Read The Finishing School Online
Authors: Gail Godwin
“Long before the terms ‘role model’ and ‘mentor’ entered common parlance, adolescents sought the company of grown-ups, other than their own parents, whose sympathetic interest and vivid presence represented the best of the adult world.… In her fine novel,
The Finishing School
, Gail Godwin charts the exhilaration, the enchantment, the transformation, then the inevitable disillusionment and loss inherent in such a friendship and such self-discovery.… Her characterization is one of the most trustworthy portraits of an adolescent in current literature.”
—
The New York Times Book Review
“She never for a second loses the reader’s attention.”
—
The Wall Street Journal
“An arresting story … The pleasure of reading
The Finishing School
is nearly equaled by the fun of thinking about it afterward.”
—
The New York Times
“Makes an indelible impression … Gail Godwin is in top form!”
—
San Diego Tribune
“An engaging, shapely narrative of cumulative power … It helps us to live our lives.”
—
The New Republic
“Marvelous, moving drama … Not only the dominant strains of the story keep running through one’s head, but all those deeply buried harmonies and variations, too.”
—
Mademoiselle
“Irresistible storytelling … Just as immediate and affecting as
A Mother and Two Daughters.
”
—
Kirkus Reviews
The Finishing School
is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
A Ballantine Book
Published by The Random House Publishing Group
Copyright © 1984 by Gail Godwin
Reader’s Guide copyright © 2004 by Gail Godwin and The Random House
Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Originally published by Viking Penguin Inc. in 1984.
Grateful acknowledgment is made to
W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., St. John’s College, Oxford
, and
The Hogarth Press Ltd.
for permission to reprint a selection (Second Part, 23rd Sonnet) from
Sonnets to Orpheus
, by Rainer Maria Rilke, translated by M. D. Herter Norton. Copyright 1942 by W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. Copyright renewed 1970 by M. D. Herter Norton.
Ballantine and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Ballantine Reader’s Circle and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Library of Congress Control Number 99-90162
eISBN: 978-0-345-47226-7
v3.1
Bang verlangen wir nach einem Halte, wir zu Jungen manchmal für das Alte und zu alt für das, was niemals war.
(
Anxiously we clamor for a hold, we, too young sometimes for what is old and too old for that which never was.
)
—Rainer Maria Rilke,
Sonnets to Orpheus
, II, 23 (translated by M. D. Herter Norton)
L
ast night I dreamed of Ursula DeVane. We were sitting on the crumbling threshold of The Finishing School, and she was telling me something in her rich and compelling voice. Then, suddenly, the sky turned an ominous color, the pond shivered like a live thing, the old pines hissed and swayed, and hard rain pelted down.
“Let’s make a run for it!” said Ursula, tensing her body for the dash.
“But why?” I asked. “We’ll get soaked. Why not sit here and wait it out?”
“Ah, Justin,” she said, putting her arm around my shoulders and giving me a shake. “Haven’t I taught you anything? Didn’t you learn anything from me?”
She leapt up and hurled herself boldly into the storm. Lightning cracked all around her. She was wet to the skin before she had even reached the far side of the pond. I huddled in the shelter of The Finishing School and watched with mounting despair as her figure grew smaller and dimmer in the downpour. I knew if I did not jump up and run after her now that I would lose her forever. But I was powerless to move.
When I woke, I could still feel the pressure of her touch on
my shoulders. I could hear the pitch of her tender, teasing voice. All day I have gone around under the spell of that dream.
Is it the dream that has its hold on me, or is it Ursula herself, after all these years? In the dream we were the same age, both young girls; yet when I knew Ursula, that single summer, she was a woman of forty-four and I had just turned fourteen.
All day I have wondered whether I would want to see the real Ursula again, even if I knew where to find her. She would be seventy this year, if she is still alive. How would I feel about her now? Would she be very changed? Or would she, regardless of age and of the hardships she may have suffered since that summer’s end, still retain the power to bewitch my imagination? Would her voice still enchant with its melody and its challenge? How would she feel about me? Would she be glad to see me, or would what happened at the end of the summer have eclipsed our friendship and made her bitter and angry? If I were to see her again, what would I say?
(Ursula, which were the true parts and which parts did you make up? Do you know, I am still trying to sort out which was which?
