Lives in Writing
Page 14
Peripeteia, which has been called the equivalent, in narrative, of irony in rhetoric, is present in every story of the least structural sophistication. Now peripeteia depends on our confidence of the end; it is a disconfirmation followed by a consonance; the interest of having our expectations falsified is obviously related to our wish to reach the discovery or recognition by an unexpected and instructive route . . . So that in assimilating the peripeteia we are enacting that readjustment of expectation in regard to an end which is so notable a feature of naive apocalyptic. And . . . we are . . . reenacting the familiar dialogue between credulity and scepticism. The more daring the peripeteia, the more we may feel that the work respects our sense of reality.
The point may seem obvious enough today, but to me in 1967 it seemed like a revelation, the elegant lucidity of the exposition making it all the more persuasive. The Sense of an Ending was full of such illuminations. It made me receptive to the new structuralist narratology which was to come out of Europe, and especially France, in the next decade, and which Frank himself did much to interpret and disseminate in his writings (in a more reader-friendly style than that of the Parisian savants) and through a famous graduate seminar, hospitable to visitors, which he ran at UCL in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
The concept of ‘apocalypse’, the prophetic revelation of an end, which runs like a thread through The Sense of an Ending proved a useful key to the understanding of much modern literature, notably D.H. Lawrence (whom Frank radically and convincingly reinterpreted), and also of postmodernism. His essay ‘Objects, Jokes and Art’ which first appeared in Encounter in its heyday (1966) is a brilliant, witty and elegant analysis of aleatory art, literature and music, such as Duchamp’s ‘ready-made’ sculptures, William Burroughs’s Nova Express, composed of cut-up fragments of printed texts, and John Cage’s silent piano piece 4’ 33”, which focuses the auditors’ attention on random sounds in the environment for the prescribed number of minutes and seconds. I selected this essay as the last item in my Reader, 20th Century Literary Criticism (1972), and it was pleasing to conclude an anthology of nearly 700 pages with Frank’s final sentence: ‘In the end what Simone Weil called “decreation” (easy to confuse with destruction) is the true modernist process in respect of form and the past. Or if it is not we really shall destroy ourselves at some farcical apocalypse.’
His interest in the idea of apocalypse later led Frank into the area of biblical criticism and textual scholarship, and once again I found myself learning from him – this time about texts that were almost boringly familiar from my Roman Catholic background. The Genesis of Secrecy (1979) defamiliarised the gospels. Reviewing that book in the New Statesman, I commented:
He himself writes as a declared ‘secular’ critic, yet in the end he seems more dejected than are most Christians by the discovery that the truth about the historical Jesus is irrecoverable, not (to borrow a metaphor from Conrad) inside the gospels like a kernel, but ‘outside, enveloping the tale which brought it out only as a glow brings out a haze.’ Kermode accepts the infinite plurality of interpretation whatever kind of text is in question, but for him this acceptance is tragic, since we interpret over and over again in quest of a truth that we know is unobtainable. ‘World and book, it may be, are hopelessly plural, endlessly disappointing,’ he elegiacally concludes. The Genesis of Secrecy, however, does not disappoint. It is exactly what one expects from Professor Kermode: elegant, incisive, expert, and original. What could not have been predicted is that it would make the New Testament as interesting to the literary critic as Joyce or Kafka.
From Frank’s urbane, relaxed manner and fluent, educated speech you would never have guessed that he was brought up in a poor family and underprivileged environment on the Isle of Man. I remember him telling me ruefully once that his friends in America (where he was always much in demand as a visiting professor and celebrity lecturer) could never understand why he had such poor-looking teeth, being quite unable to conceive the lack of dental care and hygiene in British working-class society between the wars. But it was not until I read his memoir Not Entitled in 1995 that I fully comprehended the disadvantages in early life which he had overcome to make his brilliant career. His father was a storeman, his mother a farm girl and later a waitress. The family lived first in a tenement and then in a council house ‘designed by somebody who had a very low opinion of the needs and deserts of the lower classes’.
The young Kermode had his Wordsworthian moments – notably an epiphany experienced while on an errand one autumn evening, between the ironmonger’s shop and the Congregational chapel. ‘The faint smudged pink of the sky above the church complied with the noises of the street and the tread of unilluminated persons, who had no notion of the plenitude of which they were part.’ Elated by this sudden apprehension of the wonder of creation and his own place in it, the boy put a question to God: ‘Did other persons, when they ate oranges, experience the taste I had of orange?’ No answer was forthcoming, but merely to pose it was evidence of an unusually enquiring mind, precociously identifying the problematic nature of what cognitive scientists and philosophers of mind call ‘qualia’, and still find puzzling.
Precocity can, however, be a liability. Kermode won his scholarship to high school a year earlier than usual and was therefore always by far the youngest boy in his class. Fat, bespectacled, and without physical grace or dexterity (his father called him a phynodderee, the charming Manx word for a clumsy fairy), he was unmercifully bullied at school and soon lost the will or ability to learn. Ashamed to let his parents see how badly he had performed, he falsified a school report – a traumatic episode which he still found painful to recall in his memoir. The boy, in short, was deeply unhappy, and suffered something like a nervous breakdown. He recovered in time to win another scholarship, to Liverpool University, but the misery of those pubescent years sowed the seeds of anxiety and self-doubt in later life. Even at the height of his professional fame Frank Kermode always felt himself to be an outsider, almost an imposter. ‘Looking the part while not being quite equal to it seems to be something I do rather well.’
What most impressed me in the memoir was its vivid account of his service in the Royal Navy during the Second World War, which alternated periods of extreme tedium and discomfort with moments of lethal danger. Entitled ‘My Mad Captains’, alluding to a series of variously deranged superior officers under whom he served, this section of the book is as funny and alarming as anything in Evelyn Waugh’s Sword of Honour. Kermode, who had worked on the Liverpool–Isle of Man steamers as a student in his vacations, volunteered for the navy, and became, in due course, a lieutenant. His first ship was the Sierra, a slow, unlovely merchantman hastily converted for naval duties, commanded by Captain Stonegate, a decorated but traumatised survivor of Dunkirk, whom Kermode first encountered threatening indolent dockside workers with a revolver. Kermode reported to a Lieutenant Taylor, a gloomy pale-faced man who lived on an exclusive diet of pink gin and canned lambs’ tongues and who died two days later, possibly as a consequence of it. Kermode stepped into his shoes as Stonegate’s secretary, but before long the deranged captain blew his brains out with his revolver. His successor, Henty, fell down a staircase and broke both legs before Kermode could ascertain whether he was mad. The next captain, Archer, certainly was: a monster of the kind it is amusing to read about, but hell to live with. Gross of physique and appetite, cunning, venal and utterly dedicated to the furtherance of his own interest, he enjoyed humiliating his subordinates, and never bothered even to learn the name of his lieutenant, addressing him indifferently as Cosmo, Cosmos and Comody. Under his command the crew of the Sierra laboured vainly to lay anti-submarine booms outside the Icelandic harbour of Reykjavic for nearly two years of excruciating boredom, vile weather, physical discomfort and sexual deprivation. Once, in his cups, Archer set off on a suicidal voyage into the teeth of a force 10 gale in sub-zero temperature. ‘He poured himself a Scotch. “Well, Comody,” he said, “it seems we’ve fuck
ing ’ad it.”’ Frank Kermode certainly thought so, but somehow the old tub survived.
Under a new captain, not mad for once, but a rather unpleasant martinet, the Sierra sailed to the Mediterranean as part of a convoy supplying the Allied forces in North Africa, and on this voyage Kermode first experienced enemy action. He was in a lavatory at the time, and arrived on deck a little late, to see two British ships on fire, presumably torpedoed, and destroyers scattering depth charges as a solitary Catalina circled the convoy. After an interval the survivors in a lifeboat rowing away from one of the burning ships inexplicably returned to board it, and almost immediately the ship exploded, blowing them to smithereens. The Catalina now proceeded, in breach of strict regulations, to fly along the line of the convoy, and since it was known that the Germans were using captured Catalinas, it was promptly shot down with the loss of all its crew, who proved in due course to be Canadian. Kermode laconically comments: ‘It is interesting to note that none of the people who died in this little action need have done so.’ He ended the war in the Pacific as a member of the crew of an aircraft carrier who expected, with some trepidation, to take part in the final assault on Japan. They were spared this ordeal by the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. ‘The general opinion was that it saved our lives, and we were unethically pleased about this’ – a reaction which I find entirely forgivable.
