Cakes
and Ale is a new title published by The National Archives. Once upon a time in
Britain, cake and ale were considered essential parts of a healthy diet. Late
Victorians and Edwardians were fattened with rich, fruity cakes, and ailing
ladies imbibed milk stout as a tonic. Cakes and Ale is a cultural history of a
turn-of-the-century era of feasting, when the first domestic goddesses began
cooking in their own kitchens but servants were still on hand for many to mix
drinks at glamorous parties. An affluent and leisured new middle class was keen
to impress, and working people could enjoy an unprecedented variety of foods
and drinks. Manufacturers responded with the glorious printed advertisements
and seductive images that illustrate this book and speak volumes about the
contemporary social scene. In whisky and beer advertisements gentlemen sport
top hats and working men flat caps, Scotsmen always wear kilts and butlers a
wily smile. Blazoned alongside them are the plays-on-words that amused and
persuaded their audiences. Cookery books were suddenly widely available,
with pictures of bowls of punch, crusty pork pies and towering jellies and
blancmanges to emulate for seasonal meals.
Over
the first days of Passover, I rested from my labors and reread Cakes
and Ale (1930). It is W. Somerset Maugham’s best, the only one of his
novels, as Joseph Epstein says, that is “completely successful.” A
hilarious “easel picture” of literary life in Edwardian England (“I have
painted easel pictures,” Maugham later confessed, “not frescoes”), the novel
can also stand on its own as Maugham’s artistic credo. That it was once
regarded as a roman à clef, having great fun at the expense of Hugh
Walpole and the two-years-deceased Thomas Hardy, is no longer very interesting
or significant. Contemporaries found the portraits so exact that, as the Chicago
Tribune reported, “there were loud cries of ‘Slay the Monster!’ ”
Six months after the novel was published a counterattack appeared under the
title Gin and Bitters by “A. Riposte.” But who now reads Hugh
Walpole, or giggles at the scandal of describing Hardy’s novels as boring?
And
yet a good part of the fun in reading the novel is to be found in its literary
opinions. When asked whether he remembers any of Edward Driffield’s remarks
about literature, for example, Ashenden (the book’s narrator, who knew the
Grand Old Man of English Letters when both were much younger men) replies,
[W]hen I was lunching with the
Driffields a few years ago I overheard him saying that Henry James had
turned his back on one of the great events of the world’s history, the rise of
the United States, in order to report tittle-tattle at tea parties in English
country houses. Driffield called it il gran rifiuto [the great
refusal]. I was surprised at hearing the old man use an Italian phrase and
amused because a great big bouncing duchess who was there was the only person
who knew what the devil he was talking about. He said, “Poor Henry, he’s
spending eternity wandering round and round a stately park and the fence is
just too high for him to peep over and they’re having tea just too far for him
to hear what the countess is saying.”
This
is at once unerringly true and wide of the mark. Something like it could also
be said of Maugham himself, of course. Cakes and Ale he calls
his novel, meaning not bread and water. Moreover, the one time he tried to cook
up a novel around one of the great events in world history—England at war—he
wound up with a blackened pot of melodrama. As Granville Hicks said, The
Hour before the Dawn (1942) included “a German spy, a conscientious
objector, an escape from France after Dunkirk, and an air raid, to say nothing
of a collection of landed gentry, some evacuees, and a triangle”—everything,
Hicks concluded, “except a literary conscience.”
The
critics never approved of him. David Daiches spoke for the clan when he
dismissed Maugham as an “accomplished professional” who lacked “any original
vision of humanity or any great distinction of style.” The lack of an original
vision did not seem to dissuade book buyers (and theatergoers), who approved of
him sufficiently to place him in “the £20,000 a year class,” as the New
York Times reported in 1925—more than$97,000 in U.S. currency. Popular
approval had its costs, however, which Maugham continued to pay for the rest of
the century. As Anthony Daniels (better known as Theodore Dalrymple) wrote in
the New Criterionin 2000, “[A]dmitting to an admiration for Maugham
is to an intellectual what voyaging overseas once was to an orthodox Brahmin:
it leads automatically to a loss of caste.”
Maugham
was unapologetic about being a popular writer. In a central passage of Cakes
and Ale comparing literary reputations, Ashenden says:
The elect sneer at popularity; they are
inclined even to assert that it is a proof of mediocrity; but they forget that
posterity makes it choice not from among the unknown writers of a period, but
from among the known. It may be that some great masterpiece which deserves
immortality has fallen still-born from the press, but posterity will never hear
of it; it may be that posterity will scrap all the best sellers of our day, but
it is among them that it must choose.
The
modern quarrel between popularity and posterity is Maugham’s theme. With the
exception of Driffield, who must have “thought about his writing, but never
mentioned it,” the literary men of Cakes and Ale are the sort
whom I described yesterday as bureaucrats of literature. They are anglers
for succès d’estime if not £20,000 a year.
Alroy
Kear, the author of some thirty books, has enjoyed a career that “might well
have served as a model for any young man entering upon the pursuit of
literature,” because no one else among his contemporaries has “achieved
so considerable a position on so little talent.” Kear rises in the world of
letters by means of what would now be called social networking and seizing
every opportunity to advance himself:
He could be counted on to reply for literature
at a public dinner and he was invariably on the reception committee formed to
give a proper welcome to a literary celebrity from overseas. No bazaar lacked
an autographed copy of at least one of his books. He never refused to
grant an interview. He justly said that no one knew better than he the
hardships of the author’s trade and if he could help a struggling journalist to
earn a few guineas by having a pleasant chat with him he had not the inhumanity
to refuse. He generally asked his interview to luncheon and seldom failed to
make a good impression on him.
Driffield’s
widow has asked Kear to write the late great novelist’s biography. In typical
fashion, Kear had sent a letter to Driffield several years earlier, professing
admiration for his novels, was invited to visit, and eventually came to know
him well. At first he hesitated over the biography, but he has decided to do
it. “[I]f I can make a pretty good job of it,” he tells Ashenden, “it can’t
fail to do me a lot of good. People have so much more respect for a novelist if
he writes something serious now and then.”
His
problem is the first Mrs. Driffield—a working-class beauty with a mischievous
smile, a former barmaid, a tart who is spectacularly unfaithful, chucking
Driffield and England over for another man and America. Kear does not want to
“make a sensation,” nor does he want to be accused to “imitating Lytton
Strachey.” He should like to do something “with a good deal of atmosphere, you
know, and a certain gravity, and with a sort of aristocratic distinction”—in
about eighty thousand words. “I don’t want to say anything that’s untrue,” he
tells Ashenden, “but I do think there’s a certain amount that’s better left
unsaid.”
Cakes
and Ale is the reverse image, the book
that Kear has no intention of writing. Telling the story as if he were writing
a casual gossipy memoir, Ashenden says everything about Edward Driffield’s
first marriage that Kear plans to leave unsaid—although an age that has
been informed that Lincoln was gay or has learned that Flannery O’Connor liked racist jokes
will find the revelations mild enough. The first-person narrative moves
gracefully between the literary present, in which Kear hopes to forestall
Ashenden from turning out anything about Driffield and “blowing the gaff,” and
the extraliterary past, when Ashenden knew the Driffields as neighbors and
friends and spent many happy hours in their company. Although he is no less a
hack than his rival—Maugham scorches himself as badly as Hugh Walpole—Ashenden
writes to a different standard. If Kear’s is a policy of “reserve and delicacy,”
his is one of unembarrassed plainness. He explains in the novel’s last pages.
No matter how badly he is treated by posterity and a “fickle public,” the
writer has one compensation:
Whenever he has anything on his mind,
whether it be a harassing reflection, grief at the death of a friend,
unrequited love, wounded pride, anger at the treachery of someone to whom he
has shown kindness, in short any emotion or perplexing thought, he has only to
put it down in black and white, using it as the theme of a story or the
decoration of an essay, to forget all about it. He is the only free man.
This
was also Maugham’s credo. He did not seek to claim more for himself than he
deserved. He knew his limitations as a writer; his prose style, which (as
Theodore Spencer memorably put it) “conceals its real economy under an air of
apparent garrulity,” perfectly suits the modesty of his literary ambitions.
Like Alroy Kear, he hoped to be chosen by posterity. But he knew that his best
chance was to be straight with it, and to leave questions of greatness to
another time.
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