A Glass of Blessings: Difference between revisions
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After a church service one day, Wilmet renews acquaintance with her close friend Rowena’s attractive but ne'er-do-well brother, Piers Longridge. She develops a romantic interest in Piers, and begins to believe that he is her [[secret admirer]]. What Wilmet fails to realise is that Piers is [[gay]] until she becomes aware of his relationship with Keith, a lower-class young man with a Leicester accent. But Keith comes in useful later, helping her to choose furniture after she and Rodney have to find somewhere new to live following Sybil's remarriage, whose house they had shared since their own marriage. The move brings Rodney and Wilmet more together at the same time as troubles are resolved for some of the other characters too. |
After a church service one day, Wilmet renews acquaintance with her close friend Rowena’s attractive but ne'er-do-well brother, Piers Longridge. She develops a romantic interest in Piers, and begins to believe that he is her [[secret admirer]]. What Wilmet fails to realise is that Piers is [[gay]] until she becomes aware of his relationship with Keith, a lower-class young man with a Leicester accent. But Keith comes in useful later, helping her to choose furniture after she and Rodney have to find somewhere new to live following Sybil's remarriage, whose house they had shared since their own marriage. The move brings Rodney and Wilmet more together at the same time as troubles are resolved for some of the other characters too. |
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==Publication history and reception== |
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''A Glass of Blessings'' was Pym's fifth novel and was published by [[Jonathan Cape]] in 1958. Pym's [[working title]] for the novel was ''The Clergy House'' <ref>{{cite book |last=Holt |first=Hazel |date=1990 |title=A Lot to Ask: A Life of Barbara Pym |location=London |publisher=Macmillan |page=179 |isbn=0525249370}}</ref>. The novel's portrayal of a homosexual relationship was noted by the contemporary review in ''[[The Daily Telegraph]]'' as unusual for the era <ref>Holt 1990, p.180</ref>. The book received less critical attention than Pym's previous novels, and she noted in a diary entry that none of the reviews was "wholly good". Pym noted that the reviews described her as "tone-deaf to dialogue" and "moderately amusing" <ref>{{cite book |last=Pym |first=Barbara |date=1984 |title=A Very Private Eye: An Autobiography in Diaries and Letters (ed. Hazel Holt and Hilary Pym) |location=New York |publisher=E.P. Dutton |page=199 |isbn=0525242341}}</ref>. Pym later recalled that - of her first six novels - ''Glass'' was the worst reviewed <ref>Pym 1984, p.203</ref>. |
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The novel was first published in [[the United States]] by [[E.P. Dutton]] in 1980. [[Hachette]] released the novel as an audiobook in 2012, read by Patience Tomlinson. |
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==Intertextuality== |
==Intertextuality== |
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Barbara Pym often resorted to various kinds of [[intertextuality]] in order to give her novels added depth and relevance. In the case of ''A Glass of Blessings'', the title is taken from a line in [[George Herbert]]’s poem [https://poets.org/poem/pulley "The Pulley"], which is quoted and commented on in this novel’s final chapter. In the poem, when God first made man and, "having a glass of blessings standing by", all its contents were poured on him except rest, since otherwise he would not appreciate the others with which he was endowed. It is this theme, that a life that does not run smoothly is itself a glass of blessings, that Wilmet has satisfaction in applying to all that has happened to her. There is also an ironical reference back to the source of Wilmet Forsyth's name, which is taken from the heroine of [[Charlotte M. Yonge]]'s ''The Pillars of the House''. There Yonge's Wilmet Underwood was the mainstay of her family, while the performance of Pym's narrator falls rather short of her achievement.<ref>The Charlotte M. Yonge Fellowship, [https://community.dur.ac.uk/c.e.schultze/meetings.html 14th May 2011 meeting]</ref> |
Barbara Pym often resorted to various kinds of [[intertextuality]] in order to give her novels added depth and relevance. In the case of ''A Glass of Blessings'', the title is taken from a line in [[George Herbert]]’s poem [https://poets.org/poem/pulley "The Pulley"], which is quoted and commented on in this novel’s final chapter. In the poem, when God first made man and, "having a glass of blessings standing by", all its contents were poured on him except rest, since otherwise he would not appreciate the others with which he was endowed. It is this theme, that a life that does not run smoothly is itself a glass of blessings, that Wilmet has satisfaction in applying to all that has happened to her. There is also an ironical reference back to the source of Wilmet Forsyth's name, which is taken from the heroine of [[Charlotte M. Yonge]]'s ''The Pillars of the House''. There Yonge's Wilmet Underwood was the mainstay of her family, while the performance of Pym's narrator falls rather short of her achievement.<ref>The Charlotte M. Yonge Fellowship, [https://community.dur.ac.uk/c.e.schultze/meetings.html 14th May 2011 meeting]</ref> |
