The
privilege of petting
Peter Rose
Janet Malcolm
Two
Lives: Gertrude and Alice
MUP, $32.95 hb, 229 pp, 9780522854367
The
subtitle of Janet Malcolms new book (published in Australia
by Melbourne University Press) is Gertrude and Alice. Few
names of literary couples can be so confidently trimmed. Scott
and Zelda, Ted and Sylvia, George and Martha
all those
happy couples. Gertrude and Alice has been used before, as the
main title of Diana Souyhamis joint study (1991), and will
doubtless be used again. Their fame is an achieved and bankable
thing, notwithstanding the fact that Gertrude Stein (18741946)
whose books included Three Lives (1909), The
Making of Americans (1925) and the wonderfully titled A
Long Gay Book (1932) remains perhaps the least read
of the modernists.
Now Janet Malcolm, the celebrated author and New Yorker journalist,
has added to the vast SteinToklas literature. We are never
quite sure why, for she evinces no great liking for either of
her subjects. Two Lives, while highly readable and diverting,
has little of the drama or intrigue of Malcolms The Silent
Woman: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes (1994). The author never
becomes as philosophically engaged as she did in her unlikely
but absorbing book about Sheila McGough, a small-time lawyer who
went to jail because of her legal fundamentalism and literalism
(The Crime of Sheila McGough [1999]).
Malcolm opens with an account of The Alice B. Toklas Cookbook
(1954), the book that made Toklas famous as more than just
the minatory figure often posed a few feet away from Gertrude
Stein. The young Malcolm and her cohort of pretentious young
persons, full of distaste for middlebrow American culture,
seized on the eccentric cookbook, loving its waspishness and hauteur.
This was in the late 1950s, when General Eisenhower (the Great
Golfer, as Gore Vidal dubbed him) was still in the White House,
and when Liz and Eddie were breaking Debbie Reynoldss
heart.
Malcolm read Stein much later, often with difficulty. To the dismay
of the Steinian scholars whom she interviews for Two Lives,
Malcolm prefers the audience (accessible) writing
to the real (experimental) stuff. Although she acknowledges
that the writing possesses a glitter that keeps one reading
long past the time when it is normal to stop reading a text that
makes no sense, illustrating this with the mesmeric An
Acquaintance with Description (Let it be when it is
mine to be sure let it be when it is mine when it is mine let
it be
and so on), Malcolm baulks at the 925-page
The Making of Americans, believed to be a modernist
masterpiece, but
not felt to be a necessary reading experience.
Malcolm finally conquers the book by slicing it up into several
volumes and diligently rereading each sentence, as did John Ashbery,
another recent convert.
Malcolm is not alone in her ambivalence. Even Edmund Wilson, so
important in Steins rehabilitation, wondered in Axels
Castle (1931) if it were possible to read The Making of
Americans in its entirety. Malcolm is funny about Steins
small vocabulary: When she uses a new word it is like the
entrance of a new character. Stein, of course, defended
her method: Using a word I have not been using in writing
is to me very difficult and a peculiar feeling
There are
only a few words and with these mostly always I am writing that
have for me completely entirely existing being
Any reader of Stein is struck by her whimsical guise not
to mention the cascade of present participles. Her non sequiturs
have a weird logic: Apollinaire was very attractive and
very interesting. He had a head like one of the late roman emperors.
He had a brother whom one heard about but never saw. Throughout
Two Lives, Malcolms admiration grows: every
writer who lingers over Steins sentences is apt to feel
a little stab of shame over the heedless predictability of his
own.
Malcolm begins her characteristically short book with a series
of questions. How did the elderly Jewish lesbians (long resident
in Paris) escape the Nazis? Why didnt they return to the
safety of the United States? Why did Alice Toklas (18771967)
never mention her or Steins Jewishness? Although Malcolm
admits that coyness about homosexuality and Jewishness was not
exactly unusual or impolitic in the twentieth century, especially
during World War II, these issues trouble Malcolm. She can barely
tolerate Steins egomania. Yet she acknowledges that of
all writers [Stein] may be the one whose work most cries out for
the assistance of biography in its interpretation.
Two Lives is unlike anything else written about this astonishing
couple. The fabled salon at 27 rue de Fleurus is barely mentioned.
Nor is F. Scott Fitzgerald, a favourite of Alices. Pablo
Picasso Gertrudes soulmate, interlocutor, portraitist,
frequent guest has a minor role, though he was a constant
in her life, the first of the brilliant men whose youth and masculine
vigour aroused Gertrudes mind. Alice once said that if Picasso
and Stein had, as rumoured, been lovers, then incest would have
to be part of the scandal. Interestingly, Ernest Hemingway, another
devotee, on first meeting Stein, wrote: Gertrude Stein and
me are just like brothers. Decades later, Hemingway declared
in a letter: I always wanted to fuck her and she knew it,
a line that betrays, as Malcolm notes, the sort of macho
showing off one expects of him and only half believes.
Clearly, Steins allure for her contemporaries was potent.
So were her expectations, her vainglory. This was the woman who,
when she ghost-wrote The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas
(1933), proclaimed: The three geniuses of whom I wish to
speak are Gertrude Stein, Pablo Picasso and Alfred Whitehead
emphatically in that order. Hurrah for gloire,
Stein said on learning of her belated fame in the United States.
Wars I Have Seen (1945) written during World War
II and perhaps Steins most accessible book begins
with remarkable candour about her childhood in Pennsylvania:
from
the beginning there was no doubt that I was the youngest of
the children and as such I naturally had privileges the privilege
of petting the privilege of being the youngest one. If that
does happen it is not lost all the rest of ones life,
there you are you are privileged, nobody can do anything but
take care of you, that is the way I was and that is the way
I still am, and anyone who is like that necessarily liked it.
I did and do.
Malcolm
writes of lifes evident inability ever to say no to
Gertrude Stein. When her beloved brother Leo went to Harvard,
Gertrude enrolled at Radcliffe. William James considered her the
most brilliant female student he ever had. Later she went to medical
school at Johns Hopkins, intent on a career in psychology. Examinations,
not surprisingly, did not suit this individualist. In 1903 she
followed Leo to Paris and joined him in the rue de Fleurus. Obsessively,
the siblings analysed their friends characters and then
told them what the problem was. Even Alice Toklas, who entered
their circle in 1907, wasnt spared at first. Stein wrote
in a notebook:
She
is low clean through to the bottom crooked, a liar of the most
sordid, unillumined, undramatic unimaginative prostitute type,
coward, ungenerous, conscienceless, mean, vulgarly triumphant
and remorseless, caddish, in short just plain rotten
Toklass
rejoinder, fifty years later, on being shown the notebook, was
very classy: At least she didnt accuse me of disloyalty.
Leo moved out in 1914, five years after Alice had joined the household.
Alice, always alert to rivals (sexual or intellectual), had replaced
Leo as Gertrudes amanuensis and general worshipper. Leo
had begun to criticise Gertrudes writing (he felt she wrote
the way she did because she couldnt write decent English).
The siblings remained hostile until the end. Stein, like most
egotists, eventually quarrelled and broke with nearly all her
close friends.
Toklas was different, literary but unambitious, shy and adoring.
In most of the photographs she is off to one side, strained, often
obscured or averting her gaze. Raised in San Francisco to be a
perfect hostess by a father who gave her the immortal advice,
If you must do something, do it badly, all her life
she remained devoted to Stein and her legend truly the
keeper of the flame. Her psychology, in many ways, is the more
interesting of the two passionate, tremulous, fanatical
whereas Stein emerges as a kind of freak: brilliant, preposterous.
Their sexual life generally resists the prurient because of the
discretion of their age. We know that Alice (middle name, incriminatingly,
Babette) called Gertrude Baby, but she may not have
been the first person to so address her lover. We have Steins
erotic poetry, which speaks of her marriage to Toklas.
It is clear that Stein after her early doubts and case
study was besotted with her bride: Pet
me tenderly and save me from alarm
I love my love and she loves me
She can be responsible
for me and I can see this responsibility. Sadomasochistic
games may have been part of the repertoire. Ernest Hemingway,
in A Moveable Feast (1964), gave us a posthumous insight
into their relationship. As a young visitor to 27 rue de Fleurus,
totally naïve about homosexuality, he once overheard Gertrude
and Alice upstairs:
I
heard someone speaking to Miss Stein as I had never heard one
person speak to another; never, anywhere, never.
Then Miss Steins voice came pleading and begging, saying,
Dont, pussy. Dont, please dont. Ill
do anything pussy, but please dont do it. Please dont.
Please dont, pussy.
