Tea & Antipathy

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Tea & Antipathy Page 1

by Miller, Anita




  For Mark, Bruce, and Eric. And Jordan.

  Copyright © 2015 by Anita Miller

  All rights reserved

  Published by Academy Chicago Publishers

  An imprint of Chicago Review Press, Incorporated

  814 North Franklin Street

  Chicago, Illinois 60610

  ISBN 978-0-89733-743-4

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Miller, Anita, 1926–

  Tea & antipathy : an American family in swinging London / Anita Miller. —First edition.

  pages cm

  ISBN 978-0-89733-743-4 (cloth)

  1. Miller, Anita, 1926- 2. Miller, Anita, 1926—-Family. 3. Miller, Jordan, 1926- 4. Americans—England—London—Biography. 5. Knightsbridge (London, England)—Biography. 6. London (England)—Biography. 7. Knightsbridge (London, England)—Social life and customs—20th century. 8. London (England)—Social life and customs—20th century. I. Title. II. Title: Tea and antipathy.

  DA685.K58M45 2015

  942.1085’6092—dc23

  [B]

  2014025481

  Cover and interior design: Joan Sommers Design

  Cover photo (bottom): Arbyreed

  Printed in the United States of America

  5 4 3 2 1

  Anita Miller founded Academy Chicago Publishers, Ltd, with her husband, Jordan Miller, in 1975. She earned her PhD from Northwestern University, and her doctoral dissertation was published by Garland Publishing. Dr. Miller has written, coauthored, or edited more than seventy-five books including Uncollecting Cheever: The Family of John Cheever vs. Academy Chicago Publishers, Sharon: Israel’s Warrior-Politician, and The Fair Women: The Story of the Woman’s Building at the World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago 1893. She has been awarded for distinction in editing and publishing by both London Women in Publishing and Chicago Women in Publishing.

  CONTENTS

  Preface

  1. Departure

  2. Arrival

  3. The Inventory

  4. Slipcovers

  5. Pat Foyle

  6. Cynthia

  7. Sheets

  8. Dr. Bott

  9. Liz and Jane

  10. Sightseeing and Shopping

  11. Further Adventures

  12. Miss Pip

  13. Help in Sight

  14. Flood

  15. The Science Museum

  16. At the Pub

  17. At Rose Emily’s

  18. Day Camp

  19. Shopping

  20. Chocolate and the Zoo

  21. Evening at Maud Tweak’s

  22. Lunch

  23. The Wallace Collection

  24. Plumbing

  25. Roof Garden and Knees

  26. Evening Out

  27. The Party

  28. The Portobello Road

  29. At the Bilkingtons’

  30. Afternoon at Margaret’s

  31. The Green Line

  32. The Pickwick Club

  33. Interlude with Chemists

  34. The Train

  35. Arrival at the Castle

  36. Life at the Castle

  37. Back Again

  38. Crockford’s

  39. Deathbed Wish

  PREFACE

  Mark, fifteen; Bruce, ten; and Eric, seven.

  Recently, five of us tried to eat lunch at two o’clock in the afternoon at a restaurant in a New York City hotel. All the tables were empty, but the hostess told us to wait. When I sought her out after ten minutes, she explained cheerfully that she was negotiating with the waitresses to see if one of them would be willing to take our order. They were still discussing it, and she did not see any point in seating us until a definite arrangement had been made.

  This tiny incident transported me back more than four decades in time: I could have been standing in a London restaurant in 1965, thinking frostily that nothing like this could ever happen in the United States. As the years have dwindled away, I have thought often of that English summer. Now there is the general nostalgia over John Kennedy, over the Beatles…. It is perhaps a good time to tell the story of our summer vacation in Swinging London, when we began to lose our American innocence.

  1

  Departure

  MY HUSBAND AND I had always been Anglophiles. We had always believed that someday we would move to England and live a life of gentle Jamesian fulfillment. In 1963, as a first step toward the implementation of this dream, Jordan opened a London office of his Chicago press clipping service. For two years he commuted across the Atlantic, in an ever-increasing state of emotional—and financial—disrepair.

