IN
Colm Toibin’s BROOKLYN, Eilis makes the sudden decision to leave her mother and
friends in small town provincial Ireland to return to Brooklyn and a future
that is more daring, filled with promise and potential, but infinitely risky. She
does this because she thinks this course is the one that is most likely to
bring her happiness.
In
Alex Miller’s equally beautiful CONDITIONS OF FAITH, Emily Elder makes the
sudden decision to stay in Europe and abandon her French husband and her new
born child. It is a decision that is even more risky and momentous than Eilis’.
When she tells her husband Georges of her decision whilst they are dancing at a
Paris nightclub, he asks her ‘why?’, which is a fair enough question. She tells
him it is because she is not content. His response is ‘Content? For Christ’s
sake, no-one’s content.’
They
are both interesting ideas because they are weighty decisions filled with risk.
Each person knows something is lacking and they know they just need something
more. To say that ‘no one’s content’ seems pretty meaningless to me. These are
the cowards like most of us, me included, who travel on the road already taken,
and are not prepared to risk everything for a life that could be so much
better. Maybe the doors haven’t opened sufficiently. Maybe the mindset will
mean that the doors will never open up, or widely enough. The world is filled
with risktakers like Eilis and Emily, but they pale into significance when
compared with the multitudes of us who settle for what they have.
It
must be about security. It is just too scary to risk giving up all you have
strived for. Joni Mitchell, in her song HEJIRA, sings ‘You know it never has
been easy/ Whether you do or you do not resign/ Whether you travel the breadth
of extremities/ Or stick to some straighter line.’ Mmmm… ‘travelling the
breadth of extremities.’ It sounds easy enough.
Georges
said ‘no-one’s content’, and I wonder how true this is. I read somewhere,
posted on a wall for everyone to see, that you should be careful criticising
someone else because you never know ‘what particular shit they may be going
through.’ In many ways, I would love to be someone like Eilis or Emily. I don’t
mean chucking everything in, after all that’s not what they were doing. They weren’t
suicidal. Emily was wanting to continue her archaeological studies and her
European adventure. Eilis was going back to Brooklyn to meet her husband and
start their American dream. Both wanted more of being foreigners in a foreign
land.
If
there is anything that would make me truly happy, or even ‘content’- Emily’s
word-( I am not even sure how close to ‘happiness’ this is), it would be to go back to being a foreigner
again. Van Morrison on ASTRAL WEEKS says ‘I’m nothin’ but a stranger in this
world…’. Both Katherine Mansfield and Sylvia Plath were strangers in a strange
world. Both refused to go back to a potentially easier life with family in
their home lands.
Twenty
years ago, almost to the day, I arrived in the UK with my wife and began a European
adventure of my (our) own. I dreamt of the day multitudes of times growing up
where I could have Cornwall, Somerset, Yorkshire, Northumberland, Shropshire,
at my fingertips. And then suddenly I did. I had experiences I will never forget,
including motoring holidays around Italy and France and Switzerland. But was I
content? After just over two years of this I suddenly wanted to ‘come home.’
Coming
home. I will probably take this to my grave as the biggest mistake of my life. I
look at Emily and Eilis with profound respect for the decisions that they made,
how they chose the road not taken. But if we are ever going to live a life
where we ever feel even remotely ‘content’ we have to live with these decisions,
or doing something extraordinarily wild and unpredictable, and ‘travel the
breadth of extremities’ like the trailblazers that have done this before us.
So,
I salute those who are foreigners in foreign lands. I wish I could join you. But
I also know many of you have given up important things and made extreme
sacrifices along the way.
I
come back once again to Nick Cave’s ‘There is a town…’
‘And now I live
In this town
I walk these dark streets
Up and down, up and down
Under a dark sky
And I dream
That one day
I'll go back home’
I have no doubt that
Eilis and Emily thought of home every day. And perhaps Sylvia and Katherine as
well. Were they content? Well, illness and fate always play a part. I like to
think that things worked out well for the fictional Eilis and Emily. For Sylvia
Plath and Katherine Mansfield… the former took her life through gassing herself
at age 30, and the latter died of tuberculosis at just 34. For the rest of us? Well
we live a lot longer- most of us- snug in our protective cocoons, a satisfying,
safe life, or a life devoid of mystery and filled with mediocrity… depending on
your point of view.