The Master - Reviews
The Independent
19 March 2004
What Henry knew - but never did
"Why can't gay writers give gay men happy endings, as Jane Austen gave
heterosexuals?" Colm Tóibín asked in Love in a Dark Time .
One absentee from that study of gay writers was Henry James (though, for
some, the nature of James's sexuality remains vexed). Tóibín
has subsequently written on James, focusing on his Irish blood. His interest
in "the Master" now resurfaces in his fifth novel, the first since the Booker-shortlisted The
Blackwater Lightship in 1999.
If today's gay novels can sustain happy endings, Tóibín's
own have not followed his prescription. One motive for writing Love
in a Dark Time was, he confessed, an "abiding fascination with sadness...
and, indeed, tragedy". The opening pages of The Master underline
how logical his choice of subject therefore is. The 52-year- old James is
experiencing a "wearying, gnawing sadness" as he looks forward to the opening
of his play Guy Domville . It must compete with the gaudy successes
of the Irish prodigy, Oscar Wilde. Throughout rehearsals, James is haunted
by a fear "that worldly glamour and universal praise would never be offered
to him". Sure enough, he suffers terribly on the first night.
After passing the evening enduring Wilde's "crude and clumsy" An Ideal
Husband , James returned to witness catcalls and abuse greeting his
own piece. Still worse, he initially mistook the cacophony for acclaim.
Disgrace at the play's failure is described rather like sexual shame: "Now
he would walk home and keep his head down like a man who has committed
a crime and is in imminent danger of apprehension."
The experience foreshadows Wilde's very different fall, from which James
held himself conspicuously aloof. Here, Edmund Gosse regularly imparts the
latest news. Far from empathising with Wilde, Tóibín's James
responds with flippant platitudes. He will deploy a similar strategy later,
confronting domestic travails in Rye. Especially vivid - and hugely entertaining
- is James's dismissal of his drunken household staff.
Gosse warns James of a wider climate of reproach accompanying the pursuit
of Wilde. He poignantly poses - or almost poses - the key question on James's
sexual nature: "'I wondered if you, if perhaps...' 'No,' Henry turned sharply.
'You do not wonder. There is nothing to wonder about.'"
As always in Tóibín, a tension between public and private
selves - between desire and imposed conduct - informs the most poignant
scenes. He attributes to James a deep wish for sexual expression rather
like that privately admitted by E M Forster. The Master documents
the ebbing of a younger, more openly sensual James, overshadowed by the
older nostalgic. There are long episodes of recall: the moment with "Paul" when
James came nearest to sex; a sleepless chaste night spent, aged 22, in bed
with Oliver Wendell Holmes.
Most memorable is what Tóibín takes from the uncanny relationships
that the older James initiated with striking young men. Of four candidates
- Hendrik Andersen, Jocelyn Persse, Howard Sturgis and Hugh Walpole - Tóibín
selects Andersen, the first such beloved and the most diverting. This absurdly
beautiful Norwegian sculptor, resident in Rome, responds to James's cluckish
wooing with a mercurial blend of naivety and guile.
For a time this quite unbalances the writer, as when he listens forlornly
to Andersen undressing in the guest room at Rye. Andersen is deaf to James's
acute comments on his absurd plans for a "world city" that will be filled
with his own hyperbolic statuary. James proves equally blind to the folly
of the affiliation.
This is a taut, well-crafted, mesmerising novel. As with most historical
fiction, there is the odd moment of uncertain period phrasing and the possibility
that Tóibín's empathy with his subject risks his own concerns
bleeding through too directly. Ultimately, however, his limpid, measured
prose illuminates this fictional James superbly. The Master is
a masterly achievement.
Copyright © The Independent - Article byRichard
Canning who is writing a biography of Ronald Firbank
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