The Forsyte Saga
by John Galsworthy
My rating: 4 out of 5 stars
This is for me the definitive period saga, by Nobel
Prize-winning John Galsworthy. The reader follows the intertwined characters'
lives for many years and several generations, with the collection comprising
three hefty novels breaking down into five volumes:
The Man of Property (1906)
Indian Summer of a Forsyte (1918)
In Chancery (1920)
Awakening (1920)
To Let (1921)
Almost everyone I've known had seen this before reading it,
including my great-grandparents. Two silent film adaptations, 1921 and 1922,
captivated some Galsworthy devotees but attracted erstwhile print-shy masses
who became converts, running out in droves to buy the cumbersome books.
Similarly, a high calibre 2002-3 miniseries starring Gina
McKee and Damian Lewis, with an endearingly wrinkly Wendy Craig, proved a
satisfying recreation for some author fans but a watchable inspiration for the
new millennium's page-reluctant youth, hoards becoming seduced into reading it,
fuelling a modern-day sales resurgence.
My own adolescent introduction to this extensive fictional
family was via the classic 1967 TV adaptation with a cherubic young Michael
York; the then stellar Nyree Dawn Porter; pretty ingénue Susan Hampshire; the all-accomplishing Margaret Tyzack; and featuring, as Smither, the wondrous late
Maggie Jones who would later win British hearts as Coronation Street's
acerbic-tongued, gallows-humoresque Blanche Hunt.
The saga concerns the trials and tribulations of a
twin-pronged nouveau riche British family, whose not so distant forbears were
farmers. The author's own 'new money' upper-class family was not unlike this
fictional one he so meticulously chronicles. The materially acquisitive
protagonist, solicitor Soames Forsyte, is incurably unfulfilled despite his
ever-expanding assets and status, his heart remaining shattered over first wife
Irene.
Soames' rival cousin, painter Young Jolyon, who is actually
older than Soames, was originally the family's favourite until deserting his
wife for their daughter's governess, forever since thumbing his nose at
society. The latter, however, subsequently remarries Soames' ex-wife, Irene,
concreting their cousinly enmity.
Themes threading these volumes together include those common
to the historic family saga genre: blood feuding, changing generations,
mortality, ambition and duty versus desire.
There was something about the older Forsytes I found more
endearing, their often-comical arch snobbery, their handwringing at not having
quite yet reached that 'old money' mark, their whacky foibles, quirky
prejudices and neurotic manifestations of status anxiety.
The younger generations, as the saga progresses, have less
edge, having mostly seen the errors of their forebears' ways and adapted for
the 'better' (making them blander all round). They also represent the later
period, as we compare them to their elders and their new epoch to times past.
This characteristic is necessitated by the very concept of family saga. It
demonstrates the loosening of restraint; the attitudinal progress time brings.
That necessity of genre notwithstanding, it is the very
eccentricities, queerness and glaring shortcomings of the older, earlier
Forsytes that makes them such colourful reading subjects (as was the case with
those earlier penned, unforgettable characters of Dickens and other great
nineteenth century masters from which Galswworthy's style seemingly draws
considerable inspiration).
Unlike some great sagas, this one never departs from English
society's upper strata to glimpse the characters' lower-class counterparts,
reminding us, perhaps, of the author's somewhat stifled cloistered upbringing.
As if offsetting that limitation, there is sufficient of the 'downstairs' (the
timeless, classless, primal) in some of these multidimensional, magnificently
drawn 'upstairs' characters, whose humaneness at times transcends the abstract
of class. Though they are all, superficially, defined by their staunch social
status, we are frequently reminded of that humble, if ambitious, farmers' blood
still coursing through their not yet fully gentrified veins. This paradoxical
edge to the Forsytes is charming, sometimes laughable, sometimes sad but makes
them always accessible to us, the reader.
It took me many months, with breaks between volumes but,
having selected it as midwinter bedtime reading, I remained blissfully
unhurried about the mammoth task. Was often unable to put it down and switch
off the bedside lamp, getting in 'just another quick chapter before I nod off'
then noticing the dawn glimmering in through the blinds. I was left feeling
nauseatingly smug as I closed the final page of the final book.
By no means a quick, easy or lazy read, this detailed body
of work demands intense focus or continuity evaporates. The mental investment,
however, is worth the rewards, as we end up on intimate terms with a remarkable
family. If you love historical sagas, The Forsyte Saga is
considered by aficionados to be the original, the ultimate one of its kind.
This is something you will have seriously missed out on if the effort is not
made. A magnificent work from a master storyteller.
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