You’ll be gratified to hear—at least, I hope you will—that I did choose a life in the arts. “Your soul craves that constant heightening of reality only art can give,” you told me one afternoon, down at the old stone hut by the pond, which you called my “Finishing School,” where you enthralled me with tales of your past and planted aspirations in me.
I’m sorry for the way I behaved at the end. The older I get, the more cruel that behavior seems. Yet, at the time, I was unable to behave any other way.
If you hadn’t materialized that summer, I would have had to invent someone like you. If I hadn’t come along, whom would you have invented? A girl like me? Or would just any gullible audience have served your purpose?
For what it’s worth, you left your mark on me. Despite everything that happened, I have absorbed you. As long as I live,
you live in me. Sometimes I hear myself speak in your voice. And, as you did, I watch its effects on others.)
I am a great respecter of dreams. Many turning points in my life have been heralded by dreams. A few have actually occurred in dreams. I believe that dreams transport us through the undersides of our days, and that if we wish to become acquainted with the dark side of what we are, the signposts are there, waiting for us to translate them. Dreams say what they mean, but they don’t say it in daytime language.
A friend tells me she dreams regularly of a girl named Megan, whom she hated in grammar school. But over the years, in these dreams, Megan has grown up along with my friend, and they have become important to each other. My friend says she actually looks forward to her Megan dreams. In these dreams, after an initial animosity, the two get together and reveal how they have always secretly admired each other and wanted to be friends. Each shows striking insights into the other’s nature and confides to her what strengths she has been jealous of all these years. The two of them discover they are opposites of the same self.
“But what about the real Megan?” I asked her. “Have you ever tried to get in touch with her again?”
“Good heavens, no.” My friend laughed. “I’m sure
she
grew up to be a horrible person.”
Which is to say: I won’t hire a detective to go in search of a real seventy-year-old woman, who might still be found. (And who, perhaps, would retain her power to shatter or elude all my ideas of the kind of seventy-year-old woman she might have become, just as, during that summer, she was never as I expected her to be, from visit to visit.) But I will attend to what her image, playing its role in last night’s dream, came to tell me. This is not
the first time I have dreamed of Ursula DeVane. I dreamed of her on the night of the day I met her, and many times since. I will probably be dreaming about her for the rest of my life. She, along with a few others, has claimed a permanent place in the theater of my unconscious, where each figure—based wholly or in part on some real person—has its function.
When Ursula appears in a dream, it is usually to stir things up.
“There are two kinds of people,” she once decreed to me emphatically. “One kind, you can tell just by looking at them at what point they congealed into their final selves. It might be a very
nice
self, but you know you can expect no more surprises from it. Whereas, the other kind keep moving, changing. With these people, you can never say, ‘X stops here,’ or, ‘Now I know all there is to know about Y.’ That doesn’t mean they’re unstable. Ah, no, far from it. They are
fluid.
They keep moving forward and making new trysts with life, and the motion of it keeps them young. In my opinion, they are the only people who are still alive. You must be constantly on your guard, Justin, against congealing. Don’t be lulled by your youth. Though middle age is the traditional danger point, I suspect that many a fourteen-year-old has congealed during the long history of this world. If you ever feel it coming, you must do something quickly.…”
Over the years, her vivid figure of speech has stayed in my mind. “Am I congealing?” I ask myself. “Am I getting stuck in a role, repeating myself?” Or I will think, Poor So-and-So has congealed, gathering his same old themes around him like a shroud and being content to embroider them. I wonder if he knows it.
What would I be like if I congealed? Would I know it? Would I go on doing my work? Would others know?
The Ursulas of the world would.
“It’s too bad about Justin,” I can hear her say, launching into
that
musical
tone she used when taking apart people’s characters or summing up their fates. “When I knew Justin, she was just a young girl with large, questing eyes and very brown legs from riding her bicycle away from a house that was boring her to death. She was new to our village; she was disoriented. She had lost all the props that defined her. At the time we met, she saw herself as the victim of Tragedy: in a relatively short period, she had lost the grandparents who raised her, her father, and then her home. That is a lot to lose, of course, but hardly Tragedy to someone like myself, whose family
contretemps
would have kept Sophocles
and
Ibsen scribbling around the clock if they’d lived in our neighborhood. No, there are things much more tragic than the deaths of pleasant, unexceptional people and having to start all over in a new place.