The Painted Veil

04.15.05 | 23 Comments | Filed Under Uncategorized

A book I re-read recently.

This is Somerset Maugham’s little-known novels, not as famous–or in the league of–as the Razor’s Edge but contains his characteristic stamp. He builds the plot with a rare precision and etches characters with just the right tinges: some amount of predictability and a healthy deal of suspense. The combination is deadly: you never know what to expect. Although this is not a classic, it is well worth reading (or re-reading) if only to discover how human emotions and frailities play out.

The title of the novel is I believe borrowed from Shelley’s famous sonnet that begins with the lines Lift not the painted veil those that live call life. And he couldn’t have chosen a more apt title. The plot simple as it is, personifies the title.

We have as the central characters a husband and wife: Walter Fane, an intelligent but unambitious bacteriologist and his wife, Kitty Fane, a beautiful but shallow and vain woman. Her father is a little more than a doormat always ready to be trod under his wife’s foot. The wife typifies the English (1920s) middle class lady: ambitious, and manipulative with pleasure and luxury as the only worthy goals. Brought up under such education, Kitty Fane relents to marry Walter only because her younger–and much less attractive–sister starts to get “good” proposals. Walter Fane is hardly her kind. She sees in Walter a mirror image of her father: ready to be used. Yet she agrees because he is perceived as a man of intelligence–and hence worthy of respect in society–and also because he allows himself to be humiliated.

(Walter) loved her so passionately that he was prepared to accept any humiliation if sometimes she would let him love her.

Walter and Kitty sail off to distant, cholera-infested Hong Kong where he is interested to pursue his research. And there Kitty begins an affair with a wily British official named Charles Townsend. Walter discovers this but doesn’t confront her. In fact, he never broaches the subject with Kitty but suddenly announces that he has volunteered to serve at Mei-tan-fu, one of the regions severely hit by a Cholera outbreak. Kitty reluctantly accompanies him. This singluar act reveals Maugham’s mastery over the plot and characterization.

His decision, Walter knows is suicidal. Yet it is deliberate and well-planned. It exposes Charles Townsend as the opportunist and a professional womanizer. Kitty’s entreaties to Townsend go in vain; it’s when she realizes her foolishness. It also exposes the strength of Walter’s character. Anything I say beyond this will ruin the suspense; you need to read it. But I guess this is the part the feminists really love–various feminist reviews describe this as her “spiritual awakening.”

However, it is too late.

But what still sticks in my mind is the part where a dying Walter keeps endlessly whispering, The dog it was that died. Kitty never understands what he means by that. And Maugham masterfully, reveals in the end that Walter’s refrain is the last line of Goldsmith’s An Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog.

And now for Shelley’s complete sonnet because it is supremely relevant:

    Lift not the painted veil which those who live
    Call Life: though unreal shapes be pictured there,
    And it but mimic all we would believe
    With colours idly spread,–behind, lurk Fear
    And Hope, twin Destinies; who ever weave
    Their shadows, o’er the chasm, sightless and drear.
    I knew one who had lifted it–he sought,
    For his lost heart was tender, things to love,
    But found them not, alas! nor was there aught
    The world contains, the which he could approve.
    Through the unheeding many he did move,
    A splendour among shadows, a bright blot
    Upon this gloomy scene, a Spirit that strove
    For truth, and like the Preacher found it not.

And believe me when I say that The Painted Veil is the novel-form of this wonderful sonnet.

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