Of Human Bondage-W Somerset Maugham
****/***** Novel
Of Human Bondage
W Somerset Maugham
I first read Of Human Bondage about twenty-two years back. I was then
in my late twenties, studying for MD in Pune. I bought it from a pavement on MG
road. The vendor who must have known of its popularity would not sell it to me
for less than fifty bucks, an amount not modest then, for a second-hand
paperback, a 1983 reprint of a 1975 edition in PAN books. I had discovered
Maugham around that time and had fallen head over heels for his books. I am yet
to recover from that infatuation. Later I learnt that most book lovers had read
him in adolescence and thus I came by him late in life, about a decade late.
Perhaps that is why I was so impressed by his fiction. I was at a stage of life
when old relations are continuously re-examined in light of new evolving bonds.
I could relate intimately with the psychological turmoil that devastated
Maugham’s characters in his vast oeuvre of fiction, all narrated in his
masterfully aloof, non-judgmental style. Over the next couple of years, I read
almost all his fiction and non-fiction works, barring his plays. I read Of
Human Bondage again about a decade back and until my memory is swayed by
the lure of nostalgia, I still found it ravishing. I read it for the third time
now. I have read many more books in last decade than I had read in the
preceding two. On this occasion I read it with a calm heart and a little more
discerning eye.
Of Human Bondage was published more than a century back, in 1915.
Maugham was then at the peak of his popularity as a playwright which matched
that of George Bernard Shaw. He has written in his somewhat sketchy autobiographical
writings that the fame and money that attended his successful career as a
playwright did not afford him complete peace of mind. His past life constantly
gnawed in a nook of his heart. He took a couple of year’s sabbatical from
theater and set upon this work. Book did not achieve instant success. Although
in later years it acquired great fame and apart from his short stories, this is
one book by which Maugham is remembered by most readers today. But it succeeded
in exorcising the demons of past life that had tormented Maugham till then.
Fact and fiction are inextricably mixed in Maugham’s works, according
to his own admission. But Of Human Bondage is by far the most
autobiographical of his fiction, more than his autobiographical non-fiction books
Summing Up and A Writer’s Notebook. When asked by a critic ‘why
did he write one book that was full of candour and human warmth’ his reply was ‘because
I’ve only lived one life. It took me thirty years of living to possess the
material for that one book.’ The intimacy with which author relates the
emotions and their effects on the protagonist of the book, Philip Carey sets it
apart from Maugham’s later fiction. In later years Maugham cultivated and
successfully acquired the image of a keenly observant author who watches the
drama of human life as it is being moulded by the passion of its lead actors
and relates these dispassionately. Author is not experiencing these affects
first hand and consequently he can adopt a distant manner.
Of Human Bondage narrates the growth of Philip Carey from his
childhood till he is moving on to fourth decade of his life. It does not merely
relate the events as they occur in his life but deals with the effects of these
happenings and the way they influence his personality, development of his
beliefs and his understanding of himself and the world he inhabits. Philip is
orphaned while still a boy of seven and responsibility of his care falls on his
elderly uncle and aunt. His uncle is the grasping, self-seeking, vain, vicar of
Blackstable. His wife, though well-meaning towards the loveless boy, has never
had a child of her own and now in her dotage does not know how to deal with an
introverted child who is extremely shy in revealing his feelings to anyone.
Philip suffers from club foot and this disability has marred his growth as a
person. He is constantly mocked by his colleagues and teachers. Invocation of
his disability is the ultimate slander that is hurled at him in any argument or
a fight. In an attempt to counter the cruelties of his companions Philip finds
pleasure in self-pity and withdraws deeper in the dark recesses of his mind
with each innuendo. Maugham himself suffered from a disabling stammer all his
life that made him shy of conversation in public. He believed that but for this
affliction he may have been a different person. This enforced isolation from
the masses might have sharpened his skills of observing people’s behaviour and
the way they reacted to different situations, an invaluable instrument in the
armamentarium of an author of fiction. Maugham portrays Philip’s lonely
childhood, his cruel victimization for a disability which is not of his making
with a genuine sensitivity and poignancy that can come only from personal
experience of similar vicissitudes. Considerable length of the novel- Maugham’s
biggest book- deals with Philip’s childhood at the vicarage of Blackstable, his
schooling at King’s school at Tercanbury, his infatuation with one of his
classmates, a friendship that begets him more misery than joy in the end.
