| A Review of: The Afterlife: Essays and Criticism by Eric MillerAmong the pieces posthumously collected in The Afterlife is Penelope
Fitzgerald's review of Peter Ackroyd's Blake. Fitzgerald remarks
parenthetically of the poet's marriage, "(He had fallen in
love with [Catherine] because she pitied him, which seems to surprise
Mr. Ackroyd, but pity was the great eighteenth-century virtue that
Blake most earnestly tells us to cherish.)" This observation
is at once comic, profound, and touching-and all the more so for
being couched in the sotto voce of a bracketed aside. Fitzgerald
provides no quotation to substantiate her claim about the primacy
of pity in the universe of William Blake. But proof is easy to find
in his poem "The Divine Image", from Songs of Innocence:
For Mercy has a human heart,
Pity, a human face,
And Love, the human form divine,
And Peace, the human dress.
Of course, Blake complements this picture of clemency with "A
Divine Image", a poem that appears in some editions of Songs
of Experience:
Cruelty has a Human Heart
And Jealousy a Human Face,
Terror, the Human Form Divine,
And Secrecy, the Human Dress.
Like William Blake, Penelope Fitzgerald shows in her fiction a
heartbreaking feel for the place of pity and cruelty in the lives
of men, women and children. Perhaps Blake meant to make a distinction
between our gift of mercy and our capacity to inflict harm. His
first poem is entitled "The Divine Image". The title's
definite article suggests that love is primary. Whereas "A
Divine Image", introduced by an indefinite article, may imply
that-though cruelty, jealousy, terror and secrecy are real, and
must be acknowledged in any reckoning of the human spirit-they
nevertheless comprise only a single strain, and not the dominant
part of being human. The subtle labour that Fitzgerald's writing
may perform is to educate the better side of our natures, which-with
Blake-she would not shy from calling divine. She abhors cruelty and
terror, especially when they are visited on the innocent. But she
recognizes how thoroughly we can forgive one another. Reviewing
Barbara Pym, Fitzgerald says that this writer understands her
characters so well "that the least she can do is to forgive
them." Forgiveness and silence go together. It is unseemly to
speak of what we have forgiven, no matter what the magnitude of the
transgression. The pitiless themselves properly awaken compassion.
Fitzgerald's fiction, such as The Blue Flower (1995), about the
early manhood of Blake's contemporary, the German poet Novalis, is
infused at times with laconic pity of great force. In The Blue
Flower, Novalis-known in his youth by the homely name of Fritz-sometimes
reads aloud from his fragmentary novel Heinrich von Ofterdingen.
Like any novice writer, he is particularly eager to have his story
interpreted. To his childlike fiance Sophie von Khn, Fritz says,
"I shall read my introduction aloud, and you must tell me what
it means." Sophie justifiably rejoins, "Do you not know
yourself?" Fritz responds, "Sometimes I think I do."
Fitzgerald's fiction is often as enigmatic as her character Fritz's.
The reader of Fitzgerald's novels is gratified to discover the
reticent author placed in the more voluble position of critic. From
Fitzgerald's occasional prose, we can revive and augment our pleasure
in her company, and infer some principles that governed the movements
of her heart, her mind and her pen.
Each piece in The Afterlife contains at least one apercu that
enhances the reader's grasp of Fitzgerald's world-view. Her
introduction to Jane Austen's Emma emphasizes a topic not ordinarily
much discussed: Austen's religious beliefs. Fitzgerald sensitively
fixes on the phrase "sin of thought," which she notes is
"a phrase familiar from the Evangelical examination of the
conscience, and the book here is at its most serious." Fitzgerald
continues: "Emma's love for her father has been, from the
first, the way of showing the true deep worth of her character."
In the Blake review to which I have already referred, Fitzgerald
sums up the poet's character: "awkward to deal with, sometimes
nervous, often contradictory, but incorruptible." That
contradiction and incorruptibility may coexist in the same person
is a verdict typical of Fitzgerald. Considering Richard Holmes's
biography of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Fitzgerald highlights Byron's-and
many other people's-opinion that Coleridge "was worth saving
at all costs." Here pity and admiration operate in concert to
rescue a man known to be difficult, but recognized as miraculous.
Fitzgerald shows an affinity for the Maine depicted in Sarah Orne
Jewett's Country of the Pointed Firs: "We are in a world where
silence is understood." Pondering Middlemarch, Fitzgerald
remarks that George Eliot believed "there was no use in fighting
against the future"; Fitzgerald adds, however, that Eliot
"was always true to her own past." Fitzgerald's William
Morris, like the later Goethe, values and practises
"renunciation." Love and work, not enjoyment, are what
we ought to ask of life. Yet (Fitzgerald quotes Morris's Novel on
Blue Paper) we often find ourselves "as though we were on the
threshold of a new world, one step over which (if we could only
make it) would put life within our grasp. What is it?"
One answer Fitzgerald surprisingly gives to this question is that
another world, not necessarily pleasant, does sometimes impinge on
ours-that of poltergeists. A poltergeist, Fitzgerald recounts,
occupied the Southwold bookstore in which she once worked: "I
recognized that afternoon something I had never met with
before-malignancy." Malignancy, then, exists. For example,
Fitzgerald disesteems anyone who hurts children. In an otherwise
compassionate consideration of Louis McNeice's life, she observes
that, when the poet's wife ran off with another man, his son "was
looked after by relations and hired help, and before long his father
saw him only at intervals. There is no evidence that Louis compared
Dan's childhood with his own." Surprisingly, a figure as
reputedly cold as Evelyn Waugh is praised for his paternal scruple:
"although he affected to think little of his children he in
fact got to know them, as individuals, very well." Fitzgerald
says that the Waugh "family, as so often happens in large
country households, formed a conspiracy against the outside world,
not feeling the necessity to explain itself."
This observation elucidates Fitzgerald's treatment of the Hardenbergs
and the Rockenthiens in The Blue Flower. Fritz's family, the
Hardenbergs, are brilliant but tyrannized by paternal dourness.
Sophie von Khn, Fritz's childlike beloved, lives among the boisterous,
tolerant Rockenthiens. Each family constitutes a vivid culture. In
fact, Fitzgerald's Afterlife sometimes touchingly illuminates the
fabric of her fiction. In The Blue Flower, a duel occurs at dawn.
Swords, not guns, decide the outcome. Fritz is summoned to the field
where the contest is underway; the loser's right hand has been
mutilated. Fritz "picked up the fingers, red and wet as if
skinned [he] was not likely to forget the sensation of the one and
a half fingers and the heavy ring, smooth and hard where they were
yielding, in his mouth." This episode recalls something that
actually happened to Fitzgerald as a girl:
"In my first winter term, when, as a treat, we were taken to
the skating rink, a small boy, also from one of Eastbourne's myriad
prep schools, said to me confidentially, "Will you help me
find it?" A skate had passed over his finger as he lay on the
ice and if we could only find it, some grown-up would put it together
again. But so many people flashed by, and so confusingly. A little
later, I saw him being led away."
Fitzgerald's actual memory is of unappeasable loss. Contrarily, her
character Fritz may have succeeded in saving the duellist's severed
fingers, by preserving them warm in his mouth. So fiction performs
an act of imaginative restitution, or-as Seamus Heaney once put
it-an act of redress. This fact lends another meaning to the epigraph
Fitzgerald chose for The Blue Flower: "Novels arise out of the
shortcomings of history." Fitzgerald's criticism is not as
fine as her novels, but its shortcomings are very few.
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