“It was an uncertain Spring.” (Virginia Woolf, The Years)

This is my final post for the brilliant1937 Club, which has been running all week and hosted by Kaggsy at Kaggsy’s Bookish Ramblings and Simon at Stuck in a Book. In the end I did stick to my planned reads for the week:

Apparently Leonard Woolf thought The Years the poorest of Virginia’s novels, but it was also far and away her best-selling work. So I was intrigued to know how I’d find it…

The titular years of this novel are 1880;1891;1907;1908;1910; 1911;1913;1914;1917;1918; and the Present Day. And so Woolf covers the end of the Victorian era to World War I and beyond, through the lens of the middle-class Pargiter family. Except for 1880, she portrays one day in their lives, some with significant events, others very ordinary.

In 1880, Rose Pargiter, mother to young adults Eleanor, Morris and Edward, teenagers Milly and Delia, and pre-teens Martin and Rose, is in bed in their London townhouse, dying from a long illness. Woolf captures the conflicted feelings and strain for the family around this time, particularly for Delia:

“She longed for her to die. There she was – soft, decayed but everlasting, lying in the cleft of the pillows, an obstacle, a prevention, an impediment to all life. She tried to whip up some feeling of affection, of pity. For instance, that summer, she told herself, at Sidmouth, when she called me up the garden steps…But the scene melted as she tried to look at it.”

Over in Oxford where Edward is studying, their cousin Kitty is trying to find a role for herself and struggling against the constraints of late Victorian womanhood:

“”When I was your age,” Miss Craddock continued, remembering her rôle as teacher, “I would have given my eyes to have the opportunities you have, to meet the people you meet; to know the people you know.”

“Old Chuffy?” said Kitty, remembering Miss Craddock’s profound admiration for that light of learning.

“You irreverent girl!” Miss Craddock expostulated. “The greatest historian of his age!”

“Well, he doesn’t talk history to me,” said Kitty, remembering the damp feel of a heavy hand on her knee.”

Each time Woolf jumps forward, she trusts the reader to keep up and doesn’t get bogged down by lots of explanation or exposition. We are given a snapshot the characters, whoever she is focussed on, and we fill in the gaps to a greater or lesser extent.

There are phrases and echoes across the different sections, tying them all together and giving a coherence to what could have been a more fragmentary, less satisfying novel. I also liked the repeated motif of starting each section with a birds-eye view of the time of year. I was particularly fond of this opening to 1908:

“It was March and the wind was blowing. But it was not “blowing.” It was scraping, scourging. It was so cruel. So unbecoming. Not merely did it bleach faces and raise red spots on noses; it tweaked up skirts; showed stout legs; made trousers reveal skeleton shins. There was no roundness, no fruit in it. Rather it was like the curve of a scythe which cuts, not corn, usefully; but destroys, revelling in sheer sterility. With one blast it blew out colour – even a Rembrandt in the National Gallery, even a solid ruby in a Bond Street window: one blast and they were gone. Had it any breeding place it was in the Isle of Dogs among tin cans lying beside a workhouse drab on the banks of a polluted city.”

As the above shows, Woolf grounds her tale in a recognisable topography and as always I found her descriptions of London detailed and realistic, and of Oxford too, even all these years later.

Alongside these recognisable realities, there was also plenty to enjoy regarding Woolf’s unique and arresting descriptive powers. I’m a big fan of Woolf and I just love her way of capturing inner moments, especially unreal, discombobulating moments, such as Eleanor at a dinner party during an air raid:

A little blur had come round the edges of things. It was the wine; it was the war. Things seemed to have lost their skins; to be freed from some surface hardness; even the chair with gilt claws, at which she was looking, seemed porous; it seemed to radiate out some warmth, some glamour, as she looked at it.”

Woolf brings all the characters together in the final section for a party given by Delia. She emphasises the fallacy of a reunion by highlighting the aloneness felt by many of the family. North, son of Morris, is back after many years abroad and feels detached from everything. His sister Peggy is somewhat bitter and frustrated. She tries to get Eleanor to talk about the Pargiters childhood, but Eleanor is much more interested in life now.

“That was odd, it was the second time that evening that somebody had talked about her life. And I haven’t got one, she thought. Oughtn’t a life to be something you could handle and produce? – a life of seventy odd years. But I’ve only the present moment, she thought. Here she was alive, now, listening to the fox-trot. […] Yes, things came back to her. A long strip of life lay behind her. Edward crying, Mrs. Levy talking; snow falling; a sunflower with a crack in it; the yellow omnibus trotting along the Bayswater Road. And I thought to myself, I’m the youngest person in this omnibus; now I’m the oldest…Millions of things came back to her. Atoms danced apart and massed themselves. But how did they compose what people called a life?”

There isn’t a plot so much in The Years, only as much as there are plots to any life. Woolf captures times and places for a particular family without trying to drive the novel unrealistically. Yet The Years is still a pacy read, the driving forces being the times that are lived through and the human will to carry on.  

To end, some footage of 1930s London, although I doubt Virginia ever got herself caught up with rush hour workers:

15 thoughts on ““It was an uncertain Spring.” (Virginia Woolf, The Years)

  1. I’ve not had much luck with Woolf, but now I’m realising g this is probably a comparative read that could be read alongside Annie Ernaux’s work of the same name. Not that I need to be adding more to my reading list, but you do make this appear as one I might like.

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  2. The combination of horses and engines is great isn’t it?! I found The Years a really satisfying read when I read it a couple of years ago and I’m tempted to go back and have a re read. I love the echoes and phrases (really well put!) that tie together the different sections and characters, I think it’s something that Hilary Mantel did in Wolf Hall as well, which I also loved.

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    • It’s really striking that mix of horse and engine isn’t it? I was telling my nieces last weekend that their grandmother (my mother) remembers the milkman doing his deliveries by horse and they looked at me with so much scepticism and said “And you believed her?!” 😀

      Great to hear you love this novel Jane, I hope you enjoy a re-read. I’m one of the few who couldn’t get on with Wolf Hall at all, but your comparison has made me think I should give it another go…

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  3. Looking at your pile again, I think 1937 has been a stonking good year for you! And great to end on a Woolfian high; I loved reading your review and it’s interesting to see all the different themes and sections there are to enjoy in The Years. In some ways, I’m quite glad to have come to it as an older reader (I read it for the first time last month in preparation for 1937) as I may have not appreciated it when I was younger. On the other hand, if I had, I have missed out on as many opportunities to reread – it is definitely one I hope to come back to sometime.

    What will you read next? This week will be quite a hard act to follow!

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    • It has been a great year! Even the reads I chose which weren’t as strong still had a lot to enjoy.

      I definitely think I appreciate Woolf more as an older reader. But you make a very good point about re-reading! Ultimately I like to think books come to us (or we to them) at the right time…

      I can answer your question because today I’ve read The Dry Heart by Natalia Ginzburg, which I found to be a very affecting novella. But next I really must get back to my Anthony Powell project of a book a month, because I’ve realised there’s only nine days of April left and I’m yet to read the fourth instalment!

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      • Oh, The Dry Heart is certainly compelling and powerful; I read it last year. I was not sure I would cope with it when I read the premise but I love Natalia Ginzburg’s writing style so much that once I started reading the first page I just had to keep going. I’m glad I did.

        I’ll look forward to your next instalment post on the Dance to the Music of Time.

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  4. I read The Years for the 1937 Club as well, but wished that I liked it better than I did, I’m afraid. Perhaps it was just me — I should read some of her earlier novels and then come back to this one.

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    • You’re in good company, with Leonard Woolf not rating it either! I didn’t love it as much as Mrs Dalloway or To the Lighthouse though. I hope you have better luck with her earlier work if you give it a try.

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  5. I read this one just a couple of years ago. I really enjoyed that sense of time passing and the portrait of a family across many years. I hadn’t expected to like it so much as I had previously had the impression it was a weaker novel.

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