Jumat, 06 Mei 2011

'Pumpkin Eater:' 1960s Domesticity, Sardonically

The Pumpkin Eater
By Penelope Mortimer
Paperback, 224 pages
New York Review of Books
List Price: $14.95

"Well," I said, "I will try. I honestly will try to be honest with you, although I suppose really what you're more interested in is my not being honest, if you see what I mean."

The doctor smiled slightly.

"When I was a child my mother had a wool drawer. It was the bottom drawer in a chest in the dining room and she kept every scrap of wool she had in it. You know, bits from years ago, jumpers she'd knitted me when I was two. Some of the bits were only a few inches long. Well, this drawer was filled with wool, all colours, and whenever it was a wet afternoon she used to make me tidy her wool drawer. It's perfectly obvious why I tell you this. There was no point in tidying the drawer. The wool was quite useless. You couldn't have knitted a tea-cosy out of that wool, I mean without enormous patience. She just made me sort it out for something to do, like they make prisoners dig holes and fill them up again. You do see what I mean, don't you?"

"You would like to be something useful," he said sadly. "Like a tea-cosy."

"It can't be as easy as that."

"Oh no. It's not at all easy. But there are other things you can make from wool."

"Such as?"

"Hot water bottle covers," he said promptly.

"We don't use hot water bottles. Balls you can make, for babies. Or small golliwogs."

"The point you are trying to make is that tidying the wool is a useless and probably impossible task?"

"Yes."

"But you are a human being. The consequences of your ...muddle are more grave. The comparison, you see, is not a true one."

"Well, it's how it feels to me," I said.

"When you cry, is that how it feels? Hopeless?"

"I just want to open my mouth and cry. I want to cry, and not think."

"But you can't cry for the rest of your life."

"No."

"You can't worry for the rest of your life."

"No."

"What do you worry about, Mrs. Armitage?"

"Dust," I said.

"I'm sorry?"

"Dust. You know? Dust."

"Oh," he said, and wrote for a while on a long piece of paper. Then he sat back, folded his hands and said, "Tell me about it."

"It's very simple. Jake is rich. He makes about ?50,000 a year, I suppose you'd call that rich. But everything is covered with dust."

"Please go on."

"It's partly the demolition, of course. They're pulling down the houses all round us, so you have to expect a bit of dust. My father bought the lease of the hosue for us when we got married, that was thirteen years ago."
"You have been married for thirteen years," he said, writing it down.

"To Jake, yes. There were thirteen years of the lease to run when my father bought it. He bought it for ?1,500 and we pay a peppercorn rent, so you see we're very lucky. Anyway. I was trying to tell you about the dust."

"So your lease expires this year."

"I suppose so. We're building a tower in the country at the moment."

"A tower?"
"Yes."

"You mean ... a house?"

"No. A tower. Well, I suppose you could call it a house. It's a tower, though."

He put his pen down carefully, with both hands, as though it were fragile. "And where is this ... tower?" he asked.

"In the country," I said.

"I realize that, but ? "

"It's on a hill, and down in the valley is a barn, where I used to live before I married Jake. That's where we met. Now can we get back to the dust, because ... "

"Of course," he said, and picked up his pen again.
I tried to think. I stared at him, silhouetted against the net-curtained window of the consulting room. I heard the tick of the clock, the hiss of the gas fire. "I've forgotten what I was going to say."

He waited. The clock ticked. I stared at the fire.

"Jake doesn't want any more children," I said.

"Do you like children, Mrs. Armitage?"
"How can I answer such a question?"

"Could it be a question that you don't wish to answer?"
"I thought I was supposed to lie on a couch and you wouldn't say a word. It's like the inquisition or something. Are you trying to make me feel I'm wrong? Because I do that for myself."

"Do you think it would be wrong not to like children?"
"I don't know. Yes. Yes, I think so."
"Why?"
"Because children don't do you any harm."

"Not directly, perhaps. But indirectly..."

"Perhaps you don't have any, I said.

"Oh, yes. Three. Two boys and a girl."

"How old are they?"

"Sixteen, fourteen and ten."

"And do you like them?"

"Most of the time."

"Well, then. That's my answer I like them most of the time."

"But you have ... " He glanced at his list and made do with, "a remarkable number. You seem upset that your husband doesn't want any more. This hardly sounds like someone who likes children most of the time. It sounds more of ... "

"An obsession?"

"I wouldn't use that word. Conviction, perhaps, would be nearer the mark."

"I thought I was meant to lie on a couch and talk about whatever came into my head."

"I'm not an analyst, Mrs. Armitage. I simply want to find out how you should be treated."

"Treated for what?"

"We don't know yet, do we?"

"For wanting another child? Is that why Jake made me come to you? Does he want you to persuade me not to have another child?"

"I am not here to persuade you of anything. You came of your own free will."

"In that case I do everything of my own free will. Crying, worrying about the dust. Even having children. But you don't believe that, do you?"

"I'm not here to believe you, Mrs. Armitage. That isn't the point."
"You keep saying you're not here to do this, that and the other. What are you here for?"

"Perhaps," he gave another of his wan smiles, "to find out why you hate me so much, at the moment. Oh, I don't mean myself, personally, of course. But you hate something, don't you ... other than dust?"

"Doesn't everyone?"
"What was the first thing you hated ? can you remember?"

"It wasn't a thing. It was a man. Mr. Simpkin ... "

"Yes?"

"And a girl called ... Ireen Douthwaite, when I was a child. And a woman called Philpot. I don't remember ... "

"Your previous husbands?"

"Oh no. No. I liked them."

"Your present husband? ... Jake?"

"No!"

"Tell me about Jake."

"Tell you ...?"

"Yes. Go on. Tell me about Jake." He sounded as though he were daring me. I laughed and spread my hands out, looking down on them.

"Well, what ... what do you want to know?"

"Whatever you want to tell me."

"Well, Jake ... It's impossible to tell you about Jake."

"Try."

Excerpted from The Pumpkin Eater by Penelope Mortimer. Copyright 2011 by Penelope Mortimer. Excerpted by permission of the New York Review of Books. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2011/04/22/135607349/pumpkin-eater-1960s-domesticity-sardonically?ft=1&f=1032

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'Pumpkin Eater:' 1960s Domesticity, Sardonically
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