Philip is not satisfied with the formal education being imparted in schools and
seeks freedom of spirit. He decides to forego university education and to his
Uncle’s much chagrin who exercises a tight and capricious control over the
minor legacy left to Philip by his parents, he goes to Heidelberg and then to
Paris in search of knowledge that will reveal to him his true self and the
nature of the world that surrounds him. He gradually forsakes his religious
beliefs and evolves an agnostic creed to guide him in his daily chores. But
nothing prepares him for the tempestuous life that awaits him.
He ultimately joins a Medical college in London for the sake of
learning a profession to earn his living. In a bar in London he develops an
obsessive craving for a slatternly waitress Mildred, anaemic and sickly in
disposition, slovenly in habits and dull of wit. Philips masochistic relation
with Mildred is the mainstay of the book. With ingenious skill Maugham
describes how Philip gets entangled in the web of self-destructive emotions, in
spite being aware deep in his heart that he hates Mildred all the while. Philip
is released from the tyranny of his oppressive infatuation for Mildred when he
befriends the lively and jovial Altheny, a working-class man. Altheny and his
large family welcome Philip to their home with unassuming warmth and Philip
decides to marry Altheny’s daughter Sally.
In the course of a fairly long narration of about six hundred pages,
Maugham has created some very fascinating characters in the book: the
conceited, self-absorbed, egoist vicar of Blackstable; his prim, shrivelled-up,
cadaverous wife, her hair done perpetually in the fashion of yesteryears,
longing for Philip’s affection; Philip’s companion at Heidelberg , the effete
Hayward, living off the wealth of his rich relatives, a self-styled
intellectual & aesthete who had failed in every worldly pursuit because
these were beneath the contemplation of his pure, supreme intellect; the
quarrelsome, abrasive Fanny Price, Philip’s co-student of art in Paris who
strangely falls in love with him, who has the most sincere passion for painting
but no talent; Poet Cronshaw, who never wrote anything of worth, lived in
abject penury in Paris, drank day and night, held court amidst young art
students regaling them with his wit and died of cirrhosis in Philip’s London
flat, realising in the end his worthlessness and the shallowness of his life;
and many more such splendid personalities.
Maugham has invented many memorable characters in his vast writings.
Personalities that are unimaginably nuanced, people who exhibit an astonishing
contrast in their behaviour and thought process, characters that excite our
admiration, opprobrium, affection and hatred almost simultaneously, persons with
a bizarre kink in their mind that compels them to perceive the world in a
singularly eccentric manner. But barring a few most of these marvellous
characters are men. Women in Maugham’s fiction seem like props that just
provide scaffolding for the multifarious growth of its male character. Thus,
women in his books are monochromatic lacking in subtle nuances of personality,
either too kind towards all humanity or just plain vile. I find Of Human
Bondage also exemplifies this. Mildred is hare-brained, rapacious and of
easy virtue. Sally is simple minded, of composed disposition and capable of
accepting and giving unalloyed love.
When I first came across Maugham, I was most fascinated by his plain
story-telling, his unadorned prose that is beguilingly simple and breath-taking
in its lucidity. There are a few cumbersome passages in the book when Maugham
has succumbed to the temptation of garnishing his considerably long novel with
ornate prose. But this in not his forte. These passages stand apart like
eyesore. But these unsavoury digressions are minuscule in this six-hundred-page
saga.
Title of the book is taken from Spinoza’s Ethics, where a
chapter on the role of emotions in influencing human life is titled Of Human
Bondage or The Powers of Affects. Book is truly the story of Philip’s
enslavement by his emotions and his struggle to break free of these shackles.
It is one of the most powerful books that I have read. I enjoyed it immensely
on each occasion that I read it. A foreknowledge of Maugham’s life added vastly
to my pleasure as I read it this time.
Feb 2017
Sir my only question is what it takes to have a 5 🌟.
ReplyDeleteI shouldn't be saying anything Maugham though,i dont want to commit blasphemy here(chuckles)
Oh! It's all very, very subjective. No objectivity. Matter of heart more than brain. I dare say e others will have widely different rating.
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