We’re into December, so it’s time for the annual Clothes
in Books project of Christmas in Books – seasonal scenes from random
books, for no better reason than I like looking for the pictures, and I and
some readers find them cheery and Xmas-y. This one is not cheery, but it does show an unlikely festive trope which may be familiar...
Many of the entries
- this year and in the past – were suggested by clever readers: so if
you have a favourite please do let me know and I will try to use it
Ember Lane: A Winter’s
Tale by Sheila Kaye-Smith
published 1940
The black jacket is said to be by Schiaparelli, great
blog favourite and much featured this year, and I don’t think
for one moment that Jess, below, or her bridgecoat, looked anything like this. But
it’s very beautiful, and I wanted to give the poor woman something nice
because she has the most awful time in this book… read on
It was not till she had taken out the offending object that
she realized she had unwittingly broken into the secret of what must be his
Christmas present to her. In her hand was one of the gaily decorated boxes with
which the Potcommon Co-operative Stores gave glamour to its Christmas stock.
She hastily put it back…
[her husband brings her tea]
He stooped and kissed her as he gave her the tea; then he
fumbled in his pocket and drew out a little parcel, which he put in her hands.
“Here’s from me with love to you.” For a moment she was too surprised to open
it. “But I thought…” mercifully she did not say it aloud, for her mind, working
quickly, immediately supplied the explanation. Her heart felt as cold as her
hands as she unwrapped the little parcel and displayed a tiny bottle of
eau-de-Cologne.
comments: This is a very notable
scene for two reasons. It was the Year
of the Bridge Coat on the blog, and here’s a rather sad
final one: poor Jess lives in a very cold house. And, it links up with
bedjackets, another CiB obsession.
But also, plotwise this
is a familiar scene to fans of the film Love Actually, where exactly
this happens: a wife (Emma Thompson) finds what she thinks her husband (AlanRickman) has bought her… only to be disappointed. Not only do these women not
get the nice present, but they also realize by how much their husband’s
affections are engaged elsewhere.
Jess goes way too far in her ‘understanding’ of this. She manages to sneak a look at the rogue present:
It was in the spirit of hope
mixed with anxiety that she finally opened the gaudy little box. Perhaps some
kindly saleswoman had counselled his inexperience and persuaded him to a gift
that at least would not add to his offences. She was reassured to find a quite
presentable marcasite clip, the price of which she calculated at from
twelve and sixpence to fifteen shillings. This, though certainly more than he
could afford, was very much less than in his madness he might have spent; nor
had he prepared incrimination for himself with any amorous message. So the
prevailing result of her examination was relief.
Perhaps
like this?
I don’t think Emma T’s character in Love, Actually would have been so self-sacrificing.
The book is a strange but very compelling read. Sheila Kaye-Smith wrote many novels – she was popular in her day, and her rural settings
were one of the inspirations (if that’s the word) of the Stella
Gibbons parody, Cold
Comfort Farm. And this one definitely ventures into CCF
territory, with some particularly un-user-friendly phonetic country talk, and
rather surprising interventions by some ghosts.
The setting is a small village in Sussex, and we are
looking at a handful of families – the couple above are desperately trying to
make money with their chicken farm,
having been on a downward path since Greg left the army at the end of WW1. Note
the simple awfulness of her getting the bridgecoat “for chilly indoor
festivities, of which there had been none.”
We had some brave un-moneyed women wearing bridgecoats
earlier in the year (eg the vicar’s wife in Dorothy L Sayers’ Busman’s Honeymoon - discussed here along with many other bridgecoats), plenty
of people making their clothes last for years – but the grimness of this is OTT.
It is a good book, but Jess’s story really is too much….
There will be another entry featuring other characters: it
is a very suitable wintry book, as in its subtitle.
The provenance of the top picture is hard to parse, but I found it on Pinterest, and am crediting Ludmila Kravchenko.
Picture of tea in bed from the State
Library of Queensland



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