Read The Real Mrs Miniver Online
Authors: Ysenda Maxtone Graham
He had found, among âthe buddies', a confidant whom he told about his love affair with an English married woman. Jan's reaction to this information revealed how sensitive she still was about her reasons for coming to the United States in 1940: âI know it sounds more romantic and simple, the way you put it to him, but don't you see that it isn't fair on
me
to imply that I left GB just at that crucial moment simply and solely to be with you? I didn't, as you know: if the children hadn't been coming I'd just have had to stick it out and mend my heart with Scotch tape or something. So please revise that version before I come â otherwise, I promise you, I shall get hold of him and do it myself.'
For Mrs Miniver, and for Jan in her early marriage, privacy and free time had been two of the most cherished privileges. In âMrs Miniver and the New Car' she had quoted the Chinese proverb, âTo be entirely at leisure for one day is to be for one day an immortal.' But now, in late 1943, she dreaded solitude, and feared the emptiness of being âat leisure'. The woman who had once made sure there was a permanent nannie between herself and her younger children now dreaded them going back to boarding school. This was another symptom of her depression. If there was nobody in the apartment with her, she was paralysed with loneliness. Pauly came and spent the night with her often, to keep her company: they were brought together by both missing Dolf. âIch weiss wie tief dankbar ich sein muss,' Pauly wrote to Dolf in 1943, âund ich darf bestimmt nicht klagen, aber ich bin oft so schrecklich allein.' (She ended the letter, âWirst Du nie fotografiert von den Buddies?')
1
But Pauly now had a job as a paid âlady companion' to a wealthy American lesbian, Miss Frank, and had to travel with her wherever she went. Jan's secretary Anne Curtis Brown had left, to get married.
âI miss Anne dreadfully,' Jan wrote to Dolf on 22 October 1943.
It was lovely to feel that she would be turning up every morning â moody as the devil, but human. The early mornings are the worst. Gracie comes at 10.30. Pauly (when she sleeps here) leaves at 8.30. Those two hours, especially after a bad night, are purgatory. I don't know what we can do, darling, except wish on our star and wait. The Russian (& other) news is marvellous, & that's what we ought to fix our minds on. Hell, when people are being killed all over the world, & nine lovers & sweethearts out of ten are being separated, the fate of two scraps of humanity like us ought to seem insignificant. But oh God! how it hurts. If everybody â I mean all lovers â who are torn apart like this are feeling as we do, the world seems too small to carry such a load of exquisite misery. I know we have no right to think of ourselves as exceptions â it's only that most of them can at least look forward to some focal point in the future when they can take up their lives together again, whereas
we
â but what's the use of going into all that again every time I write â¦
This was an eighteen-page letter, and it ended: âDarling, I've just made myself a dry Martini, & I'm lying on the bed drinking it. As it penetrates down to my fingertips & up to my braincells, I find I can almost imagine us happy again one day, & falling asleep in each other's arms with nothing more formidable than an alarm-clock for the next morning. Sweet, foolish, heavenly dream ⦠I'll cling to it while I can.'
Pauly, when she stayed with Jan, went downstairs each morning to collect the mail. If there was a letter from Dolf, she woke Jan; if there wasn't, she let her sleep on. Jan read the letters aloud, leaving out the private bits and the bits which might worry Pauly. On 23 October she had to leave nearly everything out. âThere is a chance that I might be sent overseas,' Dolf had written.
