ext_6997 ([identity profile] carmine-rose.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] trennels2005-08-30 12:17 pm

Fairness in the Marlow household

I was wondering if anyone had any thoughts on the fair/unfair treatment of the Marlow young by their parents. I'm thinking specifically the treatment of Nicola by her parents/mother in Cricket Term. Is there anyway this could have been handled better? Should it actually have been Nicola who was going to have to leave? Should they have told her or dropped it on her in the summer holidays? Should they have removed all the girls, or perhaps just both twins?

For that matter, should Lawrie have been given the Prosser? (I know this wasn't her parents' decision, I'm just interested whether people think it was a good judgement call on the part of the staff.)

In a similar vein, what about the horse business in Peter's Room? Was it fair that their mother bought Ginty a horse for her birthday, and said no-one else was to ride it? Was it reasonable to buy herself one before ensuring the children all had equal access to a horse for hunting? In effect, she created a situation where one daughter was the only one in the family who was unable to go hunting (without hiring a horse), which seems harsh to me. But then, I'm from a small family where such unequality with gifts never happened - is this normal for a large family? Was Lawrie's reaction reasonable, or did other readers take it as just one more example of her throwing whiny tantrums?

These two occasions seemed to me to best illustrate Mrs. Marlow's failings as a mother (and also perhaps where the children got their selfishness) - I wondered if anyone else felt the same.

Can anyone else think of any other examples of this kind of thing? Or of fairer treatment?

[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-30 11:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Obviously this is purely specualtion; there's no textual evidence for this.

Indeed, what textual evidence there is, is against this. The "Last Ditch" is plainly regarded as a family joke, certainly among the older members of the family who understand how limited its value is.

(Anonymous) 2005-08-31 07:25 am (UTC)(link)
I'd assume Chocbar could easily have cost as much as double Catkin; remember Helena Merrick who is not short of a bob or so was "coveting her madly all last season" suggesting that either Pam Marlow snapped her up the instant she was on the market or that even Helena baulked at the asking price.

Also, considering Antiques Roadshow and the like, I can't see even a horribly unfashionable diamond tiara going for less than £10-15,000 these days, can you?

[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 10:51 am (UTC)(link)
Depends how you figure it. At GDP, £250 in 1950 would be the equivalent of £16 000 today - but GDP doesn't necessarily represent the equivalent of what it would buy.

[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 08:48 am (UTC)(link)
I think jewellery which sold for possibly £200 (to afford two horses, the less valuable of which cost roughly £90) in the 1950s wasn't exactly limited in value.

To a child in the 1950s, £200-£250 might look like unlimited wealth. (See Nicola's reaction to her Windfall.) To an adult, however, it's plainly not. Depending which indicator of value you use (see Current Value of Old Money (http://eh.net/hmit/)) £250 in 1950 is probably (relative purchasing power) £5,270 in 2005. Think about how £5000 of "your own money" would look to a teenager: then think about how that would look to an adult. It's half what it would cost to buy a new car, or - before house prices went up - enough to put down a deposit on a small house or flat. (Wouldn't be now, where I live.) It's a nice little sum, but it's not, except from a child's point of view, unlimited wealth.

[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 10:49 am (UTC)(link)
And I never said it was "unlimited wealth". I said "a valuable piece of
jewellery".


What you said was "It wasn't exactly limited in value" - and that is precisely what it was: limited. It was a one-off bonus that could be spent any number of ways. You seem to have come round to the idea that Mrs Marlow spent it sensibly when she bought a horse for herself, rather than being a bad selfish mother - which was the idea that I truly objected to: the idea that a woman is a "bad mother" if she ever spends anything on herself that she doesn't absolutely need when her children are going without things that they want but don't need - which was your starting position - is really rather anti-woman and anti-mother, and generally objectionable. Mrs Marlow bought herself Chocbar, and it was a sensible and right purchase, and you accept that: good.

That there is something skewed about Ginty getting such an expensive present is something I've come round to, having read so many well-reasoned points about it on this thread. But arguing from that to "Mrs Marlow's a bad mother" is something else again.

[identity profile] ex-ajhalluk585.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 11:16 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, for crying out loud! I don't think it is a reasonable interpretation of the original essay to characterise it as "anti-woman" or "anti-mother". The question was not, "are mothers bad?" but "is Pam Marlow a bad mother?"