  I remained at home, coping with our three sons and working on a master’s degree in English literature. When I finally got the degree in the spring of 1965, Jordan was so overcome by guilt and the awareness that both he and his business venture had come to the end of their respective ropes that, as a special gift to his neglected family, he rented a house in Knightsbridge for us all for three months.

  This announcement filled me with terror. “Three months,” I whispered. “What am I going to do with the children in London for three months?” Jordan, home on one of his sporadic visits, looked at me with the contempt of the foraging male for the cowardly cave-hugging female. “London is the most sophisticated city in the world,” he said. “If you can’t find something amusing to do every day, I really feel sorry for you.”

  I saw at once that he was right, and fell nervously into line. He was going to spend a fortune, or what was left of a fortune, to make us happy, to atone for his long absence, and only an ungrateful shrew would whine at him about it. We still used words like “shrew” then, in the middle sixties.

  Jordan came home to get us at the end of May, and at last we sat together on a British Overseas Airways plane, with Mark, fifteen; Bruce, ten; and Eric seven. As we grew nearer and nearer to the Old World, I could feel gross materialistic provincialism dropping away from us. The sun rose in the middle of the night; Eric woke every two hours, crying hysterically and attempting to stagger down the aisle to what I assume he thought was his bedroom. I had to keep seizing him and hauling him back. Finally the breakfast trays arrived and afterward, pale with excitement and lack of sleep, we saw the green land beneath us.

  Sitting in the airport bus, carrying disreputable parcels with socks hanging out of them, I saw with pleasure the familiar black London taxis. I remembered our first visit to England two years before, without the children: smiling hotel porters, jovial waiters, helpful shop assistants. I thought of the Tate Gallery, Kensington Palace, the Burlington Arcade, Hatchard’s. I thought of Jane Austen, antique shops, cashmere sweaters, Richard the Lion-Hearted, Penguin Books, country lanes and the stately homes of England. In an upsurge of emotion, I squeezed the arm of my eldest son, who shied like a frightened horse.

  “Oh, Mark,” I cried, “it’s going to be fun!”

  2

  Arrival

  SOMETIME WITHIN the next two hours, we arrived at 16 Baldridge Place, which was to be our home for the summer. Baldridge Place was a quaint eighteenth-century street; all the houses were attached and painted white with gaily contrasting doors. Mrs. Stackpole, who owned Number 16, was unable to come at the moment; the friend she had sent in her place met us on the doorstep, gave us the key, and left without a word.

  The distinct odor of mold that hit us in the face when we entered passed rapidly away.

  “What’s that awful smell?” Eric cried.

  “The house is simply old, dear,” I responded. “Sometimes old houses smell odd at first. Oh, look at this lovely old sampler on the wall!”

  “Eighteen-twenty,” Jordan said, reading from it. “Imagine that!”

  We found ourselves in a red-carpeted e
ntrance hall; the walls were covered with a red-and-white striped paper that continued up a graceful staircase.

  “It’s perfect,” I said. “A perfect English townhouse.”

  “I knew you’d think so,” Jordan said gratefully. “And wait till you meet Mrs. Stackpole. She’s charming.”

  The little sitting room was rather bare. It did contain an interesting antique mahogany desk and small table, but there was a bulky sofa and matching chair nakedly upholstered in a sort of early Pullman car boucle. “My goodness,” I said weakly. “That looks comfortable, doesn’t it?”

  Jordan, exhibiting some consternation, commented that Mrs. Stackpole appeared to have removed the slipcovers.

  “English people are very fond of comfortable furniture,” I told the children.

  “Boy, is that ugly,” Mark said.

  The dining room contained only some dark stiff chairs, a little sideboard of a type often seen in Midwestern apartment hotels in the 1930s, a small fire screen with a woman’s face embroidered on it, and a stained carpet. “The dining table’s gone too,” Jordan said. “But I know she’ll bring everything back. She’s a lovely sort of person, really.”

  “But look at those beautiful velvet curtains,” I said.

  We all trailed down to the kitchen, in the basement.

  “Why is the kitchen in the basement?” Eric asked.

