When Beatrice met her, Miles had returned to Australia to live and was an important member of the Sydney literary scene. She had joined the city’s major writers’ groups and, having forgiven George Robertson for turning down My Brilliant Career, she kept a proprietorial eye on Angus and Robertson. She could be sharply critical: A&R, she said, had too many authors and concentrated too much on ‘trash’. She and the forthright feminist writer Jean Devanny were once outraged to see that A&R’s display for Sydney’s Royal Easter Show featured the books of only two novelists: Timms and Idriess.1
In some circles Miles was considered cranky. Journalist and short-story writer Thelma Forshaw, who met her at FAW meetings in the early 1940s, described her as having ‘a long truculent upper lip, scorn for makeup and dress, the earnest dominating voice propounding – such an aggressively unfurnished personality I found forbidding’.2 However, to Dal Stivens she was a sweet lady, shy, gentle and generous. ‘True, she was feminist’ – note the qualification – ‘but she was never a battle-axe.’ The poet Jill Hellyer saw her as a small, gentle person who wore rose-trimmed hats, was kind to her friends and was retiring and unobtrusive.
None of these spinster characters from Central Casting rings quite true. Certainly Miles Franklin, who was small, straight-backed and snub-nosed, who wore neat collars and brooches, long skirts with polished shoes, and whose twinkling brown eyes were hidden by round glasses, looked like a sweet little old lady. But sweet, retiring spinsters are not generally noted for their robust wit or their idiosyncratic way of looking at the world, as Miles Franklin was. Her voice was slightly deeper than average and she knew how to use it for dramatic effect. She spoke as she wrote, using vivid and pungent imagery from her rural background: to Miles a dishevelled person looked as if he had just burst through a paling fence; Xavier Herbert, struggling over a book for many years, was ‘egg-bound’. Her best work is probably the hundreds of letters she wrote to the friends she called her ‘congenials’, displaying the acuity, tartness and vitality that were so much part of her personality.
Miles was usually one of the moving spirits at literary meetings, but Beatrice quickly discovered that the assertive opinions which could make Miles appear so formidable were only part of her. ‘It was when we were alone, her mask of aggression put aside,’ wrote Beatrice in Overland magazine years later, ‘that I came to know and love her.’3
Their relationship became more comfortable, perhaps more equitable, when they met at A&R as author and editor. Though Miles had a joking, sparring friendship with her near contemporary Walter Cousins, it was Beatrice, young enough to be Miles’s daughter, who did the literary spadework on her books. The first Franklin book Beatrice worked on was Pioneers on Parade (1939), a novel that Miles co-wrote with Dymphna Cusack lampooning Sydney’s sesquicentennial celebrations; Beatrice did very little to their manuscript.
She was more directly involved with Miles’s next book, a biography of Joseph Furphy, author of Such is Life. A collaboration with Kate Baker, a former teacher who had encouraged and helped Furphy during the writing of his novel and who devoted herself to promoting his work after his death, Joseph Furphy: The Legend of a Man and His Book was plagued with problems, not the least being the personality clash of its authors. A&R had planned to publish in 1943, to coincide with the centenary of Furphy’s birth and the fortieth anniversary of his novel’s first publication, but wartime lack of paper and staff held it up for another year. By the end of 1943 Beatrice had not finished editing the manuscript and the two authors were squabbling about whose name should go first on the title page. Beatrice pushed ahead and Miles thanked her: ‘I so much appreciate your toe tracks on the sands of my saga,’ she wrote to Beatrice in December 1943.4 (Since she called the book ‘my saga’, it’s easy to see why she and Baker did not get on.) The book appeared midway through 1944 and, with a reissue of Such is Life, set off a revival of interest in Furphy’s work.
