was red.” (Chapter 11)
Kate, a furtive
reader of romantic novels, dreams of escape and secretly admires their
shop-assistant Miss Hender, who frequently goes off to the theatre.
Straitened
circumstances means the Edes have to take in lodgers. They take in the
corpulent travelling actor Dick Lennox. His bedroom is just across from Kate’s
and Ralph’s. It is relatively easy for Kate to allow herself to be attracted to
him, even though her church-bred conscience occasionally troubles her. She finds excuses to meet the fat actor while
pretending to make business calls…. And eventually she runs away with him.
It takes Kate
some time to get used to the bohemian amorality of the acting company of which
Dick Lennox is part. It is clear that the company’s leading lady, Miss Leslie,
was once Dick Lennox’s mistress, and there is much backbiting and easy morality
in the chorus. Kate is soon aware that Dick has a roving eye. Eventually,
however, she is accepted grudgingly as a member of the company and begins to
make a modest name for herself singing and dancing. She is cast in supporting
roles in the light operettas that the company performs as it tours the
provinces. George Moore remarks “Kate had
not become an actress; she was merely a middle-class woman veneered with
Bohemianism.” (Chapter 17)
Then, about the
time that her divorce from Ralph Ede is granted, she discovers that she is what
the novel tactfully calls “enceinte”.
At about this same time she has formed a platonic attachment to the company’s
sentimental musical director Montgomery, with whom she has many long
conversations when Dick is too busy to engage with her.
Up to this
point, the touring theatrical company is reasonably prosperous. Dick and Kate
are married. But Kate’s baby dies within hours of his birth and,
coincidentally, the company’s fortunes begin to decline in economic hard times
until the management (in London) decides to break it up and the chorus is paid
off. For a short time Dick, Kate, Montgomery and a few other actors call
themselves the “Constellation Company” and tour tiny industrial settlements,
attracting tiny audiences. But even this comes to an end and Kate and Dick head
for cheap lodgings in London.
Now Kate begins
to drink seriously. She feels some remorse for her infant child’s death. More
poignantly, she regrets the settled domestic life she abandoned and she becomes
obsessed with her husband’s fidelity. Her husband becomes involved with a
wealthy dilettante Mrs Forest (in which character George Moore ridicules
fashionable Oriental mysticism) who has said she is willing to bankroll a
production of an opera Montgomery has written.
Kate sinks lower and lower into gin-swilling.
She makes some fearful, violent scenes. At one stage, she is committed briefly
for possible insanity. Dick arranges a formal separation from her. Kate dries
out and tries to reconcile with Dick, but she discovers that he is already
cohabiting with another woman. It is at this point that Kate happens to meet Ralph
Ede, who has married their shop-assistant Miss Hender. So Kate feels sharply
the fact that she no longer has either the excitement of the theatre or the
satisfactions of settled domesticity.
In one last
massive binge, and sometimes funding her drinking habit by prostituting herself,
she proceeds to drink herself to death.
The novel whose
plot I have just synopsised has been reprinted many times but is not as well
known as Moore’s other works. When I read it, I had to retrieve it from the
stacks of a university library. The very early edition I read had an inserted
slip of paper declaring: “This book has
been placed on the Index Expurgatorius of the ‘Select’ Circulating Libraries of
Messrs. Mudie and W. H. Smith and Son”.
Clearly there
was much in the narrative to offend the sensibilities of Victorians and their
circulating libraries – the wife’s adulterous affair with the actor; the
backstage nudity that George Moore describes; the child born out of wedlock;
the divorce; the “boozing” (so called in the novel) and the prostitution. In
Chapter 29, in a passage beginning “Prostitution
had for the moment monopolised the town”, George Moore gives a detailed and
comprehensive description of all the types of women selling themselves in the
seamier London streets. There is also the fact that the sinful Dick is in no
way punished for his sins at the novel’s end. Indeed, on the very last page of
the novel, Dick signs off with a note of complete indifference. On her
deathbed, Kate is delirious and raves in a mixture of the Wesleyan hymns of her
youth and the show tunes she had more recently learned, expressive of her
“double life”. But when she eventually dies, Dick merely turns to Mrs Forest,
who has dropped in to visit the dying woman, and asks casually “Have you finished the second act, dear?”
