Thursday 1 November 2018

Gone to Earth

Gone to Earth by Mary Webb


A potted bio:

Mary Gladys Webb (25 March 1881 – 8 October 1927) was an English romantic novelist and poet of the early 20th century, whose work is set chiefly in the Shropshire countryside and among Shropshire characters and people whom she knew.

Her writing in general was reviewed as notable for poetic descriptions of nature. Another aspect throughout her work was a close and fatalistic view on human psychology.  She won the Prix Femina Vie Heureuse for Precious Bane. After her death Stanley Baldwin, then Prime Minister, brought about her commercial success through his approbation; at a Literary Fund dinner in 1928, Baldwin referred to her as a neglected genius. Consequently her collected works were republished in a standard edition by Jonathan Cape, becoming best sellers in the 1930s and running into many editions.

Stella Gibbons's 1932 novel Cold Comfort Farm was a parody of Webb's work, as well as of other "loam and lovechild" writers like Sheila Kaye-Smith and Mary E. Mannand, and further back, Thomas Hardy. Literary critic John Sutherland refers to the genre as the "soil and gloom romance" and credits Webb as its pioneer.

Gone to Earth  tells the story of Hazel Woodus, a child of the wilds who comes from the earth. and, in the end, returns to it.  She is the daughter of a Welsh gypsy and an eccentric harp-playing bee-keeper. She is happiest living in her forest cottage in the remote Shropshire hills, at one with the winds and seasons, protector and friend of the wild animals she loves. But Hazel's beauty and innocence prove irresistible to the men in her orbit. Both Jack Reddin, the local squire and Edward Marston, the gentle minister, offer her human -- and carnal -- love.

Hazel's fate unfolds as simply and relentlessly as a Greek tragedy, as a child of nature is drawn into a world of mortal passion in which she must eternally be a stranger.

What I thought:
I loved the lyrical descriptions of the wild landscape in which Hazel lived and roamed, her familiarity and passion for the animal life. These make up a substantial part of the text and some might be tempted to describe it as purple prose. 
There is a delightful passage where it describes her sucking the nectar from the beautiful, translucent bilberry flowers.  She is a naïve child of nature, gullible in her dealings with the two men who vie for her affections.  As she vacillated between the two, ambiguity a part of her character, I sometimes found myself feeling impatient with the choices she made.  Silly girl I found myself thinking.  I also had to concentrate when reading passages of dialogue in the rural Shropshire dialect which voices are wholly authentic and bring much to the atmosphere and mood of the narrative.

No comments:

Post a Comment