  “These houses were designed for servants,” I said. “A long time ago.” I went on to explain that Americans were spoiled, expecting everything at their fingertips, and it would be very good for us to climb a few stairs for a change.

  Some efforts had apparently been made to update the kitchen: pipes were chopped into the walls and ceiling; the floor was covered with a lumpy, red linoleum, inexpertly patched together.

  “Wow, look at this stove,” Bruce said. “It doesn’t light.”

  The stove, its iron legs gracefully bowed, stood in the old hearth, under a high narrow mantelpiece. Across the oven door was printed in Gothic script: The New World. “It must date from Columbus,” Mark said.

  “We’re all too materialistic at home,” Jordan said. “Anyone will tell you that.”

  Bruce made a second attempt to light one of the burners. “None of these stoves are automatic,” Jordan remarked, with some impatience. From the warming rail, he picked up a sort of battery with a long curved neck. “You just press this button. You light English gas stoves with these clever little batteries.”

  “Isn’t that clever,” I said, after a minute.

  “You’re lucky to have a nice white sink and a refrigerator,” Jordan said to Mark.

  “I am?” Mark said.

  Next to the kitchen was what appeared to be a playroom with a blue linoleum floor, and down the hall was a laundry room; there was a new-looking washing machine in it. Jordan said that Mrs. Stackpole had told him that the washing machine was broken.

  We went back upstairs to the ground floor, and then up the curving staircase to a landing where there were bookshelves in an alcove, and a bathroom with a green linoleum floor: decals of Bo-Peep and Little Mary Quite Contrary were pasted on the tub and the sink.

  “Isn’t that cute,” I said.

  We went up some more stairs and found ourselves in the master bedroom: a large airy room with tall windows. It might once have been the drawing room. “Everything’s got flowers on it,” Mark said.

  “That’s chintz,” I said. “I mean, that’s chintz on the chairs and the settee and those throw pillows.”

  “How come it doesn’t match?” Mark asked.

  “Oh, match, match,” I said. “Why does it have to match? This has a definite charm of its own. There’s nothing wrong with mixing a few patterns.”

  The bead of the king-sized bed was shoved up against the carved mantelpiece that held two lamps with flounced shades and a lot of dangling crystals. Above it hung a dark, rather sticky-looking painting of a fat lady clutching a book with her eyes turned upward, while some other fat ladies looked over her shoulder and some fat angels floated around them.

  “Hey, that’s cool,” Mark said.

  We looked at him suspiciously.

  “I mean it’s cool,” he explained. “It’s old or something.”

  “Oh, it’s old all right,” Jordan said quickly. “I mean I’ll bet it’s a Renaissance painting or something.”

  “There’s another fat lady over here,” Bruce said, pointing above the chest of drawers, from which the veneer was peeling in strips.

  “Boy, is that old,” Mark said, looking at the chest.

  “I don’t know why everything has to be perfectly new and neat all the time,” I said. I was feeling rather tired. Jordan agreed that that sort of attitude was middle-class.

  “When you meet Mrs. Stackpole, Mark, you’ll understand. She’s certainly not middle-class.”

  “I can see that,” Mark said. He opened a door, revealing an enormous bathroom with pale green plumbing and a wallpaper pattern different from the one in the bedroom. But flowered curtains tied the decor of the two rooms together.

  “More flowers,” Jordan said, laughing nervously. He pointed proudly to a collection of wires over the bathroom door. “An electric fire. I’ll tell you about it some other time. And they call this towel rack a ‘hot rail’. It keeps towels dry.”

  Up another flight of stairs were the children’s rooms. One, with a flowered carpet, a yellow quilted spread and pictures of dogs all over the walls, was perfect for Mark.

  “This must be the Nanny’s room,” I whispered, impressed.

  “What’s that?” Eric asked. “A goat?”

  The large nursery had little cots, slippery rugs, and water-colors of Victorian children with long pale ringlets and wistful eyes. A marble sink stood near the window.

  “Oh, isn’t this charming,” I cried. “It’s a little musty, though. Let’s open the window.”