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Another form of intertextuality is the way characters from one Pym novel reappear in another. In his introduction to ''A Glass of Blessings'', John Bayley refers to it as "one of her most engaging devices".<ref>John Bayley, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Rp400gtZZzMC&dq=%22a+glass+of+blessings%22+Pym&source=gbs_navlinks_s "Introduction"], ''A Glass of Blessings'', Hachette UK 2011</ref> Rodney and Wilmet Forsyth had already made a cameo appearance in ''[[Jane and Prudence]]'' (1953). Now Prudence serves as catalyst to the renewed closeness between Wilmet and Rodney. Prudence works, Rodney confesses, in the same Ministry as him and he had taken her out to dinner on two occasions. This prompts Wilmet to admit to previously unmentioned lunches with Rowena’s husband Harry and with Piers. Their stiff conversation then dissolves "into helpless laughter, so that an elderly woman, coming into the lounge to retrieve the knitting she had left there before dinner, retreated quickly and with a look of alarm on her face." Julian and Winifred Malory from ''[[Excellent Women]]'' (1952) are also mentioned in ''A Glass of Blessings,'' as well as Rocky Napier, whom both Wilmet and Rowena remember as a love interest during their war service in Italy. The names of two other characters, Oswald Thames and Wilf Bason, were eventually recycled in ''A Few Green Leaves'' (1980). |
Another form of intertextuality is the way characters from one Pym novel reappear in another. In his introduction to ''A Glass of Blessings'', John Bayley refers to it as "one of her most engaging devices".<ref>John Bayley, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Rp400gtZZzMC&dq=%22a+glass+of+blessings%22+Pym&source=gbs_navlinks_s "Introduction"], ''A Glass of Blessings'', Hachette UK 2011</ref> Rodney and Wilmet Forsyth had already made a cameo appearance in ''[[Jane and Prudence]]'' (1953). Now Prudence serves as catalyst to the renewed closeness between Wilmet and Rodney. Prudence works, Rodney confesses, in the same Ministry as him and he had taken her out to dinner on two occasions. This prompts Wilmet to admit to previously unmentioned lunches with Rowena’s husband Harry and with Piers. Their stiff conversation then dissolves "into helpless laughter, so that an elderly woman, coming into the lounge to retrieve the knitting she had left there before dinner, retreated quickly and with a look of alarm on her face." Julian and Winifred Malory from ''[[Excellent Women]]'' (1952) are also mentioned in ''A Glass of Blessings,'' as well as Rocky Napier, whom both Wilmet and Rowena remember as a love interest during their war service in Italy. Archdeacon Hoccleve from Pym's debut novel, ''[[Some Tame Gazelle]]'' makes an appearance, and the character of Catherine Oliphant from ''[[Less than Angels]]'' is mentioned. The names of two other characters, Oswald Thames and Wilf Bason, were eventually recycled in ''A Few Green Leaves'' (1980). |
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==Themes== |
==Themes== |
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==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
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*Orna Raz - ''Social Dimensions in the Novels of Barbara Pym, 1949-1962: the Writer as Hidden Observer'' (2007) |
*Orna Raz - ''Social Dimensions in the Novels of Barbara Pym, 1949-1962: the Writer as Hidden Observer'' (2007) |
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{{Barbara Pym}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Glass Of Blessings, A}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Glass Of Blessings, A}} |
Revision as of 03:54, 26 April 2020
Author | Barbara Pym |
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Language | English |
Publisher | Jonathan Cape |
Publication date | 1958 |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Pages | 255 pp |
A Glass of Blessings is a novel by Barbara Pym, first published in 1958. It deals with the growing estrangement of a well-to-do married couple and the means by which harmony is restored.
Plot summary
The central character and narrator, Wilmet Forsyth, is the thirty-three-year-old wife of a Civil Servant with a comfortable though routine life. She does not need to work and enjoys a life of leisure. When not lunching or shopping she occupies her time, somewhat guiltily, with occasional "good works", particularly at the instigation of Sybil, her slightly eccentric do-gooder mother-in-law. She becomes drawn into the social life of her church, St. Luke's, and there makes a change for the good in the lives of two other characters. One is when the kleptomaniac Wilf Bason has to resign from the Ministry where her husband Rodney works and she arranges for Wilf to become housekeeper at the church house. The other is her support for Mary, a ‘mousy’ worshipper, who eventually goes to live for a trial period in a convent.
After a church service one day, Wilmet renews acquaintance with her close friend Rowena’s attractive but ne'er-do-well brother, Piers Longridge. She develops a romantic interest in Piers, and begins to believe that he is her secret admirer. What Wilmet fails to realise is that Piers is gay until she becomes aware of his relationship with Keith, a lower-class young man with a Leicester accent. But Keith comes in useful later, helping her to choose furniture after she and Rodney have to find somewhere new to live following Sybil's remarriage, whose house they had shared since their own marriage. The move brings Rodney and Wilmet more together at the same time as troubles are resolved for some of the other characters too.
Publication history and reception
A Glass of Blessings was Pym's fifth novel and was published by Jonathan Cape in 1958. Pym's working title for the novel was The Clergy House [1]. The novel's portrayal of a homosexual relationship was noted by the contemporary review in The Daily Telegraph as unusual for the era [2]. The book received less critical attention than Pym's previous novels, and she noted in a diary entry that none of the reviews was "wholly good". Pym noted that the reviews described her as "tone-deaf to dialogue" and "moderately amusing" [3]. Pym later recalled that - of her first six novels - Glass was the worst reviewed [4].
The novel was first published in the United States by E.P. Dutton in 1980. Hachette released the novel as an audiobook in 2012, read by Patience Tomlinson.
Intertextuality
Barbara Pym often resorted to various kinds of intertextuality in order to give her novels added depth and relevance. In the case of A Glass of Blessings, the title is taken from a line in George Herbert’s poem "The Pulley", which is quoted and commented on in this novel’s final chapter. In the poem, when God first made man and, "having a glass of blessings standing by", all its contents were poured on him except rest, since otherwise he would not appreciate the others with which he was endowed. It is this theme, that a life that does not run smoothly is itself a glass of blessings, that Wilmet has satisfaction in applying to all that has happened to her. There is also an ironical reference back to the source of Wilmet Forsyth's name, which is taken from the heroine of Charlotte M. Yonge's The Pillars of the House. There Yonge's Wilmet Underwood was the mainstay of her family, while the performance of Pym's narrator falls rather short of her achievement.[5]
Another form of intertextuality is the way characters from one Pym novel reappear in another. In his introduction to A Glass of Blessings, John Bayley refers to it as "one of her most engaging devices".[6] Rodney and Wilmet Forsyth had already made a cameo appearance in Jane and Prudence (1953). Now Prudence serves as catalyst to the renewed closeness between Wilmet and Rodney. Prudence works, Rodney confesses, in the same Ministry as him and he had taken her out to dinner on two occasions. This prompts Wilmet to admit to previously unmentioned lunches with Rowena’s husband Harry and with Piers. Their stiff conversation then dissolves "into helpless laughter, so that an elderly woman, coming into the lounge to retrieve the knitting she had left there before dinner, retreated quickly and with a look of alarm on her face." Julian and Winifred Malory from Excellent Women (1952) are also mentioned in A Glass of Blessings, as well as Rocky Napier, whom both Wilmet and Rowena remember as a love interest during their war service in Italy. Archdeacon Hoccleve from Pym's debut novel, Some Tame Gazelle makes an appearance, and the character of Catherine Oliphant from Less than Angels is mentioned. The names of two other characters, Oswald Thames and Wilf Bason, were eventually recycled in A Few Green Leaves (1980).
Themes
The subject of homosexuality is not infrequent in Pym's work, but it is usually referred to in oblique and subtle ways. This novel is surprisingly frank about the subject, especially for a comedy of manners published in 1958. The reader can reach no conclusion other than that Piers and Keith live together in a romantic relationship.[7]
The British class structure, which was gradually fading out at the time the novel was published, is essential to the interactions between the characters, like Wilf Bason, who cooks for a house full of celibate priests. The heroine's lifestyle also appears outmoded to today's reader.[8]
References
- ^ Holt, Hazel (1990). A Lot to Ask: A Life of Barbara Pym. London: Macmillan. p. 179. ISBN 0525249370.
- ^ Holt 1990, p.180
- ^ Pym, Barbara (1984). A Very Private Eye: An Autobiography in Diaries and Letters (ed. Hazel Holt and Hilary Pym). New York: E.P. Dutton. p. 199. ISBN 0525242341.
- ^ Pym 1984, p.203
- ^ The Charlotte M. Yonge Fellowship, 14th May 2011 meeting
- ^ John Bayley, "Introduction", A Glass of Blessings, Hachette UK 2011
- ^ Betty Smartt Carter, "Barbara Pym's Affectionate Irony", First Things, Nov 2006 Archived July 22, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Kate Macdonald (21 September 2015). "Interested onlookers at vestry rage in Barbara Pym's A Glass of Blessings". Kate Macdonald official website. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
Further reading
- Orna Raz - Social Dimensions in the Novels of Barbara Pym, 1949-1962: the Writer as Hidden Observer (2007)