As well as being literary colleagues, Miles and Beatrice were gradually becoming friends. Miles treated Beatrice like a favourite niece or daughter, scolding her for working too hard. ‘Attacking the weeds, running a beautiful house … the weight of a great institution on your rare and special gift and all the lame ducks and other calls and connections of life. Where is your love time, your play time, your special outlet music time?’ she asked.5 She also lectured Beatrice about employing her gifts for the betterment of Australian literature, writing, perhaps wistfully, that the younger woman was prettier, better educated and had had greater opportunities than she herself had been offered. Like most people who had anything to do with Angus and Robertson, Miles was shrewdly aware that Beatrice was probably the brightest person in the company, writing to Dymphna Cusack that A&R’s general editor was ‘the one spark of leaven in directors of sheer stodge’, and she noted how writers courted Beatrice.6
Miles’s friendship was important to Beatrice, who, inclined to be overconscientious, appreciated Miles’s bracing approach to life, once telling her that ‘I always feel a bit dull compared with you’.7 (Beatrice’s letters could be too eager, even gushy.) And when she travelled overseas for the first time in mid-1952 it was Miles to whom she confided her impressions of London:
Everything in London was exactly as I had expected it to be, from the smell and the feel of it to the policemen and the lions in Trafalgar Square. I had to force myself to go sightseeing, and settled into a nice little rut in my attic in Bloomsbury Street, going to theatres, wandering around on buses, and meeting lots of people, and being roused from my lethargy only when somebody had the impertinence to congratulate me on not seeming like an Australian. There’s something about the condescension of that remark that always makes me mad with rage. It’s difficult to define the difference I feel between the English and us – we are the same people, yet – the class distinctions perhaps strike you most, and the badly fed, runtish look of so many of the lower orders, but you can’t generalize. I have still really to talk to English people who have ideas and say what they think, instead of taking refuge in that aloof poise that is sometimes the essence of all rudeness … Travelling doesn’t make me feel very intelligent, only rather dazed and blotting-paperish. Perhaps I’ll feel later on that I’ve profited from it.8
From the late 1940s Beatrice occasionally stayed overnight with Miles at ‘Wambrook’, Miles’s small turn-of-the-century brick cottage about ten minutes’ walk from Carlton station on Sydney’s southern train line. For Beatrice, who lived on the north side of the harbour and worked in the city, the working-class suburb of Carlton was foreign territory indeed. The house, which had belonged to Miles’s mother, had what Vance Palmer called a ‘hearty rural atmosphere’. One felt, he said, that there might be a horse hitched to the fence in front and an army of fowls in the backyard.9 Photographs show a small suburban cottage rather too hemmed-in for a country look, though Miles did keep a few bantams in the backyard, one of which laid her eggs in an ancient felt hat on top of the copper in the outside laundry.
Beatrice was well aware that a visit to ‘Wambrook’ involved a certain amount of ceremony and preparation: like many older people who spend a lot of time alone, Miles took visitors very seriously. She always gave Beatrice careful and strict instructions about using the outside lavatory, and told her to bring nothing but a comb and tooth-brush. ‘I have a clean washed hair brush and a tin of salmon,’ she told Beatrice. ‘If you can eat a salmon mayonnaise, that’s one dish without trouble.’10
‘Wambrook’ was very small, though not necessarily cosy. The main room was the parlour, with a mantelpiece on which stood jars of variously coloured earth from different parts of Australia, some collected by Miles, others given her by friends. In the centre, in pride of place, was Miles’s Waratah Cup, a Royal Doulton cup and saucer decorated with waratahs. It was a mark of high approval to be invited to take tea from this, and the privileged visitor was also asked to sign and write a note in the visitors’ book, known as the Waratah Book, which featured the signatures of Austral
ia’s foremost writers. In the parlour, too, was a piano, which Miles often insisted Beatrice play, though she apologised for its poor quality. The rest of the house – two bedrooms, tiny dining room and kitchen – held the solid family furniture that Miles’s mother had brought from the country. The house was always tidy, if a little musty.
Though Miles spent very little money, living on the rent from a couple of local shops inherited from her mother as well as her meagre royalties, she was a great stickler for appearances. Beatrice was never a big eater and she must have been dismayed to see fruit, chocolates and cake spread before her while Miles, urging her to eat up, put on a starched white apron and grilled chops and cooked vegetables at the small gas stove. Dinner, in the dining room at the back of the house, was served on a white linen tablecloth with heavy family glassware, crockery and cutlery.