  I wanted to get the children to bed. It upset me that Bruce and Eric should have been up nearly all night. I was afraid that at any moment something awful would happen to them: they would faint or become hysterical, develop tuberculosis or a tropical disease like ringworm or blight. So it was with great relief that I saw them into their cots, which were made up with strange strips of blue nylon instead of sheets. The fresh air dispelled somewhat the musty odor of the room. I had noticed, however, that the odor grew stronger as one approached the marble sink and that it carried with it more than a hint of sewer gas. I decided to say nothing about it, however, and so, feeling tired but happy, we went to bed, under the sticky painting of the woman with the turned-up eyes.

  3

  The Inventory

  A FEW HOURS into our nap, the doorbell rang. Jordan went downstairs to greet Mrs. Stackpole, who had arrived to conduct the inventory. After combing my hair and trying in general to make myself presentable, I followed him down to find sitting at the desk, not the middle-aged lady in tweeds with a firm handclasp whom I had envisioned, but a slender creature whose brown bouffant hairdo peeped from under a little kerchief.

  “Mrs. Miller,” she said, fluttering long lashes and leaning toward me with intense sincerity. “There’s such a lot of noise and traffic in the street here. Is that all right?”

  I said it was, and we began to go through the inventory of ground floor items: two armchairs, one sofa, two tables…. Jordan interrupted to ask her diffidently what had happened to the dining room table.

  “Oh, it’s being mended,” Mrs. Stackpole said. “A little man will bring it round. You couldn’t have used it the way it was.”

  “And the slipcovers?” Jordan asked.

  “Oh, yes,” she responded vaguely. “Do you like those?” She looked at her watch. “I’m just off to Ascot,” she said, with an apologetic laugh.

  We were impressed by that; it sounded suitably upper class. We followed her trim figure in its quiet blue coat down the basement stairs into the kitchen. She began to open cupboards and count things.

  “Six teacups,” she read from h
er thin inventory sheets and pointed to the teacups that were actually mugs, one odder than the others, bearing a picture of a monkey in a dress holding an umbrella. “One, two, three, four,” she said, counting. There was an awkward pause. She consulted the paper. “Six teacups,” she read again. Reassured, she turned back to the shelf. “One, two, three, four….”

  We watched her, mesmerized. The paper. “Six teacups.” The shelf. “One, two, three, four….” There was an admirable persistency in Mrs. Stackpole’s character. After another lingering moment of silent count, she took a pencil from her smooth blue calf bag and made an emendation to the inventory sheet. “Four teacups,” she said, smiling at us with all her dimples. We smiled back.

  Pointing to the mantel over what we will laughingly call the stove, she said: “Two pots.” Pointing under the wood-enclosed white porcelain sink: “Two casseroles.” She met my eyes with her blue level gaze. “I’m sorry,” she said. “I could only get these two small casseroles.”

  “Oh, it’s all right,” I said quickly. “I can use two for one casserole.”

  “Two for one casserole,” she murmured, pleased. “Of course.”

  We had apparently completed the list of cooking utensils. I had a dim idea that something was missing, but I couldn’t think what it could be. I asked myself, Do I do all my cooking in two pots and two small casseroles? I couldn’t remember.

  “Mr. Miller asked me to leave my good dishes,” Mrs. Stackpole went on, whipping open a sliding panel that promptly fell off. “So I have. They can quite easily be replaced if they are broken.” She disclosed a set of interesting china: red peacocks paraded around the rims of the dishes, alternating with yellow doodles. “These can all quite easily be replaced,” she repeated, with slight emphasis. It developed later, in a moment of need, that the set consisted of twenty or thirty luncheon dishes, ten or twelve dinner dishes, a toast rack and a cream jug.

  Mrs. Stackpole then turned her attention to the large kitchen dresser, upon which stood some egg cups and a little clay figure with a basket on its back, possibly for toothpicks. “One duck,” Mrs. Stackpole read, enunciating clearly. “I left you some cookery books,” she went on, opening a drawer, and then she explained the stove to me. Actually no one could explain the stove to me; its continued existence in the middle of the twentieth century was, and will remain, a mystery. But she tried. “Your kitchen towel,” she said, pointing gaily to a blackish object hanging limply on the back of a door; then, to a longer, greasy, more frightful object on a hook: “Your apron!”

 

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