That chapter of Not Entitled is so good that you wonder with regret why Frank decided after he was demobilised that his ambitions to be a creative writer were doomed and abandoned them to become an academic. Perhaps the two vocations seemed less compatible then than they did to my generation. I was born in 1935, just old enough to remember what it was like to live through the Second World War as a civilian, and to acquire from comic books and movies a rather simplified and heroic idea of what it was like for combatants; later I was a reluctant conscript, doing boring and banal National Service in the peacetime army. As a young university teacher I was often struck by the thought that many of my distinguished senior colleagues in the field of English Literature had seen active service in the war, yet very seldom spoke about it, and almost never referred to it in their published work. Would one have guessed, without being told, that, for example, Raymond Williams had commanded a tank in Normandy, Richard Hoggart slogged through North Africa and Italy with the artillery, Philip Brockbank piloted bombers over Germany, and Graham Hough and Ian Watt were prisoners of war in the notorious Japanese camps of Siam? I thought not; yet surely to have been in such life-threatening situations would leave its mark on a man, and make him take a somewhat different view of, say, cruces in Shakespeare’s texts, or symbolism in D.H. Lawrence, or the Intentional Fallacy, from those who had not had such experience? Not so, according to Kermode. The experience of modern warfare is so absurd, so chaotic and random, that there is really nothing to be learned from it except that it is better to be lucky than to be unlucky – and even that is not an unmixed blessing. Frank counted himself fortunate, but nourished a vague sense of guilt, common among survivors of war, who ‘have somewhere in their heads the notion that they have remained alive by some slightly underhand trick or evasion’. As he observes, one might expect that those who for one reason or another had had a safe, cushy war, or avoided it altogether, would be the ones troubled by guilt and low self-esteem: ‘But it doesn’t work like that, it never did.’ This helps to explain why in spite of being by his own admission a workaholic driven by academic ambition, at some cost to his personal relationships and family life, a man who occupied some of the most prestigious professorial chairs of English Literature in Britain and was knighted in 1991, his social manner was always modest, unassertive and ironically self-deprecating.
In an interview once Frank said, rather sadly, apropos of the flamboyant Yale professor Harold Bloom, that ‘there aren’t any Kermodians in the world’, meaning that he himself hadn’t attracted disciples like Bloom (or, one might add, like F.R. Leavis, Raymond Williams, Northrop Frye and Jacques Derrida). This is true in the sense that Frank never formulated a critical ‘method’ or ideological apparatus which could be simply appropriated and applied by others. But many of us who pursued academic careers in what looks in retrospect like the Golden Age of English studies (from, say, the mid-1950s to the mid-1980s) were covert Kermodians inasmuch as we regarded him as the most accomplished literary critic of his generation. Firstly, he wrote beautifully – a graceful, precise, apparently effortless prose. If its vocabulary is occasionally challenging, that is because of his unusual range and elegant economy of reference, not because of any professional pomposity or deliberate mystification. He was a master of the review-essay of the kind he published frequently in the New York Review of Books and the London Review of Books, where in a few thousand words he would spin original thoughts of his own on a variety of topics out of a courteous but searching encounter with another mind. He wrote in a late collection of such essays that criticism ‘can be quite humbly and sometimes even magnificently useful’, but it must ‘also give pleasure’. It was the anhedonist character of much post-structuralist discourse as much as its theoretical principles that made Frank turn against it in his later years, and led him to say that it had had an ‘interestingly catastrophic’ effect on literary studies. Secondly (and this is one reason why there are no card-carrying Kermodians) he was enormously wide-ranging and indefatigably curious in his intellectual interests. Renaissance literature, Romanticism, symbolism, modernism, narratology, hermeneutics and biblical criticism . . . Shakespeare, Yeats, Lawrence, E.M. Forster, Henry Green, Muriel Spark . . . The catalogue of authors and topics he wrote about seems endless. Few modern academic critics ranged so widely and to such effect. Thirdly, he never tried to say the last word about any of the many topics he touched upon. He was suggestive rather than exhaustive. He passed you the ball and left you some space to run with it yourself, and perhaps even score. That is possibly the most cherishable attribute a critic can have.
