I recently came across Noël Coward’s The Collected Short Stories in the library. I never knew
that Noël Coward wrote short stories. I thought of him mainly as a delightful
writer of plays, many of which were adapted for the movies, and as the author of screenplays
for several films. Coward’s credits include the script of the play and movie Design for Living, as well as the play Private Lives and the script for
the theater that was adapted into the wonderful movie Brief Encounter.
Noël Coward |
Coward was a witty and knowing
writer, so I thought I’d give his short stories a chance. I wasn’t
disappointed. There are several wonderful selections in the book, but I’d like
to highlight one that I think has an interesting message for writers, for
artists of all sorts, and for practically anyone, come to think of it.
The first story in the
collection, “Traveller’s Joy,” concerns a character named Herbert Darrell, an
actor past his prime, staying in a theatrical boarding house in a provincial
city in England. This could potentially be quite a sad story, since the actor
has fallen on fairly hard times since his days as a romantic leading man in the
West End of London. Darrell is now reduced to playing character roles in tours of the
provinces in whatever play he can land a part.
The dilapidated boarding house where he is staying
is owned by a middle-aged spinster with a hunchback, a Miss Bramble, not a
glamorous leading lady by any means. Still, she plays an important role in the
story, but more on that in a moment.
We first see Herbert Darrell putting on his makeup
for the evening’s performance, rehearsing in his memories his successes and
failures in the theater and in love. Darrell may have slipped into a life that
is a poor imitation of his former stardom, but he still has high points (not to
mention several Guinesses) to float him over those moments when life’s failures
swamp him with gloom.
Noël Coward then switches point of view in the
story to Miss Bramble’s thoughts the next morning. (Coward, perhaps influenced by film, is very fluid in the way he approaches point of view in his stories.) We realize through her
recollections that she ended up spending a night of passion with Herbert
Darrell, who fell asleep while she slipped out of his room. Coward describes in a moving way how, for Miss
Bramble, this night was literally once in a lifetime: “Again she shivered, this
time with the sudden chill of clear realization that she wanted him again, that
every nerve in her body was tingling with an agony of desire.”
Even though Darrell gives her a cold and piercing
look when she returns with his breakfast in the morning, Miss Bramble was
prepared for this snub. Nothing will prevent her from preserving this night in
her memory like a delicious jam of summer figs, just as Darrell has nourished
himself through his ups and downs in the theater with his recollections of
glamorous opening nights and love affairs with stars.
The take-away for artists, writers, and others is
this—life is full of the shoves and slices of the quotidian. What can sustain a
writer through these wounds is to keep a recollection of first
learning about an acceptance, seeing a new book in print, receiving words of
gratitude after a reading, or hearing praise from an admired colleague.
Those moments are easy to shrug off, overlook, or forget if we don’t think we deserve the
acceptances or accolades, but the way to keep going is to genuinely savor and
remember those small but important treats. That, for me, is the takeaway of Noël Coward’s story.
Other recent posts about writing topics:
How to Get Published
Getting the Most from Your Writing Workshop
How Not to Become a Literary Dropout
Putting Together a Book Manuscript
Working with a Writing Mentor
How to Deliver Your Message
Does the Muse Have a Cell Phone?
Why Write Poetry?
Poetic Forms: Introduction; The Sonnet, The Sestina, The Ghazal, The Tanka
How to Be an American Writer
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