Sitting at the kitchen table, sipping a dry sherry from a specially bought bottle, Beatrice would chat to her hostess. They talked of mutual friends and acquaintances: Dymphna Cusack and Henrietta Drake-Brockman, Douglas Stewart (grudgingly approved of by Miles even though he was a New Zealander), younger writers such as Margaret Trist and Nancy Keesing. They discussed literary politics, particularly the fortunes of the Fellowship of Australian Writers. Miles insisted that the society was going to the dogs, failing to attract real ‘writers of tonnage’ as members, deploring that significant writers such as Eleanor Dark hardly ever came to meetings. What the country needed, she thought, was a literary organisation prepared to tackle the real issues confronting contemporary writers – more than a tea-and-sandwiches society. It was ridiculous nonsense for leftist writers’ groups such as the FAW to send approving cables to their colleagues in Russia, or to order the USA to stop persecuting communist writers: they should be working closer to home. The problem was that all Australia’s ‘writing guns’ were in Melbourne, not Sydney – Vance and Nettie Palmer, Flora Eldershaw, Frank Dalby Davison, Alan Marshall, David Martin, Arthur Upfield – but the country’s premier city should be making more of an effort. What was being done to promote Australian writing, to make life easier for local writers, to honour their work? Miles Franklin fretted constantly about the lack of practical support available to Australian writers, and was determined to do something about it.
She and Beatrice, with differing tastes, also argued about what constituted good writing. Beatrice liked vividly descriptive, poetic and inventive prose: then and always she was a great admirer of Eve Langley’s work and the short stories of Hal Porter. Miles pooh-poohed the work of both writers, labelling them phony, one of her favourite disparaging adjectives. Beatrice also respected the work of Patrick White: Miles thought his writing was ‘by Joyce out of D.H. Lawrence’ (not a compliment) and that his first novel, Happy Valley, had got the Snowy Mountains – which she considered her own special territory – all wrong. But they both liked the novels of Christina Stead. Beatrice always regretted that Stead was committed to another publisher, while Miles identified with her living abroad for many years while she wrote about Australia.
Miles generally preferred clear, realistic writers whose work echoed her own vision of ‘the real Australia’, which generally meant life outside the cities. She enjoyed the rough-hewn camaraderie expressed in Sumner Locke Elliott’s wartime play Rusty Bugles (1948), while Beatrice thought it was too episodic and sparsely plotted to be a successful play. Miles also applauded the courage of Frank Hardy in writing Power Without Glory (1950) – not one of Beatrice’s favourite books – which brought out her moralistic streak. ‘We are just as low in public morality as the USA,’ she wrote to Florence James.11
But for Miles there was realism and realism. She heartily disliked Ruth Park’s The Harp in the South, set in the slums of Sydney’s Surry Hills, when she read it serialised in the Sydney Morning Herald at the end of 1946. ‘Ruth Park’s great achievement was to fit all those bedbugs into the Sydney Morning Herald,’ she sniffed to a correspondent. ‘She will never surpass that.’ Miles seldom missed an opportunity to stick a knife into the young author, criticising everything from her work to her appearance; it was a dislike that was almost obsessive. Ruth Park later speculated that Miles’s bitchiness was due to jealousy, which seems a reasonable conclusion.12 Like Park, Miles had once been a promising and admired young writer, and, not having fully developed that promise, perhaps she found unbearable the thought that another might succeed where she had failed. Miles was also cruelly dismissive of Catherine Gaskin, whose first novel was published when she was sixteen and whose historical novel Sara Dane, published in 1954, was a worldwide bestseller.
Miles was always very interested in Beatrice’s personal life, though Beatrice did not discuss it with her in any detail, knowing that Miles had her quirks where sex and men were concerned. Energetic and scornful general discussion of male foibles was permissible, but Beatrice’s intuition would have told her that discussions of love and loss were touchy. Though Miles had always enjoyed flirting with men, she rejected any closer relationship. She wore a wedding ring for a very typical double reason: to tease people into wondering about her past and to serve as protection against unwanted male attention. Miles herself confided nothing about her private life, telling Beatrice that she would find out everything in her diaries, to be published posthumously. Like Miles’s other friends, Beatrice was sceptical about this – why would the obsessively secretive Miles reveal herself on paper, even after her death? (Miles Franklin’s diaries, still in the Mitchell Library, were published in 2004, edited by Paul Brunton.)