Frank Kermode died in August 2010, at the age of ninety, intellectually active to the last. I remember him with great affection for his geniality, his self-deprecating humour, his capacity to surprise you with an acute observation, and to make you want to revise a lazy thought or a careless expression. There was always, I felt, an underlying melancholy in his temperament, but a complete absence of self-pity. When I heard that he was seriously ill and wrote to commiserate, he replied characteristically: ‘The news is, alas, true. When I read Eothen for school cert I learned that in Kinglake’s time nobody any longer said “Alas!” but sometimes it does duty if only as a sigh. I’ve done and allowed to be done all that can be done and my friends come from the pain controllers, not the oncologists. I’m grateful for others, such as yourself, who have given me friendship and pleasure.’ In their unforced eloquence those words are deeply expressive of the man who wrote them.
MALCOLM BRADBURY: WRITER AND FRIEND
IN 1961, AGED twenty-six, I was in my second year as Assistant Lecturer in English Literature at Birmingham University when the Head of Department, Professor Terence Spencer, decided that we ought to have a specialist in American Literature, and accordingly advertised a post for one. I remember being in his office one day when he showed me an application for this lectureship from a man two years older than me called Malcolm Bradbury, currently an extra-mural studies tutor at Hull University. He was completing a PhD dissertation on American literary expatriates and had a number of interestingly varied publications to his name, including a novel, Eating People Is Wrong, which I had heard of, though not read. ‘I don’t think we need bother interviewing anybody else, do you?’ Spencer said nonchalantly (heads of departments enjoyed the power of feudal barons in those days) and I readily agreed. I was the only teacher in the department under thirty-five; I looked forward to having a colleague of the same generation as myself, and one who seemed to have the same ambition to combine an academic career with writing fiction (at a time when creative writing was not on the curriculum of any British univer
sity). I had published my first novel in 1960, and Malcolm his in 1959. Naturally I read Eating People Is Wrong, and naturally he read The Picturegoers, before he arrived in Birmingham in January 1962. We quickly became friends, as did our wives Mary and Elizabeth.
Malcolm was not quite my first ‘writer-friend’, but he was the one most important to me, and remained so until his death in the year 2000, at the age of sixty-eight. It left a space in my life that could never be filled. Our careers were so closely entwined, especially in the early years, that without that relationship my own would have been significantly different – much less interesting and possibly less successful. We soon found we had much in common, but it was more than I realised until I read the fragments of autobiography in Liar’s Landscape, a posthumously published collection of miscellaneous writings edited by his son Dominic. We were both children of the war and the Blitz, traumatically separated for a time from home and parents, dimly aware of a vast historical drama being played out in which our little lives had been caught up with unpredictable consequences. It made both of us, I think, temperamentally cautious and prone to anxiety in later life, but ready to seize the opportunities which opened up in peacetime for the first beneficiaries of the 1944 Education Act. We both came from lower-middle-class backgrounds where there was no tradition of proceeding to higher education. My parents had to be convinced by the headmaster of my Roman Catholic grammar school that it would be a good idea for me to go to university, rather than to leave at sixteen and start earning my living. I literally didn’t know there were other universities than Oxford, Cambridge and London and didn’t for a moment consider applying to the first two, so I went to University College London to do (we didn’t say ‘read’) English for my BA degree, commuting from home. Malcolm was encouraged by his grammar school to apply for Oxbridge, but because his father would not countenance his staying on in the sixth form for that purpose after taking ‘A’ Levels, he went to what was then the University College of Leicester. Since its students sat the London University External exams in those days, we pursued essentially the same syllabus in English, and later both of us obtained London MAs – then a two-year research degree – doing our research in the Round Reading Room of the British Museum, though in different years.