Worse than this
(as far as Victorian sensibilities are concerned), there is Kate’s reaction to
her baby’s death. Moore suggests that her wailing and grief are strictly for
public display, as if she is playing a role that is expected of her, when her
feelings are zero:
“There was a want of naturalness in this
sorrow. It was too vehement and it came too much in jerks to be considered a
spontaneous expression of true grief. It was not sustained, there were times
when she forgot herself and relapsed into indifference. And yet she was
perfectly sincere. Knowing what a mother should feel, she strove to force these
feelings upon herself, but the truest sentiment in her heart was a hatred of
herself for having got drunk and neglected her child… We have, therefore,
arrived at the period of decadence in Kate’s character. Her want of motherly
instincts and her forced hysterical grief… As the funeral approached the
cemetery, her sobbing was so boisterous that one of the mutes looked round….”
(Chapter 24)
And yet, despite
all these offences against Victorians and their lending libraries, Moore
himself is essentially Victorian in his attitudes in this novel. Indeed, his
attitude towards theatrical people is really as reproving as that of the puritanical
Mrs Ede. I can imagine the whole novel playing as a Victorian melodrama under
some such title as RUINED! The Downfall
of a Plain Woman. The overall structure is what Leslie Halliwell in his fat
film guide so often calls “the road to
ruin.”
From first to
last, the influence of French naturalism upon young George Moore is clear. A Mummer’s Wife begins as Flaubert’s Madame Bovary (or Guy de Maupassant’s Une Vie, which was published the year
before A Mummer’s Wife) with a bored
woman dreaming of escape from a limiting life. It ends up as Emile Zola’s
condemnation of booze and alcoholism
L’Assommoir, which was published in 1877, seven years before A Mummer’s Wife. George Moore was a
lifelong admirer of Zola, and records a visit he made to Zola in the Confessions of a Young Man, which he
wrote a few years after A Mummer’s Wife
appeared.
In A Mummer’s Wife there is both ripe
melodrama and much piling-on of documentary detail, just as there is in Zola.
When Kate and Dick make a visit to a Staffordshire pottery, we get a full
description of how the place works. When a Dr Hooper ministers to Kate in her
last pathetic days, we are given the pathology of alcoholism and all its
symptoms (at which point Moore really is copying L’Assommoir). The effect is much as it often is in Zola – the
effect of having been “mugged up” and producing a detachable essay.
There are,
however, scenes where Moore’s scrupulous pursuit of physical detail pays
dividends. The best single scene in the novel – or at least the one that stays
longest in my mind – is in Chapter 12, where the theatrical touring company
make a brief stop at a railway station on their route; and manage to scoff a
meal laid out by the station’s caterers, without paying for it before their
train departs. The narrative of anxious waiters running up and down, trying to
find who is responsible for paying for the meal, would not work as well if we
had not first been given a full account of the station itself and its practices
in catering for visitors who are passing through only briefly. Likewise the
scene in which simple Lancashire folk are so impressed by the tatty
“Constellation Company” that they give the mummers a bed for the night – this
works because we are first given a set-up to what sort of people the Lancashire
audience is.
In spite of these merits, A Mummer’s Wife has the same essential flaw as de Maupassant’s Une Vie. Its central character is a
puppet. Moore himself appears to despise Kate as a brainless woman, easily
duped by tinselly illusions, which are rapidly shown to be only illusions. The
literary “pretext” of using her ignorance of the theatre to introduce us to the
theatrical life makes her appear doubly naïve. Moore’s fundamental contempt for
Kate is made explicit:
“She was the woman
that nature turns out of her workshop by the million, all of whom are capable
of fulfilling the duties of life, provided the conditions in which they are
placed, that have produced them, remain unaltered. They are like plants that
grow well so long as they are not transplanted from the original soil. They are
like cheap Tottenham Court Road furniture, equal to an ordinary amount of wear
and tear so long as the original atmosphere in which they were glued together
is preserved. Change this, and they go to pieces. This was precisely what had
happened in the case of Kate Ede.” (Chapter 27).
I closed A Mummer’s Wife feeling that George
Moore had much talent that had not yet matured. Where he stands morally is at
best ambiguous, but the “road to ruin” structure harnesses him to received
opinions. He can be vivid when writing of sordor or the scallywaggery of
travelling actors, but he can also pile on the moralising. He has read his
French masters, but he has not the freedom to speak as frankly as they do. This
is a very imperfect novel showing promise. A young man’s novel forsooth.
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