Fay Weldon's Wicked Fictions (19 page)

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Authors: Regina Barreca

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BOOK: Fay Weldon's Wicked Fictions
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Page 50
over a child, which as soon as born became the property of the master and part of the wealth of the estate. A slave also had no right to abort, destroying the master's property. In Chariton's novel we are made to forget all that, or to hold it of no account. The novelists of antiquity take more liberties with the social and moral order than Menander, who must soon compromise his interesting situations with prevailing moral normsa perennial weakness of situation comedy, as not of the situational novel. Kallirrhoe, the heroine of virtue, of
sophrosyne
*
,
takes a second "husband," commits bigamy or, rather, seduces (in some lights) a man who must really (if unwittingly) take the position of an adulterer (
moichos
) instead of a true husband. She also puts a large cuckoo in his nest. Kallirrhoe well and truly disturbs the bloodline and the flow of property, the orderly masculine "civilized" order of inheritance.
Chariton's Kallirrhoe acts as if she were the real parent of her child and is never concerned by Roman law regarding marriage or childbirth or slavery. She learns how to grow out of mere dutiful virtue into a wiser self-preservation. In the terms of the world around her, she is a-moral or even immoral. Her rebirth from the tomb means she is no longer purely daughter or wife, but a moral being. She is a magnificent illustration of the Weldon dictum "the worse women behave, the better they get on." Kallirrhoe, instead of having to mope about the back kitchens as a slave, gets a fine new husband, a house and clothing, and access to money, as well as a father for her child. Aphrodite
approves
of Kallirrhoe, and supports her; Kallirrhoe always looks like Aphrodite herself.
One sees how much better off Chariton is than Weldon; he does not have to re-invent Nature or fumble for new terms for "our mistress." The Goddess can be appealed to, represented, generalized about, and comically used in the narrative which supports the work of Aphrodite, the generative and redemptive creation, as Weldon is later to do. As in Weldon, males who try to meddle with or undo Aphrodite's operations are going to have to pay for it, whether or not they recognize retribution for what it is. The Goddess sees to it that Chaireas is punished for his violence to the wife Aphrodite gave him. On the track of Kallirrhoe, Chaireas is able to punish the bandits who abducted her, but when he gets warm in his search, Dionysius sees to it that Chaireas is spirited away and sold into slavery himself. He is nearly crucified before he starts recovering his fortunes again; at last he obtains a position by which he can hope to recover his lost wife. He does, of course, recover her, although during the law case in Persia where he appears against Dionysius, some of Kallirrhoe's female supporters are unromantically critical of him and sardonically warn her against returning to her childhood sweetheart:
 
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"And what if Chaireas reverts to temper tantrums? Back to the tomb?" [P. 151]
Dionysius, a hopelessly un-"Dionysian" man proud of his own rectitude, a slow, self-righteous, and self-pitying person, is treated so tactfully by Kallirrhoe, even as she leaves him, that he never knows his son is not his, and can even persuade himself that Kallirrhoe goes back to Sicily with her first husband only because she must. Kallirrhoe's last letter to him is a model of intelligence and heartfelt deceit through suggestion. She has evidently learned not only how to survive, but how to ensure that her son survives in prosperity, and even that Dionysius' self-love should survive.
I tend to think of Chariton's
Chaireas and Kallirrhoe
as "the first Fay Weldon novel." Chariton's novel didn't get into print until 1750, and its eighteenth-century English translations are not widely known. It is not and cannot be a direct influence on Weldon's work; I'm not here dealing with direct influences but with patterns of resemblance. The kind of novel that Chariton's book represents is a kind of novel that hasn't been dealt with very well by criticism informed merely by ideas of the realistic and moral novel trumpeted by F. R. Leavis. To oppose to that novel we have only the often crude concept of the "romance," which is frowned upon in English criticism and used as a dungeon into which we pile the Brontës and some of Dickens only when we wish to be unkind. Chariton's witty novel shows us the charm of the situational novel, its power to question received cultural assumptionsabout marriage, for instance, and about property and choice. Situational works can use realistic materials and touches, as Chariton does all the time. Consider, for instance, his description of Kallirrhoe coming to in her tomb:
As she began to arise, with difficulty, she encountered the crowns and fillets. She made a noise of gold and silver. There was a strong smell of spices. [P. 62]
How nicely Chariton has calculated what it would be like to come to in a tomb
in the dark
. His narrative here follows the heroine's sensesthe tinkling noise of the gold and silver objects as she brushes against them, the confusing smell of heavy spicesall puzzling, sensuous experiences to a person who can make no use of her eyes. Such realistic detail does not bind Chariton to the realistic or naturalistic in his story. What he looks toand what we look foris a strong situational pattern. Novelists who do not employ nineteenth-century realism, or the romantic patterns as we have understood them, have been imperfectly visible to us; in modern times such writers are labeled "experimental." Much fiction of both past and present is situationally devised and, while not primarily concerned with pure realism or development of organic character, it is at the same
 
Page 52
time not particularly romantic and does not need either dragons or haunted castles to achieve its ends. (Though in defence of Radcliffe and Co. one might remark that an imprisoning castle offers a strong situation from which a good deal of moral, sexual, and social observation can be expected.)
In some of her novels Fay Weldon has very visibly employed the techniques and references of a more ancient fictionand done it so well that puzzled readers have not been able to call her "romantic." My own favorite among all her novels so far,
The Hearts and Lives of Men
(1987), appears to be a deliberate adaptation of the plot patterns and tropes of ancient fiction. The heroine of the story, "little Nell" (an overt reminiscence of Dickens) is the child of the beautiful Helen, a woman whom we may think will be the heroine. But Nell is that favorite of ancient fiction, the rescued girl. These magical females traditionally survive shipwreck, and even burial alive, in order to pursue their rescuing vocation. When she is snatched by a bandit, Mr. Blotton (who is trying to snatch her for her father), Nell is in a plane that crashesbut she is wonderfully saved:
But what happened to the tail was this. It floated down, quite gracefully, the air billowing through it and sustaining it by some phenomena of aerodynamics, tilting first a little to the right, then a little to the left, as if it were a parachute, and in it were two seats, and sitting side by side were Nell and Mr. Blotton ... [P. 11]
Nell is carrying a talisman, her mother's emerald pendantand emeralds have been a favorite associate of heroines from time immemorial. The emerald is a stone of chastity and high aspiration; in Heliodorus'
Aithiopika
the heroine's treasures, given her as a baby by her unknown mother, include emeralds. Armed with her emerald maternal pendant, and her fate, Nell escapes (a pleasant) imprisonment in a château through a fire which spares her and no other. She is always looked after, for she has a meaning and purpose different from her parents' limited and selfish objectives (their affairs, jobs, and remarriages). And she is always busy:
But, reader, the fact is that Nell was simply not destined for a quiet life. It was always to be like this. Fate would allow her some small pleasant respite, then whirl her up and set her down on an altogether different and not necessarily pleasant path. Good fortune and bad were always, for Nell, to follow close upon each other's heels, and snapping at hers. [P. 161]
Fate is a favorite figure of the ancient novelistsFate (
Tyche
*) being a feminine deity who takes part in the action. As Chariton has it, leading into Kallirrhoe's pregnancy and her marriage with Dionysius, "Fate (
He
*
Tyche
*) was plotting against the chastity (or virtue:
sophrosyne
*) of the

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