âPlease don't even
mention
the overseas idea to me at present,' she wrote back. âI am not strong enough to stand it.' Her thoughts were âgoing round and round like chipmunks in a cage' â and the only way to regain any peace of mind, she realized, was to countermand the cancellation of the second half of the autumn lecture tour. At Jan's request, Clark Getts had arranged for her to be in Los Angeles over Thanksgiving, after giving four lectures in Illinois, two in Texas, two in Oklahoma, two in Washington state, and three in northern California. âDarling, I am on my way to you,' she wrote on 7 November, âtravelling in a slow and rather cold train through an illimitable waste of snowy prairie. I am sitting with a nice Pittsburgh housewife who is on her way to Seattle to see her husband (an Army doctor) for a little while before he goes overseas. She has 3 small children at home & can't therefore do war-work to take her mind off things. She is obviously miserable. Just one more of the millions of torn-apart and disembowelledâ¦'
In her engagement book, the inch-deep space for Thanksgiving Day has a diagonal mark across the top left-hand corner: her secret sign. The Clark Getts Details of Engagement say: âWe presume you have your own plans for accommodation in Los Angeles.' She and Dolf stayed at the Biltmore, for three nights. By 2 December she was lecturing at Houston, Texas, and she would not be able to see Dolf again until his furlough, which could be months away.
Her lectures, she felt, could do with rejuvenating. She needed new material, first-hand, up-to-date information about wartime civilian life in Britain. She made an application for a two-way passage. Surely she would have priority, with the excuse of âcollecting material for British publicity in the US.' She dared to dream about it: and, having started to dream, she let herself go. She would see Jamie again, and small fields, and beloved London! Homesickness overwhelmed her, and she was now as set on returning to Britain as she had been on leaving four years before.
But her plan was constantly foiled. Later in December, a fibroid was found in her womb (âapparently innocent,' she wrote to Tony's sister Ysenda, âbut obstructive, so that I am absolutely crippled with pains for the four or five days when I have the curse, and have to stay in bed with my knees doubled up, feeling as though I'm giving birth to twins'). Then the British Information Service told her there was a long list of essential people trying to get to Britain, and she would have to wait some months. âI expected to have left by now,' she wrote to Dolf on 2 March 1944, âbut it seems it may be another couple of weeks at least. I feel discouraged and on edge.' She could not get to sleep without a sleeping-pill or a drink. â
DON'T
call me “a brave girl”, sweetheart. I am not brave, & you know it. My only strength is that I do not fear death any more â only injury, and sea-sickness, and lecture audiences, and going home to a Heimat which will be stranger than any strange land.'
Then news came from England that Jamie, having injured his leg on a training exercise, was in an Army hospital with haemorrhoids. And she still had no definite date for leaving. âYou can imagine my present state of mind,' she wrote to Dolf on 20 March. âThe suspense of this journey business is awful. In addition, everything else has been going wrong at once â financial worries about income tax, Getts chivvying me about lectures, and, underlying everything, my ever-present sadness at being separated from you with oh! so little hope of seeing you again till God knows when ⦠I saw two letters from Tony in the mailbox yesterday at long last â but when I looked at them I saw that one was 7 months old, from Italy, & the other (a postcard) 5 months old from the German transit camp. Oh dear, it's so hard to keep in touch with people when the news one gets is so stale. The postcard sounded very depressed (for him).'
In the course of the Allied liberation of Italy, some prisoners-of-war had been released to make their own hazardous way to the Allied lines. But Tony had been among the less fortunate ones who were sent on in closed cattle trucks to Germany, by way of transit camps in Central Europe. âYou may imagine my disappointment at finding myself here,' he had written to Jamie from Stalag VIIA in southern Germany on 8 October 1943. His postcard could not say more.
By 16 April 1944, Jan's journey to England was definitely off. âNothing can make the Home Office give any guarantee of my being able to get back here again,' she wrote to Dolf, âespecially with things being about to pop (invasion etc.) & I simply cannot risk getting myself stranded
there
& the children stranded here ⦠I feel desperately disappointed on Jamie's behalf. For myself, I feel ghastlily disappointed at not seeing him. I feel like a snapped string, and I have now
no
focal point to look forward to.'
I have forgotten even the smell of happiness â
As one who has been many months at sea
Forgets the scent of grass on summer evenings.
I remember only that it was sweet, and lifted the heart.
One of these days, perhaps, there will be landfall,
And I shall smell it again, and my heart be lifted.
But for now there is nothing except the bitter salt,
Day after day after day.
