The Sailor’s Return
by
David Garnett
A review by Llewelyn Powys
New York: Alfred A.
Knopf.
Like a Clear Stream
One of Guy de Maupassant’s short stories describes an old French peasant coming to a railway-station to meet his son and his son’s sweetheart, only to make the startling discovery that his prospective daughter-in-law is a Negress. The happy pair get up into his farm cart and rattle away toward the family home, and the aged parent, watching their departure from the gate of the platform, is made to express his peasant’s surprise at so anomalous an alliance, his peasant’s discomfiture;, his peasant’s bewildered consternation, by the simple words, “Good luck to them!” It is just such an exclamation of a countryman’s inarticulate outraged conservatism in the face of what is strange that might be taken as the keynote of Mr. David Garnett’s latest story, which has to do with the sudden appearance in a Dorset village of William Targett, mariner, and his wife Tulip, a Negress from Africa.
Let it be acknowledged at once that no fault can be found with Mr. Garnett’s manner of writing. It would seem to be impossible for this author to write badly. As in that incomparable little masterpiece “Lady Into Fox” and as in that less interesting, though none the less admirable fantasy “A Man in the Zoo”, this young master never for a single moment departs from his high standard of simple but extremely lucid English. His power of making fiction appear to be fact he would seem to have inherited directly from Daniel Defoe. On my soul, I feel that he might be a bastard of that old ruffian, perhaps by one of those aristocratic Portuguese Ladies that Robinson Crusoe made merry with after he had escaped from his island. For if Defoe’s imagination is the sturdier, David Garnett’s imagination is the more refined and subtle. It may lack, and I am of the opinion that it does lack, that deep inspiration, like the music of waves breaking against blackened ledges or the sound of thunder in mountains, which characterizes the great passages of English prose. But on a more surface level the thing is unequalled in its flawless meanderings: like a clear stream, let us say, with sticklebacks and water boatmen casting shimmering shadows through silver ripples that are making their way by hedgerow and foot-bridge path, and thatched cottage, down and down, past meadowsweet and purple-tinted water mint, down to the beached margin of the sea.
But when I use the word “refined” or “subtle” or “aristocratic” in connection with Mr. Garnett’s work I do not mean to imply that it has anything precious about it. Throughout these three books one feels that one is in the company of an honest writer, of a writer devoid of affectations and prejudice, of a writer who possesses the particular kinds of spiritual generosity and tolerance that belong to the best traditions of English literature. In every sentence one feels that his sympathies are in the right place – are where Henry Fielding’s or Oliver Goldsmith’s or Charles Dickens’s sympathies would be under like circumstances.
The actual setting of this story is, one suspects, no other place than East Chaldon, where a hundred yards back from the village green a tavern stands displaying on a swinging signpost the title of this book. And to any one who knows this most beautiful and most hidden away of all Dorset villages certain passages of “The Sailor’s Return” come to his ears with the actual cawing of the rooks of Madder, with the actual clattering of the buckets of the old women at the well of Madder, with the actual tip-tap, tip-tap of the dairy-house knocker, where one goes to fetch his milk each afternoon through summer and winter. These particular passages, I say, are stored away in one’s memory, together with his actual experience of the place, until, as can happen only with exceptional books, fact and fiction becomes mingled in one’s mind.
Whenever David Garnett refers to the Negress something magnanimous in him is touched and he writes with the utmost delicacy. “William had called her Tulip because she had seemed to him like that brilliant flower, swaying upon its slender, green, cylindrical and sappy stalk,” and again portraying her when she was disguised as a boy he says, “His savage bones were small and delicate; one might have fancied them light as a bird’s, and, like a bird’s bones, filled with air.” The mere mention of Tulip brings from him tender sentences, just as the mere thought of the evil spite and meanness of the village public opinion, which he draws “so true to life”, gives to his pages a new stinging quality, like nettles come upon unexpectedly among bluebells and pink-campions. “Young Mr. Stingo” (the brewer who had threatened to evict Targett from his public house because of his illicit relationship with Tulip) “was as much surprised as he was pleased when Mr. Cronk wrote and told him of the approaching marriage; for, though glad to keep his tenant, he had never known that vice could get such a hold on a man as to make him marry a coloured woman rather than part from her.” Think of selecting such a name as Cronk for the clergyman of the village! There is genius in that alone. The Rev. Adrian Cronk! And how truly humorous is the description of Mr. Cronk’s hasty retreat into the ditch behind the cowshed!
“Good day, Targett,” said the clergyman. William grinned again, turned and discovered Tulip, who had been eavesdropping, behind the door. There was in her face an expression of great alarm, mingled with relief, and, coming on her suddenly like that, William burst out laughing, caught her by both hands and whirled her out onto the doorsteps of the inn. As he did so the parson turned and looked back, and Tulip, catching sight of him, gave a scream and ran into the house… William laughed and laughed again; he found he could not stop and leaned up again at the door-post weakly. While he laughed the Rev. Adrian Cronk looked about him in terror lest he should have been seen leaving the inn. People would think Targett was laughing at him. The parson didn’t dare to walk into the village, and on the spur of the moment jumped down into the ditch and crawled behind the carrier’s cartshed… anything was preferable to walking through the village with that sailor laughing at him, and he was always happiest when only the eye of God was looking… The reverend gentleman had, of course, been observed taking cover, but it did not surprise either of the old women who witnessed it. They put his retirement behind the cartshed down to another reason, one which may apply to every one, irrespective of the color of his cloth. How, too, he hits off these villagers, these ignoble men and women who look upon anything out of the common, with the pale, vicious, “rafti” eyes of frightened carnivorous sheep! When Targett and Tulip came riding back together after their midnight bath at the foot of the White Nore “Tulip riding in front with her bare feet thrust into the leathers of Harry’s stirrups, William’s jacket hanging loosely in folds round her naked body, and her wet woolly head shining,” the village people remain sullen to the sailor’s cheerful greeting “until he turned towards them in the saddle.” When Targett rides back unexpectedly to find an angry mob at the door of the inn demanding that Tulip shall be given up to them, and asks with his hunting crop in his hand what all the nonsense is about, “he found that the crowd seemed just as big as ever but it was composed of his friends.”
The farm laborers in the hot cornfields had rejoiced at first to see each noble supplies of good liquor coming into the village, being drawn by stout horses of The Trade: “the horses were fat and shiny, and moved with that slightly tipsy, dancing gait which is the sign of all good brewery horses.” Eventually the ominous thundercloud breaks and William Targett is murdered in a fight in his back orchard by an unscrupulous prize-ring “pug” hired to “beat him up.”
There is real pathos in the words that the brave, heartbroken Tulip calls down to Targett’s young brother from the upstairs room, “Tell the doctor William’s skull is broken,” she said. “I can feel the edges of the bone,” just as there is authentic humor in the observation of the licensed retailer who succeeds Targett when he remarks in condoling with the Princess Gundemey of Dahomey, reduced now to a glasswasher called Two Lips, on the death of her husband: “A villain like that deserves no mercy – murdering a licensed man.”
(from New York
Herald Tribune, 1925)
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