Classic of the Month: Period Piece by Gwen Raverat (1952)

Later today we’re making a pilgrimage to Bookbarn International,* one of my favorite secondhand bookshops in the UK, on the way (ish) to seeing friends in Bristol and Exeter for the weekend. In the past we’ve managed to drop in to Bookbarn annually, but it’s been nearly 2.5 years since our last visit. At that special Harvest Supper and Scrabble** tournament in October 2017 (which I wrote about here), I got to meet William Pryor, the chairman of Bookbarn, and he gave me a copy of his grandmother Gwen Raverat’s memoir, Period Piece.


Raverat was a granddaughter of Charles Darwin (the first child of his son George) but never got to meet him as he died three years before her birth. Her book has the subtitle “A Cambridge Childhood,” which perfectly conveys the aim. This is not a comprehensive family history or autobiography, but a portrait of what it was like to grow up in a particular time and place. Raverat was born in 1885, but she begins two years earlier, when her American mother, Maud Du Puy, was 21 and in England for the first time to spend a summer with her great-aunt and -uncle. She had three suitors during that time, all of them Fellows of Trinity College. The rules had only just been changed to allow Fellows to marry, so George Darwin would be among the first married members, and Gwen was in the first batch of offspring.

Period Piece is a charming, witty look at daily life from the 1880s through about 1909 – ending with the marriage of her cousin Frances, which seemed to signal a definitive end to their collective youth. Raverat focuses on everyday sights and sounds but also points out life’s little absurdities. She proceeds thematically rather than chronologically, taking up topics like her mother’s parenting theories; her boarding school education and budding love of art; visits to Grandmamma at Down House, Kent; childhood fears and ghost stories; the five Darwin uncles; religion; sports and games; clothing; and social events such as dances.

Raverat’s childhood home in Cambridge, now part of Darwin College, University of Cambridge. CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5).

Writing towards the end of her life and in the middle of the twentieth century, Raverat neatly draws contrasts between old-fashioned propriety and modern mores. For example, as a child she was often called upon to act as a chaperone to courting couples, and when ladies boated past a watering hole where boys swam naked, they would cover their faces with parasols. She herself managed to avoid the matter of sex entirely until she was an adult, though she does remember looking to an encyclopedia to find out where babies come from.

The utter reliance on servants, a profusion of buttons on every garment, and forced trips to church are a few elements that might strike today’s readers as alien. One incident felt eerily contemporary to me, though: once, walking home alone at around 10 p.m., Gwen saw a gang of dodgy-looking undergraduates carrying a drunk or dead young woman down the street and into a pub. After much internal debate, she decided not to say a word about it to her parents.

I often wonder how novelists and filmmakers get a historical setting just right. The answer is, probably by reading books like this one that so clearly convey quotidian details most people would leave out, e.g. a list of every piece of clothing a lady wore or a rundown of the steps to getting her mother out the door to catch the 8:30 train for a day out in London. Those who have visited or lived in Cambridge will no doubt enjoy spotting familiar locations. There are also amusing cameo appearances from Virginia Stephen (Woolf) and E.M. Forster.

Raverat, a wood engraver, peppered Period Piece with her own illustrations (I have photographed one favorite, at left, but you can see them all in the archive here) – a lovely supplement to the highly visual text. Not just an invaluable record of domestic history, this is a very funny and impressively thorough memoir that could be used by anyone as a model for how to capture childhood. It has never been out of print, and still deserves to be widely read.

 

 

*They’ve recently had a renovation that I helped to crowdfund; I’m looking forward to seeing the results. I’ll also be sure to report back on my book haul.

**I was especially delighted to see that the Darwin family had a favorite word-making game, described in the middle of the “Sport” chapter, that sounds a fair bit like Scrabble – except that you only added one letter at a time and could scramble the letters to change the meaning.

 

Some favorite lines:

(describing one of her mother’s early letters home to America) “They got [rooms for the night] at last at ‘the St Pancreas Hotel’. I was delighted to find this spelling so early, as, to the end of her days, my mother always considered the saint and the internal organ as identical.”

(of their French nurserymaids) “By a provision of Providence they were always called Eugenie, so that when a new one came she could be called Newgenie.”

“The faint flavour of the ghost of my grandfather hung in a friendly way about the whole place [Down] – house, garden and all. … In fact, he was obviously in the same category as God and Father Christmas.”

 My rating:


I read the 2014 Collector’s Library edition, an attractive pocket-sized book with gilt edging and a built-in red ribbon bookmark.

14 responses

  1. This is a book I read and hugely enjoyed in, of all things, my teenage years. Time for me to look again?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I think you would find it a very worthwhile reread.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Oh I loved this book, as you say it’s utterly charming. A wonderful glimpse of a time gone by.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I hear tell that there is an adaptation in the works…

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Even though I’ve read this, I don’t remember any of the details and Newgenie made me laugh aloud all over again! The illustrations are just lovely, too, aren’t they? They make me wish that all books came with pictures.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It’s a delightful book all round. The author’s grandson tells me Faber and the Folio Society brought out new editions just last year.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. I have never heard of this book before but it sounds delightful.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I know you have enjoyed some quaint English stuff and like getting to some of the lesser-known classics, so I think you’d really enjoy it.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. “Quaint English Stuff” is totally in my wheelhouse!

        Liked by 1 person

  5. I loved this when I read it in 2014 https://librofulltime.wordpress.com/2014/10/24/book-reviews-121/ and I have a very sweet pink covered copy (I despair at the image of my TBR in the picture accompanying that review of mine, however).

    Thank you again for reaching out on Twitter to check I was OK, by the way – that really touched me. And here I am, reading my blogs and commenting and writing my own blog, so I’m getting there.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You’re absolutely right when you say “It’s really evocative and charming without being twee or sentimental”.

      No problem! Online friends are real friends, too 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  6. This sounds wonderful. And, for some reason, it appeals to me even more knowing the author is the granddaughter of Darwin. He left more valuable ‘things’ behind than he thought!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hearing more about his descendants was definitely a bonus for me.

      Liked by 1 person

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