Monday 21 June 2021

An Episode of Sparrows By Rumer Godden (1955) #20 Books of Summer

 An Episode of Sparrows is another perceptive and sensitive novel by Rumer Godden. Godden’s writing is spare and unsentimental with a gritty realism, but also much beauty.

In the preface to this book she wrote:

'Finally the time came when I had to tell myself miserably, “You have squandered, muddled, and wasted everything, everything from opportunity to money. Wasted.”

There I was wrong. After the war years of hard work, poverty, and loneliness in Kashmir I needed that space of gaiety, companionship, even luxury, and I have come to believe that nothing is ever wasted; out of mistakes, or through mistakes, something quite worthwhile can come, in my case the seed of another novel.’

Living in the busy whirl of post-war London in a tiny little jewel of a house, she spent as much time as she could in the nearby park where she got to know the antics of the ‘London sparrows’- children from the poorer streets nearby. She picked her way through the bombed-out sections of London where weedy flowers pushed their way up through broken masonry and blossomed in the rubble.

Godden wrote that all her stories have themes underlying them, not actually stated, but there all the same. An Episode of Sparrows grew out of her stay in London but it wasn't until ten years later, in 1955, when she started to write it.

There are multiple characters in this story but the central figure, Lovejoy Mason, is a girl of about 11 years of age whose life held little love and no joy.

Lovejoy’s mother worked on the stage and had casually left her with Mrs Crombie and her husband, Vincent, a superb chef wasting away in an impoverished part of town with virtually no clientele, while she went off all over the place for work. From time to time the neglectful mother would return to her daughter who was devoted to her. Then there came a time when she didn’t come at all.

‘Mrs Crombie was kind, Vincent was very kind, but for Mrs Crombie there was really only Vincent and for Vincent there was only the restaurant. Lovejoy was a little extra tacked on.

She had never heard of a vortex but she knew there was a big hole, a pit, into which a child could be swept down, a darkness that sucked her down so that she ceased to be Lovejoy, or anyone at all, and was a speck in thousands of socks, ‘Millions,’ said Lovejoy, and then there was something called ‘no-one.’

The story revolves around a secret garden. Lovejoy who, with the help of some other London sparrows, steals some good soil from the rich neighbourhood gardens to start their own. Godden’s clever use of shifting perspectives brings in all the other supporting characters and gives us insight into their motivations, reactions and thoughts. 

Olivia and Angela are two unmarried sisters who live in the more prosperous area near Lovejoy. Olivia, the eldest, is dominated by her beautiful, high energy and opinionated younger sister. When Olivia finds a small footprint in the garden bed that points to the soil thieves, she says nothing and her heart is stirred to find out more about the Sparrows.

“It was not the absence of a man that Olivia regretted so much, though she could have wished that both she and Angela had married…that blank in her life was not the worst, but I wish children were not so unknown to me…Olivia divined something in children, not in her nieces and nephews…who were precocious and spoilt, but in the children who were let alone, real children…they seemed to her truer than grown-ups, unalloyed; watching them, she knew they were vital; if you were with them you would be alive, thought Olivia.”

As Lovejoy planted her garden in the bombed ruins of a churchyard, her soul grew along with her seedlings…

‘At night now, when she went to bed, she did not lie awake feeling the emptiness; she thought about the garden, the seeds, their promised colours. She had never before thought of colours…except in clothes, thought Lovejoy; now she saw colours everywhere, the strong yellow of daffodils…the deep colours of anemones; she was learning all their names; she saw how white flowers shone and showed their shape against the London drab and grey. She was filled with her own business. She had never had her own business before; directly after breakfast, on her way to school, she went to the garden and was thinking about it all day long.’

She spent most of her time waiting…for her mother to wake up in the mornings; waiting for her while she tried on clothes or went shopping; waiting outside pubs.

‘Why did people take it for granted that children had all that time to waste? I want to garden, not wait, she thought rebelliously.’

Rumer Godden’s writing is similar in some aspects to Elizabeth Goudge’s. They both were both masters of characterisation and understood human conflict. Godden’s style is terse, Goudge tends to be rambling and more philosophically inclined but both were adept at thematic undertones. I think Rumer Godden had a greater insight into children - The Greengage Summer is another example of her way of seeing from a child’s perspective.

Although both of the books just mentioned are focused on children, there are some themes that make them more suited to older readers. Greengage has some obvious mature content, An Episode of Sparrows only has one aspect that would make me hesitate to give it to a younger person - Lovejoy’s mother would entertain her male friends in her room while her daughter sat forlornly on the steps outside. It was a passing observation so it would probably go over a child’s head. However, I’d hold off until about age 14 because there is an underlying richness that may not be appreciated or understood by a younger child. From an adult point of view it is a story that has staying power and lingers in your mind and heart afterwards.

Both authors have been unjustly neglected but Elizabeth Goudge has made a comeback in more recent years and from what I’ve read this has been largely initiated by book bloggers. (Yay!) Rumer Godden’s works need a similar revival.

Biography | Rumer Godden



14 comments:

mudpuddle said...

wonderful post. i looked up Ms. G on Gutenberg and she wasn't there, so i guess i'll see if Abebooks has a copy of this... it really sounds like a thoughtful novel. i'm reading a collection of H.G. Wells short stories. one is about a secret door in a hidden lane that transforms a life: sort of has similarities to this book: resonances, maybe...

mudpuddle said...

they had a copy for $3.89 so i ordered it: tx for the recommendation!

Brona said...

I read Greengage Summer a few years ago with such delight, that I acquired a few more of her books...still waiting to be read, of course! I've been thinking about hosting a reading week (maybe in Dec for her bday) to help me to read them!?

Carol said...

Hi Mudpuddle, the HG Wells sounds interesting. I hope you enjoy the book. I'm always a little nervous when someone buys a book after I give it a glowing review just in case it doesn't have the same effect it had on me!

Carol said...

Brona, that would be great! If I get a copy of another one of her books I'd join in if December doesn't get to full of other things. I think I'd like to read Black Narcissus next?? I haven't found any of her books 2nd hand yet.

Brona said...

Excellent!
I’ve got a friend making a badge as I type. Will hopefully post something in the next week 😍

Laura Jeanne said...

Thank you for the review, Carol. It sounds like a lovely story. I see the same paperback you have is inexpensive on Amazon. I might have to give it a try. I love Elizabeth Goudge and I'm pleased to learn there is another author whose books have a similar feel.

gretchenjoanna said...

This is one I haven't read yet, though it is on my shelf. You've made me want to get to it sooner rather than later <3

Carol said...

You’re welcome, Laura Jeanne. In This House of Brede is a lovely book by Godden that I’d recommend as well. She sort of had two different lives. One in India where she was deserted by her husband and later in England where she remarried and became a Catholic and from what I understand, I think her books reflect many of her experiences.
I hope you enjoy An Episode of Sparrows!

Carol said...

Hi Gretchen, I’d love to have a look at your bookshelves. You always have interesting books on the sidebar of your blog.

Carol said...

You’re on the ball there, Brona!

Rajani Rehana said...

Please read my post

Carol said...

Thank you, Rajani. I visited your blog & commented.:)

Amy of Hearth Ridge Farm said...

You bumped this up on my TBR by your lovely review, Carol. Thank you!