Miss Pym disposes.Miss Pym disposes Barbara Pym Barbara Mary Crampton Pym (June 2, 1913 – January 11, 1980) was an English novelist. Biography Pym was born in Oswestry, Shropshire. After studying English at St Hilda's College, Oxford, she served in the Women's Royal Naval Service during World War II. No Soft Incense: Barbara Pyre and the Church, edited by Hazel K. Bell. Barbara Pyre Society, 115 pages, 7.50 [pounds sterling] Although No Soft Incense, the title of this collection of essays put together by the Barbara Pyre Society (it is available on the Society's website at www.barbara-pym.org), is not in fact the title of one of Barbara Pym's eleven novels, it mimics her penchant for picking up phrases from obscurish English poems: Some Tame Gazelle gazelle, name for the many species of delicate, graceful antelopes of the genus Gazella, inhabiting arid, open country. Most gazelles are found only in Africa, but several species range over N Africa and SW Asia; the Persian, or goitered, gazelle ( (Thomas Haynes Bayly), A Glass of Blessings A Glass of Blessings is a novel by Barbara Pym, first published in 1958. The title is taken from a poem by George Herbert. Plot summary The central character, Wilmet Forsyth, is a married woman with a comfortable lifestyle and no need to go out to work. ("The Pulley pulley, simple machine consisting of a wheel over which a rope, belt, chain, or cable runs. A grooved pulley wheel like that used for ropes is called a sheave. ," Herbert), The Sweet Dove Died ("The Dove," Keats). Pym's titles are obscure both in the sense that you might not have heard of them and that you can't quite tell what they're supposed to mean even once you have. The phrase "no soft incense" (modified Keats) pleasantly poses a Pyre-like conundrum: no incense or a lot of the heavy stuff? Incense is a problematic commodity in Pym's anatomy of the Church of England Church of England: see England, Church of. . Too much reeks of Going Over to Rome; none is really Too Low. The trick is getting it right. It was dark and warm inside the church and there was a strong smell of incense. I began to wonder idly whether it was the cheaper brands that smelt stronger, like shag tobacco or inferior tea, but I was sure the Father Thames would have only the very best. No Soft Incense has a pleasantly amateurish air from contributors who make up an almost stereotypical cast of Pyre characters, largely divided into Excellent Women and Clergy. The institutional affiliations of the two lay men are impeccable: one served in the Coldstream Guards before joining the Department of Manuscripts at the British Museum; the other taught History at the University of Lagos The University of Lagos (also known as Unilag) is a federal government university with a main campus located at Akoka, Yaba and a college of medicine located at Idi-Araba, all in Lagos, Lagos State, southern Nigeria. (Pym, you may recall, worked at the International African Institute The International African Institute (IAI) was founded (as the International Institute of African Languages and Cultures) in 1926 in London for the study of African languages. Diedrich Hermann Westermann was co-director from 1926 to ????. and created the wonderful Bishops of Mbawawa and Nybongaland). The sole tiresome contribution is a heavy-handed and verbose Wordy; long winded. The term is often used as a switch to display the status of some operation. For example, a /v might mean "verbose mode." essay drawing on Bakhtin and feminist theory on Milton. I thought at first the essay must be a parodic homage to the anthropological papers delivered to obscure learned societies by characters such as Esther Clovis and Everard Bone, but, alas, it seems to be intended straight. Pyre herself quotes Milton in a lighter spirit, as when two characters discuss a newly attached couple: "'Imparadised in one another's arms, as Milton put it," Basil went on. 'Or encasseroled perhaps--the bay leaf resting on the boeuf bourguignon.'" One of the contributors who wears her learning more modestly is the detective novelist Kate Charles (whose books were called by The Guardian a "bloodstained blood·stained adj. Responsible for killing or slaughter: a bloodstained government. bloodstained Adjective discoloured with blood Adj. 1. version of the world of Barbara Pyre.... Could make one late for Evensong"). Her essay on Pym's clergymen as a kind of third sex--neither fish nor "holy fowl"--is a model of apposite ap·po·site adj. Strikingly appropriate and relevant. See Synonyms at relevant. [Latin appositus, past participle of app quotation in the service of a sensible thesis. Here's a conversation between Father Neville and his mother. "It may be that I shall have to marry her ... I mean that it might make things easier all round, and I dare say she'd make quite a good wife." "I thought you didn't hold with marriage." "I don't really, for a priest, but there could be situations where one might have to sacrifice one's principles for the happiness of another person." Father Gabriel Myers--not one of Pym's priests but a Benedictine monk and organist--has contributed three lovely little pieces on aspects of Pyre, from a fan's pilgrimage to a pleasant study of "Miss Pym and the Victorian hymn." Father Myers has a nice blend of tone and subject matter added to a not unseemly amount of personal detail. Life in a religious community has made him sympathetically attentive to Pym's descriptions of the human difficulties of Christianity. Ivan, in The Brothers Karamazov, both scoffs at and agonizes over Christ's impossible imperative to love even the least of our brothers as we love him. Pym's method of teaching that lesson is rather different. Based on his experience in a monastery refectory, Father Myers singles out Mildred's cri de coeur cri de coeur n. pl. cris de coeur An impassioned outcry, as of entreaty or protest. [French cri de c when she finds herself in a cafeteria: "This place gives me a hopeless kind of feeling.... One wouldn't believe there could be so many people and one must love them all." Her companion, Mrs. Bonner, "looked up from her chocolate trifle, rather shocked. 'Oh, I don't think the Commandment is meant to be taken as literally as that.'" The collection also includes useful, brisk lists of things like Pym's London churches and a Clerical Directory a la Crockford's, working out at 5.76 clergymen per novel. Really, this volume is a happy dipping book for fans, so it would be a churlish churl·ish adj. 1. Of, like, or befitting a churl; boorish or vulgar. 2. Having a bad disposition; surly: "as valiant as the lion, churlish as the bear" Shakespeare. cavil CAVIL. Sophism, subtlety. Cavilis a captious argument, by which a conclusion evidently false, is drawn from a principle evidently true: Ea est natura cavillationis ut ab evidenter veris, per brevissimas mutationes disputatio, ad ea quce evidentur falsa sunt perducatur. Dig. indeed to note how many quoted passages repeat from essay to essay. Friends, after all, enjoy chuckling over their favorite tidbits--or at least are willing to indulge their friends in that harmless pursuit. Pym might have admired the "enviable detachment" of her anthropologists, but she did not share it. In his introduction, James Runcie (not to be confused with the former Archbishop of Canterbury The Archbishop of Canterbury is the main leader of the Church of England and by convention is also recognised as head of the worldwide Anglican Communion. The current archbishop is Rowan Williams. ) describes her mode: Barbara Pym's writing contains both gentleness and a startling lack of ego that both tempers and blesses the acuity of her observation. It celebrates all that is best of Christian wisdom and generosity; hopeful without being trite, loving without being naive, comic without being cruel. Pym's satirical eye rested lightly--fondly, even--on the congregated personages before her, even as they dwindled through "Rome, Death, and Umbrage" (and, as the contributor Joy Grant notes, "the greatest of these was Umbrage"). Let us pray that we find ourselves at the disposition of so benevolent an author. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion