{"id":142,"date":"2004-06-08T14:35:25","date_gmt":"2004-06-08T18:35:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.law.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/2004\/06\/08\/the-master\/"},"modified":"2012-05-04T00:06:21","modified_gmt":"2012-05-04T04:06:21","slug":"the-master","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/2004\/06\/08\/the-master\/","title":{"rendered":"The Master"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a name='a546'><\/a><\/p>\n<p><P class=\"MsoNormal\"><SPAN>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/SPAN><FONT face=\"Times New Roman,Times,Serif\" size=\"4\">I <A href=\"http:\/\/media.skybuilders.com\/Lydon\/Toibin.James.mp3\">interviewed<\/A> the Irish writer Colm Toibin in the Cambridge&nbsp;Cemetery&nbsp;on the chance that we might hear voices from the James family grave. <\/P><br \/>\n<P class=\"MsoNormal\" align=\"center\"><IMG hspace=\"10\" src=\"http:\/\/cyber.law.harvard.edu\/blogs\/static\/lydon\/toibin.jpg\" vspace=\"10\"><\/P><br \/>\n<P class=\"MsoNormal\"><\/P><br \/>\n<P class=\"MsoNormal\"><FONT face=\"Times New Roman\" size=\"4\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/FONT><FONT face=\"Times New Roman\" size=\"4\">We knew that the psychologist William James and his brother Henry, the novelist, were the sort of people who&#8217;d oblige us, if they could.&nbsp; On William&#8217;s death in 1910, Henry actually stayed his return to England and lingered for six weeks in his brother&#8217;s house in Cambridge, with some hope that William&#8217;s spirit would make contact.&nbsp; Henry was disappointed by the ghost.&nbsp; So were we.&nbsp; Yet Colm Toibin&#8217;s spookily Jamesian novel <EM><STRONG><A href=\"http:\/\/www.reviewsofbooks.com\/the_master\/\">The Master<\/A><\/STRONG><\/EM> very nearly brings Henry alive, as convincingly as a seance or a dream. <BR><BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <STRONG><EM><A href=\"http:\/\/books.guardian.co.uk\/reviews\/generalfiction\/0,6121,1154220,00.html\">The Master<\/A><\/EM><\/STRONG> pictures James between 1895 and 1900, in his late fifties, at the far turn of his unflaggingly&nbsp; productive life.&nbsp; <IMG hspace=\"5\" src=\"http:\/\/www.zona-pellucida.com\/Images\/james-h.jpg\" align=\"left\" vspace=\"5\"> In January, 1895, in the dark prelude of Toibin&#8217;s story, the determined playwright Henry James is being hooted off a stage on the opening night of his ignominious and final theatrical flop, <EM><STRONG>Guy Domville<\/STRONG><\/EM>.&nbsp; Far from crushing him, <EM><STRONG>Guy Domville<\/STRONG><\/EM> turned James toward the last three towering home-runs of his career in fiction&#8211;in three years, three immortal masterpieces: <EM><STRONG><A href=\"http:\/\/www.online-literature.com\/henry_james\/wings_dove\/\">The Wings of the Dove<\/A><\/STRONG><\/EM> (1902), <EM><STRONG><A href=\"http:\/\/www.online-literature.com\/henry_james\/ambassadors\/\">The Ambassadors<\/A><\/STRONG><\/EM> (1903) and <\/FONT><A href=\"http:\/\/www.readbookonline.net\/title\/60\/\"><FONT face=\"Times New Roman\"><FONT size=\"4\"><EM><STRONG>The Golden Bowl<\/STRONG><\/EM> <\/FONT><\/FONT><\/A><FONT face=\"Times New Roman\" size=\"4\">(1904).&nbsp; <BR><BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Toibin catches James precisely in the early autumn that generated also the perfect novella, <\/FONT><A href=\"http:\/\/www.online-literature.com\/henry_james\/beast_in_jungle\/\"><FONT face=\"Times New Roman\" size=\"4\">&#8220;The Beast in the Jungle&#8221;<\/FONT><\/A><FONT face=\"Times New Roman\" size=\"4\"> (1903), a scathing reflection on the price a man pays for casting off life and love.&nbsp; John Marcher, the pitiable anti-hero of &#8220;The Beast,&#8221; is a man who talked himself out of a good woman&#8217;s love, arguing that he must reserve himself for a mysterious catastrophe, a lethal&nbsp;beast of prey lurking in his future.&nbsp; Years later the catastrophe turns out to be nothing but the self-absorption that blinded Marcher to love&#8217;s redemption.&nbsp; Is this the lament of closeted homosexuality?&nbsp; Is it James&#8217; calculation of his own sacrifice for art?&nbsp; Is it, as I suppose, a lesson about the power of fear to teach us the wrong stories about who we are and what we can do in life?&nbsp; <IMG hspace=\"10\" src=\"http:\/\/216.15.204.50\/findagrave_1\/101c\/222\/jameshenry2.jpg\" align=\"right\" vspace=\"10\">&#8220;The Beast&#8221; marks in any event the mood and the moment in which Colm Toibin tries to penetrate the mist of Henry James&#8217; invention.<BR><BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Colm Toibin grew up, as we all do, with the notion that Henry James was an artist without a life&#8211;the far opposite in his own time of Oscar Wilde, who was said to have committed his talent to his art, but his genius to his life!&nbsp; In <EM><STRONG><A href=\"http:\/\/enjoyment.independent.co.uk\/books\/reviews\/story.jsp?story=501377\">The Master<\/A><\/STRONG><\/EM> Colm Toibin is respinning the web of emotional filaments that tied James in every moment of his consciousness to his rich, rampaging, free-thinking father and his extravagantly indulgent mother; to brothers Wilky and Bob who were sacrificed to the Civil War; to his miserably clever and indiscreet sister Alice; and to the brilliant, beloved William James, the elder brother who scorned Henry&#8217;s late prose style. <BR><BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In <EM><STRONG><A href=\"http:\/\/www.newstatesman.com\/site.php3?newTemplate=NSReview_Bshop&amp;newDisplayURN=300000080511\">The Master<\/A><\/STRONG><\/EM> and in our <\/FONT><A href=\"http:\/\/media.skybuilders.com\/Lydon\/Toibin.James.mp3\"><FONT face=\"Times New Roman\" size=\"4\">gab at the graveside<\/FONT><\/A><FONT face=\"Times New Roman\" size=\"4\"> Colm Toibin takes up the modern charge that two other woman suffered painfully, perhaps fatally, for Henry James&#8217; monomania.&nbsp; His doomed but radiant cousin Minny Temple was always known as the inspiration for Isabel Archer in <EM><STRONG>The Portrait of a Lady<\/STRONG><\/EM> and for Milly Theale in <EM><STRONG>The Wings of the Dove<\/STRONG><\/EM>.&nbsp; But&nbsp; in her brief tubercular real life Minny Temple was the fragile young woman who begged Henry to take her with him on his first trip to Rome.&nbsp; Henry refused her. Minny died.&nbsp; In <EM><STRONG>The Master<\/STRONG><\/EM>, it is James&#8217; friend, by then a famous judge, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., who blames Henry for abandoning Minny:&nbsp; &#8220;When she did not hear from you,&#8221; says Holmes to James, &#8220;she turned her face to the wall.&#8221;&nbsp; Many years later Constance Fenimore Woolson, an expatriate American novelist who&#8217;d confided, traveled and commiserated with Henry James over many years, committed suicide in Venice, not long after he&#8217;d rebuffed her invitations to join him there.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/P><br \/>\n<P class=\"MsoNormal\" align=\"right\"><IMG hspace=\"5\" src=\"http:\/\/www.utexas.edu\/courses\/hilde\/photos\/jamesbros.jpg\" align=\"right\" vspace=\"5\"><\/P><br \/>\n<P class=\"MsoNormal\">Too late to save her,&nbsp;he rushed&nbsp;to commandeer her apartment and destroy all evidence of their connection.&nbsp; The Woolson story&#8211;so close to the agony of &#8220;The Beast in the Jungle&#8221;&#8211;was a topic that Henry James assiduously avoided with his friends, one that Toibin pursues in gruesome detail but with no condemnation.<BR><BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; It&#8217;s the astonishing body of work that redeems Henry James in the end, no matter what.&nbsp; But Colm Toibin&#8217;s subtle portrait of an infinitely subtle man is a pleasure in its own right.&nbsp; I&#8217;ve come to imagine that inside the puffy cartoon of James as a marshmallow mountain of effete logorrhea there was a man of steel.&nbsp; Colm Toibin has found him.&nbsp; I hope the movie part goes to Sean Connery.&nbsp; Listen in <\/FONT><A href=\"http:\/\/media.skybuilders.com\/Lydon\/Toibin.James.mp3\"><FONT face=\"Times New Roman\" size=\"4\">here<\/FONT><\/A><FONT face=\"Times New Roman\" size=\"4\">.<\/FONT><\/P><\/FONT><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I interviewed the Irish writer Colm Toibin in the Cambridge&nbsp;Cemetery&nbsp;on the chance that we might hear voices from the James family grave. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; We knew that the psychologist William James and his brother Henry, the novelist, were the sort of people who&#8217;d oblige us, if they could.&nbsp; On William&#8217;s death in 1910, Henry actually [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1340,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-142","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/142","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1340"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=142"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/142\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":178,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/142\/revisions\/178"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=142"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=142"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/archive.blogs.harvard.edu\/lydondev\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=142"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}