It
is much better than The Road to Wigan Pier, much livelier, more characterful, more a
collection of good stories than a tedious political tract as that is. I shall
read it to the end, it is certainly worth it, but it suffers from the same
problems as his other autobiographical works- a lack of self-awareness and of
genuine insight.
He
is not working class and he never could be. He works hard at the restaurants in
Paris, very hard indeed when he can get a job, and he suffers hardship when he
can't. But it's all a game to Orwell. It's a bit of fun to placate his
existential boredom and his bourgeois guilt. At the very most it's a kind of
research. When he decides he can take no more he writes to England and asks
someone to find him a comfortable job as a private secretary to someone or
other. And that's it. He's bored with the game and goes back to his real life.
Just like in Spain when after a few months he's had enough of the war and just
goes back to England and gets on with his life.
He
deals almost entirely with people like himself, broken-down foreign bourgoisie.
He never chooses the company of the French working class, who he is so
despetately trying to pretend he is like and understands better than anyone
else. He either sneers at them- the landlords trying to make ends meet, the
cooks and waiters at the restaurant making a living, taking pride in doing
their job well, are enemies in the parochial little world he doesn't realize
he's retreated into- or he charicatures them through the people and behaviours
he describes seeing in the bars.
I
was reminded by a scene he describes in a bar on a Saturday, where a brief
moment of timeless joy and power gives way to the inevitable maudlin
drunkenness and hangover. He says it was probably worth it. It reminded me of a
black character in Faulkner's 'The Rievers', who says, 'If you could only be a
nigger one Saturday night, you wouldn't want to be a white man again as long as you live.'
He
is particularly blind when wondering what the life of a plongeur is for. He
compares it disfavourably with the work of a miner, whose product is needed by
other people. He doesn't seem to realize that if restaurants weren't wanted
they wouldn't exist (unlike coal which was mined for political reasons at
public expense for decades after it had ceased to be wanted in any quantity. I
wonder if Orwell would have agreed with that business, or if he would
acknowledged it was happening).
People
like to eat well without having to cook or clean, when they can afford to do
so. Working men need to earn a living. Competent businessmen, restaurateurs-
and anyone who wants to take a chance can be one, after all- satisfy both of
those needs at once, while benefitting themselves at the same time. It is silly
to ask for what purpose a plongeur works 15 hours a day. The purpose is the same
for which any man works, to fill his belly. It is even sillier to claim, as he
does, that there is some kind of conspiracy of the wealthy to keep the poor
toiling senselessly, for fear they might otherwise want to share in their
wealth.
It's a good read, illuminating on many aspects of poverty that most of us have probably never known or even thought about.
3 comments:
Don't you think you're being a bit hard on him?
for a moment I thought you'd fallen on hard times.
Sackerson
I wasn't trying to be fair, nor to write a complete review. I'm a fan of Orwell's writing style and admire the fact that he was able to accept and analyse the effects of reality on his beliefs, and to change them accordingly. These comments focus on the negative reactions I had because I was surprised by them, whereas I wasn't surprised to find much of it very good.
The most surprising thing to me was the way he fails to become a part of the class he himself thinks he has joined. This is less clear in England, in fact it might be fair to say that he really does become one more tramp there, but in Paris he is never one of them, just as in Spain he often seems to think that the war is all about the foreign mercenaries (perhaps the wrong word, idealists, maybe) who made up a very small part of the Republican forces, rather than the Spaniards who were fighting not just for their beliefs but for their livelihoods and their identities, and would have to live with the whatever way the war ended.
JH
Not yet, I'm glad to say ;-) And if it comes to it I'd go to Marbella rather than Paris. If you're going to live on the streets it might as well be the beach front.
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