The New Magdalen by Wilkie Collins
published 1873
Wilkie Collins is always a refreshing read when it comes to
Victorian fiction. I have enjoyed several of his books and there are a
number of blogposts.
Blogfriend Christine Harding
recommended this one when I was doing posts
on impersonation last year – she said ‘What about The New Magdalen by Wilkie Collins, where a
poor woman with a disreputable past takes on [another] persona.’
It has taken me a while to
get round to reading it, but once I started it was pretty much unputdownable –
Collins knew how to create a plot and tease and grip the reader. This one is
also shorter than some of his others – it was not a long multi-episode serial, but
actually created as a play. There are linking passages that read like stage directions
and set description, and also every item is not spelled out and there are jumps
in the action. Late on someone speaks about something that happened ‘on a day
not long since’, and I had to check that it wasn’t mentioned in the earlier
text (it was not).
There is a lot of deep feeling here, and some of it is
quite extreme, but you can always rely on Collins for some lighter moments. There is a wonderful clergyman, Julian Gray, who is a beacon of nobility
of character. He is a genuine hero - but his aunt, Lady Janet, gets impatient
with his long-windedness. He says he is going to read out a letter:
"Will it be very
long?" inquired Lady Janet, looking with some alarm at the closely written
sheets of paper which her nephew spread open before him.
And then later, the same two in conversation:
[Julian says:] "Shall I
tell you what he said when I saw him this morning?"
"Will it take long?"
"It will take about a
minute."
"You agreeably surprise
me. Go on."
And I liked her diatribe against doctors:
The medical profession thrives
on two incurable diseases in these modern days—a He-disease and a She-disease.
She-disease—nervous depression; He-disease—suppressed gout. Remedies, one
guinea, if you go to the doctor; two guineas if the doctor goes to you. I might
have bought a new bonnet," cried her ladyship, indignantly, "with the
money I have given to that man!”
A Magdalen is a reformed prostitute, and the book looks at
the chances of one succeeding in creating a new life, and concludes that they
are slim. At the end of the book we get the full story of the heroine, Mercy
Merrick – until then we only know that at one point she was on the streets but
wants something better in life so has become a nurse.
The book opens very dramatically – Mercy is working for the
Red Cross on an effective battlefield during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, tending to wounded
soldiers. An attack is coming – the fit soldiers go, leaving her with the men
who are badly-hurt, and with Grace, a random woman who is trying to get to
England and has got caught up in events. The two women talk, and tell each
other what they are up to. Then a shell lands and kills Grace. Mercy knows that Grace was on her way to be
companion to a woman who has never seen her, a family friend. She has letters
of introduction, and background information. So Mercy takes the sudden chance
and says she is Grace when help comes.
When we next meet her she is well-established in Lady Janet’s
household, much loved by all and about to get engaged to a highly eligible
young man.
SPOILER
But not much of a spoiler as it is what gives the book its
edge – the real Grace was NOT dead, she fell into the hands of an expert German
doctor who worked hard to save her. She is assumed to be Mercy Merrick, and her
objections and complaints are seen as a sign that the medical trauma has sent
her mad.
Still she manages to make her way to London and turn up at
the house. Nobody believes her of course: one of the key factors of the book is
that Mercy (I will use their original names) is a much nicer person than Grace.
You have to remind yourself all the time that Grace has right on her side, and
has been very much ill-used.
Mercy has to decide what to do. She has also met the
magnetic clergyman Julian - whom she encountered earlier in her life, though
not enough for him to recognize her or there would be no plot:
this man who had shaken her to
the soul when he was in the pulpit, and when she was listening to him (unseen)
at the other end of the chapel
I love the author’s helpful insertion of (unseen) there.
Given the way the world worked in the 1870s, it is
intriguing, and by no means certain, to wonder what will become of Mercy: a
happy ending not guaranteed, and in many Victorian novels an ex-prostitute,
however reformed, has to die (in peace, looking forward to the afterlife etc). Collins
– who himself led an unrespectable life by the standards of the time, though of course he was a man so it was more acceptable - has a
very interesting way of ending everyone’s stories, told in a rather random
epilogue. Let’s just say, no fairytales, believable, and not too depressing.
The
New Magdalen was part of the genre of the Sensation Novel – Collins’ Woman in White was one of the earliest defining
texts of this kind of book. To find out more about these books, read a very
entertaining short piece on the British Library website, here - it’s by Matthew Sweet, another blog favourite. ‘The sensation novel jangled the
nerves, and inspired a kind of pleasure that readers felt as much in their
bodies as their minds.’
The plot brought
to mind various Victorian paintings – those ‘narrative’ or ‘problem’ pictures
showing families and couples being torn asunder, the likes of The Awakening Conscience. But: I decided against (much
as I love and enjoy those pics) because I wanted something better for Mercy.
And I found the top picture – it is from 1900, so much later, and is by Hugh Goldwin
Riviere and is called The Garden of Eden. It is owned by the City of London
Corporation, used with their kind permission. The title is seen as ironic – a
dull day in an enclosed park, but the couple transcend that, they are happy. So
that’s what we need for Mercy….
There is a fair
bit more Wilkie Collins on the blog, check out the tag, including No Name which features a character called
Magdalen. I used the second picture, by Vasily Perov, which would probably do for
this book too.
This really does sound like a suspenseful story, Moira, and I like the premise. You're right, I think, about Collins' ability to build tension and set atmosphere, too. And yet there's a bit of wit, too (I really like Lady Janet just from your description!). That's not easy to pull off - glad you enjoyed this.
ReplyDeleteHe is such an interesting writer - it's fascinating to think how he would have written if he'd lived now, and wasn't at all constrained in what he said. He challenged Victorian ideas, but still I suspect he couldn't write as he would have liked to.
Delete"A Change of Heir" by Michael Innes is about an impersonation, it is a standalone without Appleby (or any other policemen).
ReplyDeleteThanks - I do like an impersonation plot and this sounds excellent. I have just ordered it!
DeleteI think it was actually written in the 1960's but it felt earlier to me. Innes novels always seem a little old-fashioned in tone, almost as if they never got out of the 1930's (even when more modern things are mentioned). I had to laugh at one in which anti-ballistic missiles were scoffed at as outrageously impossible! But that was a Bobby Appleby tale, and he was young and in love so his judgements weren't too sound.
DeleteIt has arrived! I have read a lot of Innes books, and have varied responses to them, but the lack of any Applebys is a point in favour to me these days.
DeleteSo glad you enjoyed this - I’m always worried when I recommend books I like, in case other people don’t agree with me, and then I feel guilty!
ReplyDeleteI know what you mean, though I would never blame someone else if I disliked a book they recommended - I would still be grateful to them for thinking of me! Anyway, no such problem here, I enjoyed it hugely.
Delete