Elizabeth Taylor, née Coles, was an English fiction writer
who lived from 1912 to 1975. Critics who have written about Elizabeth Taylor the novelist have
speculated that part of the reason for her relative obscurity might be because
she was eclipsed by the actor Elizabeth Taylor, who was born twenty years after
the novelist. Despite their age difference, both the fiction writer and the
actor flourished at the same time in the 1950s and 60s, because the more famous
Elizabeth Taylor achieved celebrity as a child actress.
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The fiction writer Elizabeth Taylor |
I stumbled on the work of the fiction writer Elizabeth
Taylor through the film
Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont, a delightful movie that stars the great Joan Plowright in
the title role.
Mrs. Palfrey, based
on one of Taylor’s final novels, is representative of much of Taylor’s work in
that it involves two themes the author was fond of: a woman alone, and a person caught in a fictitious or false
role that she has created.
The Wikipedia article on Taylor mentions that she was briefly a
member of the Communist Party, and afterwards a lifelong supporter of the
Labour Party. Her political persuasions do occasionally enter into her writing
in a subtle way. But one of Taylor’s outstanding qualities as an author is that
she almost never oversteps the role of the writer as an objective observer of
personality. Her endings are nearly flawless in their even-handed meting out of
fates to the characters.
I’ve read a couple of Taylor's works of fictions, including the novel
The Wedding Group, a wry look at the culture of self-realization of the late 1960s. Each character is determined to have what only he or she wants, with no regard to the well-being of others. In the end, no character really arrives at a satisfactory life.
I’ve also enjoyed a short story collection of Taylor's,
A
Dedicated Man and Other Stories. One benefit of
reading short stories, as opposed to novels, is that they give a quick overview
of the kinds of plots and characters that a writer is drawn to. A specialty of
Taylor’s that appears in several of the stories is her insight into the
conversations of couples talking about other couples, including their friends.
There is that strange distancing after a dinner party, where a
couple sizes up the other duos, making little remarks that showcase their own
relationship as the party line.
There is a wonderful story in
A Dedicated Man called
“The Prerogative of Love,” first published in the
New Yorker, about a couple
who are giving a dinner party for another couple on a sweltering summer night
at their home in the suburbs of London. The lady of the house, Lillah, is a
beautiful, childless woman, renowned among their circle of friends for her romantic marriage to a man named
Richard. Overcome by the heat, Lillah seems unable to lift a finger to do
anything to make the evening a success, leaving the entertaining to her husband
and the food preparation to the cook. Richard rather resents that his wife
has been home all day but has done nothing to get ready for the party, leaving
him no time for a quick dip in the river after his long commute home from London.
In barges Lillah’s niece, Arabella, a fashion model, even
more self-preoccupied than her aunt. In fact, all the characters in this story
could be placed on a continuum of selflessness or self-absorbtion, with Lillah
and Arabella the most concerned with themselves, and the cook at the other end
of the spectrum, since she is almost psychically attuned to the needs of others. (The author’s class politics do sneak in from time to time.)
The couple who come to dinner, John and Helen Forester, are
somewhere in the middle of this scale, rather conventional English parents who
breed dogs as a hobby and have none of the glamour of their hosts. Helen falls
all over Lillah with admiration, and her husband develops a fantasy crush on
the young model.
The point of view at the end of the story switches to the
Foresters, as they dissect the evening when they drive home from the party. (Taylor
is quite unattached to any one point of view in her stories, moving fluidly
from one character’s perspective to another—a technique writers can learn from her stories.
) Taylor
begins with the wife’s comment about the hostess’s dress, but the husband,
still thinking about the young model, misunderstands her:
“A really
beautiful frock,” she was saying.
“Unusual,” he
replied. “Not much of it.” He suddenly laughed.
“I meant
Lillah’s.”
Presently she
sighed and said, “He’s so wonderful to her always.”
John knew the
pattern—the excited admiration invariably turned to dissatisfaction in the
end—one of the reasons why these evenings ruffled him.
“I’m sure that to
him she’s as beautiful as on the day they married,” she went on.
“Still a very fine
woman,” he replied.
“Is it because
they’ve never had children, I wonder? The glamour hasn’t worn off by all those
nursery troubles. All their love kept for one another.”
“It is better to
have children,” John said.
“Well, of course.
Who ever’d deny it? You know I didn’t think that. But I wondered if it had
drawn them close together, not having
them. They never seem to take one another for granted.” “As we do,” she left
unspoken, though her sigh was explicit.
“Well, we musn’t
compare ourselves with them,” he said
rather smartly. “And who are we to be talking about love? They’re the ones.
They’re famous for it, after all. It’s their prerogative.”
Taylor laces this brief
conversation with many rich ironies. First of all, the wife, Helen, is scolding
her husband for his lingering thoughts of the young model’s skimpy outfit, then
making a pointed comment that their hosts have a much more romantic
relationship.
Meanwhile, the husband, John, is
humoring his wife’s fascination with the hosts, remarking slightly
sarcastically that only couples such as Richard and Lillah have a right to be
considered not only as a domestic unit but as a romantic one.
Most ironic is the
author’s own viewpoint. Earlier in the story, the author has let us in on the secret that Lillah
certainly does take Richard for granted, and is quite spoiled. Taylor seems to
be criticizing the way that love is linked in most people’s minds with the
personality of self-indulgent beauties, rather than with more selfless personalities,
such as that of the cook, who is able to anticipate her employers’ every need.
I’d also like to give a shout out to another short story of Elizabeth Taylor's that I love,
“The Letter Writers,” from
The Blush, also collected in
You’ll Enjoy It When You Get There: The Stories of Elizabeth Taylor. “The Letter Writers” is a delicious story about a celebrated male novelist and a woman fan of his who have corresponded regularly for ten years without ever meeting, until... Well, I won’t give it away. You have to experience this fabulous story for yourself.
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