Again,
Malcolm notes the common scepticism about Hemingways motives:
the old man of the sea was indignant at Steins subsequent
dismissal of his work (He looks like a modern and he smells
of the museums). But given Toklass ruthlessness towards
her rivals, and given the violence with which Toklas once forced
Stein to excise all references to an earlier lover from her poetry,
Malcolm begins to trust Hemingways account.
The advent of the Nazis was perilous for the two women, and for
their fabulous art collection. They thought of returning to the
United States but opted to stay in their country house in Bilignin.
Another guardian intervened to protect Stein. Bernard Faÿ,
installed by the Vichy régime as head of the Bibliothèque
Nationale, persuaded Marshal Pétain to ensure that the
two Jewesses remained untouched. Stein, a political conservative
(she loathed Roosevelt and admired Franco), was grateful to Faÿ.
After the war, she wrote in his defence, but the collaborator
was still imprisoned. Wars I Have Seen contains no reference
to the Holocaust or to her Jewishness. After the liberation, Stein
told an American journalist that these had been the happiest years
of her life. How many readers of Wars I Have Seen (published
three months after Germanys surrender) would have appreciated
the authors whimsy about the haphazardness of the Germans
destruction of statues in Paris, They certainly are funny
people, the Germans?
Peace for Stein was short-lived. In 1946 she was diagnosed with
cancer. Because of her grave condition, the doctors refused to
operate, but she commanded a young surgeon to proceed: I
order you to operate. I was not meant to suffer. She died
on the operating table.
Toklass widowhood lasted for more than twenty years. She
wrote her books, penned amusing letters and tended Gertrudes
reputation like a grave. Her devotion never wavered, nor her servitude.
If there were still not things to do for Gertrude,
she wrote to Mercedes de Acosta in 1956, there would be
no reason for me to live on. Her circumstances were straitened
because of the curiosities of Steins will (Wills are
uncanny and electric documents, Malcolm writes in a brilliant
passage). The ruthless wife of Steins nephew and heir removed
all the pictures; Toklas returned to the apartment one day to
find their outlines on the walls. Toklas, almost blind, ended
up in a small flat, living in relative poverty. She converted
to Catholicism and looked forward to meeting Stein in Heaven (slightly
tricky, since the unbaptised Stein was locked in limbo).
Some authors we read for the lyricism or the satire or the syntax
or the sex. Janet Malcolms forte has always been her cast-iron
technique, so influential for other writers, Helen Garner included,
who has acknowledged her debt. Malcolms interviews with
the Steinians are often funny and always beautifully observed.
She can be very dry at times. Of an earlier biographer, she writes:
[Elizabeth] Sprigge was a woman of her time [the 1950s],
which may not have been the best time to be a woman. An
impressive holder of a grudge, Malcolm is relentless and deterministic.
She is like Patricia Highsmith, without the pistols.
Usually, there is an aleatory quality to Malcolms projects:
a stray remark or letter or invitation that turns into a three-year
quest. By now we are very familiar with the technique. At some
point, Malcolm will fly to another city or meet someone for coffee
to glean more clues about the mystery at the heart of her book.
It can feel like reading a thriller.
This time the crucial witness is Leon Katz, a mysterious American
scholar who in 1948 discovered Steins intimate notebooks
from 190211, and who went on to engage Toklas in a series
of remarkable interviews about their contents and about the woman
who had broken Steins heart. This is virgin territory for
Steinians. Katz is barely mentioned in James R. Mellows
Charmed Circle: Gertrude Stein and Company (1974) or in
Linda Simonss The Biography of Alice B. Toklas (1977).
But on this occasion, the rendez-vous is aborted: Katz changes
his mind and declines to meet Malcolm. It all feels rather anticlimactic,
and the other Steinians, desperate to get their hands on the material
that Katz has sat on for half a century, are appalled. But Malcolm
is philosophical about Katzs wariness. He still has a magnum
opus to write (though he is leaving it late). She has experienced
narrative theft herself, so [Katzs] fear
of being ripped off was not irrational.
These are perhaps the most interesting pages in the book. Malcolm
has already written about the ruthlessness and inefficacy of biography,
in Reading Chekhov: A Critical Journey (2001). Now she
reflects on the instability of human knowledge: Almost everything
we know we know incompletely at best. And almost nothing we are
told remains the same when retold.
What Alice knew may yet remain unknown, in limbo, flowing
and flown.
Peter
Rose in Editor of ABR.
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