While she was working on this poem, called âAt Sea', in the black fortnight after the final cancellation of her plans to return to England, Dolf sent her one in German he had just written, about being in a strange sun-land where there was no rain, and
no sweet smell of grass
in the evening. It was another of their poetic coincidences. âOh, darling,' Jan wrote back, âI try so hard to orientate myself away from the life which you have been the centre of for so long: I think I am making headway â and then suddenly a poem of yours strikes me right to the heart and makes me realise how absolutely “one river” we are.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
A period of âSchneeschmeltzen' â the thawing of Jan's iced-up spirit â followed in April, with the help of Dr Pardee, a neurologist with whom she sat for many hours, talking things out. He told her she was going through a kind of battle fatigue as a result of trying to deal with insoluble problems until her brain was exhausted and congested. He could not solve the problems, but he at least clarified what was happening, and this shaft of light tipped Jan in the other direction, from depression to a new kind of high â elation spiced with dottiness. She dashed off poems every day â âA poem a day keeps the doctor away':
I'll never see, where'er I roam,
A tree as lovely as a pome.
A tree is just a thing that growed â
But only man can make an ode.
She and Dolf were frank, in their letters, about their ârandiness'. âWhen I'm in camp I don't miss sex so much,' Dolf wrote, âbut as soon as I get out and especially after catching up on my sleep, it bothers me â not enough, though, to get into the gutter. What I really miss is
LOVE
â the whole thing, the physical and mental.' Jan was having calcium injections and had discovered that they âreduced local desire in other parts of the body'. âThis is a major discovery,' she wrote to Dolf, âthough rather comic in a way. I never knew about it before, because it is so many years since I have been sex-starved (awful word).'
They were both aware of the possibility of the other âgetting involved with' somebody else. âAre you?' Dolf wrote. âNo, sweetheart, I am
NOT
,' Jan replied. âTemptations are many & strong because I'm meeting so many fascinating people â but (a) I'm too physically tired to be very randy very often & (b) I love you too much. This is not a promise â we
neither
of us made a promise â but only a statement of fact.'
Dolf had every reason to fret: Jan was meeting lots of attractive, eminent men, the very fact of her affair with him proved her capable of infidelity, and she did have crushes. âDon't worry, I haven't the least letch on Morris Ernst [President Roosevelt's personal representative on missions to England],' she wrote to Dolf. âI had for about 2 days, but got over it when I'd lunched with him for the 3rd time & seen his handwriting in a notebook.' (Amateur graphology was one of the dozens of subjects which fascinated her.) She was great friends with the singer Paul Robeson, crush material even though he was married (and it was Janet, not Jan, on whom Paul Robeson turned his seductive charms). Dolf hardly met any women from one year's end to the next, but Jan still felt jealous. She used the expression âa blonde' to describe the kind of woman Dolf might be tempted go to bed with: someone of great superficial physical attraction, but not much brain. It was a cunningly derogatory term, designed to make Dolf feel ashamed if he did succumb to such a person's charms. It became one of their private comic words; but underneath the comedy there was genuine fear on Jan's part. When she saw âa blonde' in her imagination, it was always somebody
young,
with bouncy hair and a bronzed West Coast complexion. Dolf was thirty, she was forty-three. Her own hair was becoming silver-flecked, and she occasionally caught sight of a double chin in a right-angled mirror. (She had recently sent Dolf a funny photograph of herself looking donnish and double-chinned in a mortarboard while being awarded an honorary degree by the University of Pennsylvania.) It was a sign of the shifting balance of power in their relationship that she felt the more insecure.
She telephoned Dolf one morning and he was short with her. He didn't say, âIs that you, darling?' but âIs that New York?' Feeling sick with foreboding, she wrote to him.
The possibilities, as near as I can figure them out, are these:
1Â Â You were desperately sleepy and early-morning-new-born-kittenish, and couldn't rouse yourself to talk much.
OR
2Â Â You were feeling really sick, either in the stomach or in the head.
OR
3Â Â You were feeling depressed about the boringness and smallness of your job, and longing to get overseas or at any rate into something more interesting.
OR
4Â Â You weren't alone, and therefore couldn't speak freely. This again splits up into various possibilities, viz: