This
blog post today will be my first attempt at some sort of assimilated book
review/ book comparison. As mentioned previously in my last blog post, I have
most recently been reading The End of the
Affair by Graham Greene, and after what I calculate to be a month of
protracted reading, I have finally completed the 160 page long novel. To give a brief outline, the novella is
set in London during the Second World War and follows the relationships between three
central characters: Maurice Bendrix (a writer); Sarah Milles (Maurice’s lover) and
Henry Milles (Sarah’s husband) Fundamentally the novel examines the themes of,
jealously, envy, self-delusion and obsessions that develop within these
relationships. Whilst Bendrix and Sarah fall quickly in love, their
relationship is left unspoiled for only a short period of time, for very soon
into their relationship it begins to dawn upon Bendrix that their affair will
end just as quickly as it began (predominately due to his unconcealed
jealously). Hence, one evening during a liaison, a bomb blasts Bendrix’s flat
and he is nearly killed. It is at this point that Sarah breaks off their
affair, with what at first seems to be for no apparent reason, and it is only two
years later (this is the point where our story commences) that Bendrix
discovers the reason for Sarah’s desertion, through an abrupt and troubled
encounter with Henry, transgressing the Common which partitions their flats.
Intrigued
as I was by the novel, I decided to do some further background research, from
which I found that the novel was predominately based on Greene’s own love
affair with Lady Catherine Walston (wife of a farmer and agricultural author) As
much as it is in some ways a personal story of Greene’s own love affair, it is
also a collective story of an individual’s inner conflict between
self-happiness and religion, which contributes further to the portentously
victorious tones of Greene’s explicitly Catholic novels. I believe I read once, in the introduction to
Greene’s novel The Heart of the Matter,
that his reason for writing that particular novel (and by extension, most probably his reason for writing this book too) was what he described
to be the same reason for Evelyn Waugh writing Brideshead Revisited (another fantastic book I would highly recommend),
namely boredom and war; It was from this point onwards that my eyes were opened
to the painfully obvious connections between the two authors’ lives and
works.
Both
Evelyn Waugh and Greene converted to Catholicism within a relatively parallel
timeframe. (Greene in the late 1920s and Waugh in the early 1930s). Up until
that point Waugh had led an irreligious life, as he expounds however, the
realisation that life was “unintelligible and unendurable without God” was the
catalyst for his conversion. Greene’s
own conversion was bought about by his correspondence with his future wife
Vivien Dayrell-Browning, during which time he was in fact agonistic, and
perhaps would have remained so, if he had not considered seriously pursuing
their relationship and eventually wedding. The resemblances are not however
limited simply to their religious conversions- more profoundly the similarities
resonant within their works. The central theme of God and religion 'triumphing
all' undeniably pervades throughout the entirety of both these texts, and indeed
I am in no way up to the challenge of endeavouring to clarify the significance
of this or to recount the various scholarly arguments and interpretations put
forward for the success of these novels as propaganda for Catholicism (many of
which essentially question how effective the novels are as propaganda for
Catholicism, if ultimately characters are in some form or another enforced
(either by duty or guilt) to endure misery and sacrifice self-happiness- an argument to note for these novels being propaganda in favour of Catholicism is the idea that they promote the theory of asceticism-
severe self discipline and avoiding of
all forms of indulgence, typically for religious reasons. ) I have no
doubts or delusions that the idea I would actually like to focus upon in this
blog post has been deliberated and re-studied several times and with much more
fluidity, yet it is a concept which has imprinted upon my
conscious and is arguably one of those timeless ‘human’ themes that will be
pertinent, no matter when or in which context you may read either of these
novels- that is, the theme of beauty. I find it to be no strange coincidence that
both the female protagonists in the novels are illustrated as being extremely beautiful and for this
very reason both express their discontent with the gratification their beauty
may bring for others, yet yielding no benefits for themselves. Sarah’s diary
entry (TEOTA) in which she expresses her desire to be ‘ugly’ like Richard
introduces the intriguing discussion between asceticism and beauty, advocating
here that bearing pain (in the form of unattractiveness) keeps one closer to
god: “I couldn’t tell him I envied him, carrying the mark of pain around with
him like that, seeing You in the glass every day instead of this dull human
thing we call beauty” (pg98) Now I struggled a bit with this statement, not so much for the fact that it implies that one should be grateful to God for providing you with pain to endure (for it is debatably reasonable in helping one grow as a person and detach oneself from materialistic conceptions of beauty etc) but rather it causes, at least in my understanding, a contradiction of mankind being said to have been created "in the image of God"(Genesis 1:27), as how can Richard's physical deformity be seen as a mirror to God's eternal beauty and power? Possibly (and most probably) the exact same
sentiment is not being expressed, nevertheless I couldn’t help but recall
Julia’s own disillusionment with her beauty in Brideshead Revisted (BHR) as our narrator Charles betrays that
“Time had wrought another change, too; not for her the sly, complacent smile of
La Gioconda; the years had been more
than “the sound of lyres and flutes,” and had saddened her. She seemed to say,
‘Look at me. I have done my share. I am beautiful. It is something quite out of
the ordinary this beauty of mine. I am made for delight. But what do I get out of it? Where is my reward?”. Is this simply a typical
case of desiring what one cannot have? Perhaps, but I think it is a little
deeper than this.
Beauty
has always been an awkward, intangible and quite frankly nonsensical concept to
talk about. It’s an ever-changing phenomena; a trend created and sustained by
human action, which in itself is not worth very much. It’s ironic when you
think about it, because these supposedly 2 dimensional characters (which for me
are in some aspects indeed 2 dimensional, but certainly in a lot more ways
substantial) so happen to be born in the period of time when their physical
appearance is deemed socially to be beautiful- how different it would be
perhaps if their cast was explored in the modern context of beauty. Recently a
good friend of mine sent me a YouTube video, entitled Woman’s Ideal Body Types Throughout History (Click here if you want
to watch). Although it is in every
respect a generic and in a way ‘basic’ video (it misses out various era’s of beauty for
reasons unknown- BUT in particular the Roman era, which I take to be a personal
jab) nonetheless, it does a solid job in demonstrating the alternating nature
of the perception of beauty in society.
Anyway,
as not to discourse too far from the main subject matter, I thought I could
include in here, some other parallels that I have drawn between The End of the Affair and other various
novels that have stuck with me. In particular, I found it fascinating how the relationship
between Bendrix and Henry developed. The element of gaining comfort from the
‘enemy’/ the very person who has cheated on you with your wife, seems to echo
the episode between Tom Buchanan and George Wilson in The Great Gatsby, whereby George, in utter despair turns to Tom for
consolation. Or perhaps a more suitable comparison to be made here is with the
book Revolutionary Road, where by the
protagonist Frank is comforted by his neighbour Shep Campbe (who, as it is
revealed beforehand, has previously had an affair with his wife, April) I’ve
never actually gotten around to reading the book, but the film is portrayed by
the power couple Leonardo Dicaprio and Kate Winslet, so if you’re a film
maniac, or just love Leo then definitely give it a watch. The book/film is
centred on the concept of the failed American dream, and unlike The Great Gatsby is not the failed dream
of an individual, but one gains the sense of the failed dream of an entire generation, in a much more focussed and family orientated canvas. What's more, I’ve always been a fan of literature that appeals to ideas and works bigger than itself, or can have connections drawn to other art forms; it feels like the author makes a conscious effort to associate with another human being, and project their own interpretation and understanding of that particular text: “He repeated: ‘I will take everything off your hands’, repeated it in a tone of admonition as though he were addressing Lady Macbeth, and promising her some better process of sweetening her hands than the perfumes of Arabia.”(TEOTA)
Back
to the topic of the relationship between Bendrix and Henry, I can not help but
ponder upon how realistic is it that Bendrix and Henry move in together after
Sarah’s death; the lover and husband? It is perceivable that they only have
each other to preserve Sarah’s memory and can only express to one
another the love they felt for Sarah- “There are times when a lover longs to
also be a father and a brother: he is jealous of the years he hasn’t shared.”
But does this work vice versa? So true it is indeed that the lover is always
jealous. There are times when I have longed to be a friend rather than a lover
to my beloved one, simply because there is a different dynamic of closeness I
will never get to experience and the time past that I shall never be a part of.
As I end this blog post, I think it is only appropriate that I too discuss the ending of these novels. The overriding message appears to be that religion triumphs all- just as both the female characters are made to feel guilt-ridden and even culpable for the pleasure their beauty inspires, so too are the male protagonists of the novels left disenchanted with their reality and particularly their religious beliefs. Greene’s novel however appears to have a more pessimistic tone, ending with Bendrix’s desperation not to believe in “You” but at the same time praying to God to “leave [him] alone for ever”. On perhaps a more optimistic ending in Brideshead Revisted, Charles too appears to be converted- he understands that the beauty of the Brideshead estate (as with all other materialistic and physical objects in life) is ultimately transient: “quomodo sedet sola civitas. Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.”
Just
because I couldn’t manage to fit these in anywhere else in this blog post coherently,
here are some of my favourite quotes from The
End of the Affair:
-
“eternity is said not to be an extension of
time, but an absence of time, and sometimes it seemed to me that her
abandonment touched that strange mathematical point of endlessness.”
-
“but a delayed victory can strain the nerves as
much as a prolonged defeat.”
TEOTA-
The End of The Affair (2004 edition)
BHR-
Brideshead Revisited (online text, available here)- please note however that there are textual discrepancies between this version and the actual hard copy.
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