LINK - Benjamin Taylor
Transcription
LINK - Benjamin Taylor
Benjamin Taylor 37 Fitzrolt Square u g.ni.r, were overserved, he could always be brought round by a cabman and deposited in the upstairs bath' In the event, the drunkard tended to be Swinburne, Fordie's godfather. The front door was ornamented above with a funeral urn quite large enough to smash life out of a luckless boy' And a frequent topic, here at Ford Madox Brown's house, was whether the thing might in fact one day topple. "I can still remember," writes Ford Madox Ford, "as a very small boy, shuddering as I stood upon the door-step at the thought that the great stone urn, lichened, soot-stained, and decorated with a ram's head by way of handle' elevated only by what looked like a square piece of stone of about the size and shape of a folio book, might fall upon me and crush me entirely out of existence." Madox Brown was Ford Hermann Madox Hueffer's maternal grandfather. He sheltered Fordie, his brother Oliver, and Mrs. Hueffer from 1889, when Francis Hueffer, Ford's father, died of a heart attack. Fordie loved his grandfather with the unvexed emotion reserved for grandparents, and the old man loved Fordie back in kind. An older contemporary and fierce encourager of D. G. Rossetti, Brown was himself a painter of more technique, if less originality, than his Anglo-Italian colleague. Brown's work is exemplified by The Last of England, painted in 1855 and hanging today in the City Museum and Art Gallery of Birmingham. It depicts, in a tondo, the departure of emigrants; English people gaze their last at English soil, or shake a fist, or turn away; the day looks raw. A solemn good-looking woman and man fill the foreground. She swaddles a baby inside her cape' He broods deeply. They deserve a future, but look as though they have If none. "As I remember him," Ford writes of his grandfather, "with a square, white beard, with a ruddy complexion, and with thick white hair parted in the middle and falling to above the tops of his ears, Madox Brown exactly resembled the king of hearts in a pack of cards." He was noted for a man-size temper and for generosity of heart' He /81 "With a funeral urn in the centre of the entrv." B2 / Benjamin Taltor The Last of Engtand by Ford Madox Brown (i821-1893)' By courtesy of Birmingham Museums and Art GallerY. his life' seems to have been crucial in pointing Ford the way to ,,Brought up in the backrooms and nurseries of Pre-Raphaelitism," a He boy l."u.rr.i that there were two species-artists, and the others. be enlearned that the world exists to produce a few of the former and abide," cumbered with a lot of the latter. "In that belief I tranquilly writes Ford. Buthisrelationshiptoaestheticismismoreequivocalthanthe half-humorous remark would suggest' Parade's End implies a critique of Benjamin Ta/or / 83 sensibility-sensibility as a way of life-and in so doing challenges a cultural trend the backward current of which reaches to Fitzroy Square. The debased aesthetes of Parade's End are either mercenary (Edith Ethel and Macmaster) or else insane (Rev. Duchemin). Some Do Not . . . , the first volume of the tetralogy, renders a world about to be grievously transformed; to this circumstance, the sensibility as such makes only corrupt or clownish responses. Ford is in Parade's End contemplating the implications of a new century, the one that began in August 1914. Like other writers of the period, he sees "a parting of the ways," a "crack across the table of history." This side of the fissure, the wisdom of Victorian grandfathers stands mocked in its inadequacy to events. Parade's End overtly celebrates a mythologized England of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. More quietly, it undertakes to indict the real England of the nineteenth. Christopher Tietjens and Valentine Wannop, a hero and heroine too virtuous of mind and heart for the modernity they inhabit, take a last look at the expired Victorian age, but without admiration. Their sources of intellect and feeling lie entirely in a world that antedates the rule of middle-class values. "Middle Class Morality?" asks Valentine on Armistice Day, evoking the immense foreground to war. "A pretty gory carnival that had been for the last four years!" Christopher and Valentine certify themselves as the two best minds left in England by their intuitive grasp of what has happened in terms of the whole century preceding. They understand the catastrophe in terms of the bourgeois culture, that is, the expedient culture, that England has become. Parade's End is a patriotic book, and its patriotism is heartbroken. "This is history," wrote another Englishman at the same moment. "One England blots out another." And the new England dictates one tenet above all others, both in war and out: the game is more than the players. "In such a world as this," Tietjens explains, "an idealist-or perhaps it's only a sentimentalist-must be stoned to death. He makes the others so uncomfortable. He haunts them at their golf. ." Tietjens is saintly, Anglican saintly, in his will to efface Tietjens. Throughout the novel, he resolutely disinherits himself from a world in which gamesmanship has superseded the very possibility of public virtue. (This is the meaning of his refusal to inherit money or lands, and of his exalting the mediocre Macmaster to the place of distinction that would otherwise have been his own.) Tietjens everywhere in Parade's End writes himself out of the future that belongs to a virtueless new team, B4 / Benjamin Taylor the Sir Vincent Macmasters of the day. He is, as Sylvia puts it, "a man disinclined to take his own part," though his reasons are certainly beyond her ken. Or anybody's in the novel, except Valentine's. What she and Tietjens together stand for "isn't any more in this world'" So they quit modernity in favor of a thatched house in Sussex where they make their frugal way of it: "They desired to live hard even if it deprived them of the leisure in which to think high! She agreed with him that if a ruling class loses its capacity to rule-or the desire! -it should abdicate from its privileges and get underground." Now an antique furniture dealer, Tietjens vends "the leavin's of Old England" to rich Americans. Valentine will presently give birth to a baby boy, Chrissie. And there they are at the conclusion to Parade's End- the refugee threesome Ford first beheld in a painting by his grandfather. This novel is surely the best English account we have of the Great War in all its implications, which point backward to the nineteenth century as well as forward to us and our further prospect. In 1911 Ford concluded his Memories and Impressionsby observing: "Life is very good nowadays; but art is very bitter." Soon enough that great sooty stone urn, the nineteenth century, lichen-encrusted and furnished with rams' heads for handles, would come tumbling down. Life would get a lot less good; and art would find new reasons for bitterness. But bitterness is not the note of Parade's End. lNhat prevails instead is a sheer wonder at history, the unleashed enterprise. And a prescient fear that history, thus at large, will not be got back on its leash again. Benjamin Taltlor / 85