Some of Miles’s friends thought she was afraid of intimacy. Henrietta Drake-Brockman wrote to Beatrice after Miles’s death:
Really a strange, untrusting nature. Perhaps that’s why she could never bring herself to marry, or sleep with anybody … She only seemed to remember passion in terms of being “adored” by [a man]: What about her own desires? I am certain, really; that Miles never got further than, at best, preliminary skirmishes!13
Miles had definite views about sexual morality, some of which amused Beatrice. For instance, she disapproved of single women sleeping in double beds, and once Beatrice had gently to persuade her that a woman character in an English novel who quickly yielded to the attentions of a male was not a nymphomaniac.14
Miles seems to have been far too fond of Beatrice, however, to judge her according to her own strict rules. She knew that, since Frederick Bridges’s death, Dick Jeune was no longer a husband-approved escort but had become firmly ensconced as the man in her life. Like Beatrice’s other friends, Miles had met Jeune at literary gatherings; after FAW meetings in the city, he would obligingly go out of his way to run some of Beatrice’s friends to Central station in his car. ‘He is like the old squattocracy, gives his opinions unbridledly,’ Miles wrote to Dymphna Cusack.15 ‘B had warned me it was useless to either pinch or hush [him] as it only stimulates him to reiteration.’ But she approved of Beatrice’s comment that Dick was to be ‘bullied and cherished’, saying she thought Beatrice well able to do both.
Early in 1950, with money from the Bridges estate, Beatrice bought a property in Tizzana Road, Sackville, about fifty kilometres north-west of Sydney and ninety minutes away by car. She wrote to Henrietta Drake-Brockman about it in July:
I have acquired about 20 acres of a broken-down orchard with an old ramshackle house on it as a country retreat. It is on the Hawkesbury River and the scenery is the sort that makes me feel tranquil and happy. She-oak trees and willows on a river bend, orange trees and a lagoon with black swans on it, but fruit has to be picked, and fences put up, and the house tidied up, so it may be some time before it is as peaceful as it should be.16
Just down the hill from a picturesque stone church and not far from the local winery, the house, with a verandah on two sides, was intended to be a haven, a place to invite friends for weekends.
It also became the home of Dick Jeune, now retired, who rapidly assumed the mantle of local character. (The house was not far from the local post office which c
ontrolled the telephone exchange. Whenever there was a call for Dick, who was deaf as a post, one of the Morley family who ran the post office had to rush down the hill to tell him his phone was ringing. One wonders how he managed to hear the caller.) Dick looked after the orchard and tried his hand at raising poultry: on the electoral roll, no doubt with tongue firmly in cheek, he described himself as a farmer. The place at Sackville gave Beatrice something unique in her life: a place to indulge in tranquil domesticity. ‘A weekend at Sackville, packing Valencia oranges, stuffing cushions with kapok, admonishing broody hens and admiring Dick’s 200 new chickens,’ she wrote to Miles.17 ‘The river looked heavenly with its willow curtains and mountain backdrop, and yesterday we had tea on a boat chuffing down its widest reaches. To retire and live here would be bliss – for a while at least.’
Miles Franklin was one of Beatrice’s first visitors at Sackville. The two women continued to see a lot of each other, mainly because Miles’s literary career had revived during the 1940s. Not only was there the biography of Joseph Furphy, but Colin Roderick included her work in two anthologies. One of these, The Australian Novel (1945), included some of Miles’s fiction written under the pseudonym Brent of Bin Bin. Encouraged by this, Miles asked A&R to republish the six novels she had written under that name, though she presented herself not as the author but as Brent’s agent. As Beatrice dryly noted years later, it says something for Miles’s personality and persuasiveness that A&R agreed.18 She was also being disingenuous: clearly in Miles’s case Beatrice allowed friendship to overrule literary judgement.
Miles Franklin played the Brent of Bin Bin game for years. (She had a tin ear for names; an unpublished novel carried the pseudonym of Mr and Mrs Ogniblat l’ Artsau, or Talbingo, Austral[ia], her birthplace, spelled backwards, more or less.) Not only did she quote ‘the old gentleman’ and write many letters under his name (astute observers noted that Brent used the same typewriter as Miles did), but she once wrote an elaborate account of meeting him. And where did the name come from? Perhaps Miles was giving a defiantly Australian twist to an English form of title, which would have been like her. Beatrice thought Miles knew someone called Brent; the name was printed on a man’s collar she found in an old suitcase that Miles left behind after one of her visits.19 When A&R agreed to publish the Brent of Bin Bin series, Miles told them that the true identity of the author would be revealed when the final volume appeared.
A Certain Style Page 14