Actually, I think compared to Helena Merrick or Mrs West or Madame Orly (and absolutely one hundred percent as compared to Mrs Frewen) she's a shining example of motherhood (and that in relation to the Prosser she treats Nick as an adult, and, at least if Jan Scott's analysis is correct, allows Nick, by giving her access to relevant information, an opportunity to play a part in shaping her own destiny).

But I think that "Is Pam Marlow a bad mother?" is an invitation to debate, not a statement which is in and of itself objectionable.

If you want to debate motherhood in the Marlow books, there are much worse examples than Pam Marlow to consider, in my view, and I'm posting a separate essay on the topic above.
(screened comment)

[identity profile] ex-ajhalluk585.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 01:25 pm (UTC)(link)
So if the incident concerned had shown Commander Marlow selling the Last Ditch to buy himself and Nicola a pair of matched 24 foot keelboats you would consider anyone questioning whether the act concerned was that of a bad father, and constituted selfishness on his part that would mean that the person asking the question was anti-man and anti-father?

[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 01:54 pm (UTC)(link)
But has anyone, ever, inquired whether Commander Marlow's parenting skills and his job are perhaps one reason why the Marlow children are as they are?

It's really not part of the cultural view of mothers and fathers to ask whether a man with eight children is selfish because he doesn't devote himself to them, putting their needs before his, 100% of the time. It's not part of the culture to ask if it's wrong for a married man and a father to have a job that requires him to spend so much of his time so far from home.

It is a cultural given to demand that a woman shall prioritise her children's needs above her own (someone, evidently not [livejournal.com profile] carmine_rose - I got confused - suggested that it was selfish of Pam Marlow to have bought Chocbar when her children didn't even have new party clothes): and it is a cultural given to question a mother who has a job that means her primary committment can't be to childcare. Fathers aren't subject to such questions.

To quote a friend: "Because in the dictionary under 'mother' is a magic mirror-of-Erised-style picture of everyone's don't-wanna-act-like-a-grown-up fantasy, wheras under 'father' is a dot disappearing into the distance, possibly scattering money in his wake. And that does a disservice to both mothers and fathers."

[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 02:26 pm (UTC)(link)
But he didn't, she did.

Because she's there. He isn't. She's making parenting decisions: he's not.

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[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 02:33 pm (UTC)(link)
Also, I don't think anyone actually explicitly stated "it's selfish of her to buy a horse for herself instead of party clothes for the children"

Pretty near, though. On this thread:
Perhaps I should have reworded that to say Was it reasonable to spend so much on herself when some of her children are going without some things? link (http://www.livejournal.com/community/trennels/3795.html?thread=63699#t63699)

and by "some things" you explicitly said in the same comment
But on the other hand, it seems like she's spending money on something pretty frivolous when some of her children don't even get new best clothes

So yes, this "got interpreted" as "New party clothes for all is more important than Mrs. Marlow!" because that is precisely what it appeared to be you were saying.

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[identity profile] ex-ajhalluk585.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 07:48 pm (UTC)(link)
But has anyone, ever, inquired whether Commander Marlow's parenting skills and his job are perhaps one reason why the Marlow children are as they are?

You mean,I presume, apart from a statistically significant percentage of this community in various pubs around the country, in various piss-ups at which I have been personally present?

What culture are you talking about here? The "culture" in which Antonia Forest's works are a vital and important text? Well, if you're proposing to interrogate them, in the words of Anthony Merrick "that's half an hour of your life accounted for, then".

In what "culture" is it a "given" to demand the above, and why do you assume that that culture reads onto this culture, without pause for consideration?

Your culture may be inordinately sexist - in which case I offer you my sincere condolences - but I'm from Lancashire.

[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 08:06 pm (UTC)(link)
...okay.

Walking away from this conversation now.

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[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 11:41 am (UTC)(link)
I also didn't bring the clothes into it, someone else did, and I have said I don't really mind the hand-me-down aspect of the clothing

I apologise for this - I've been following this via livejournal and via threaded posts on Gmail, and I evidently got your comments confused with someone else's.

[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 11:52 am (UTC)(link)
As I said - I think I must have got your comments mixed up with someone else's, and I truly apologise for that - it's a side-effect of Gmail, but I really should have noticed.

Will attempt to respond to your other points later, but am commenting on your other thread now. ;-)

[identity profile] yonmei.livejournal.com 2005-08-31 05:45 pm (UTC)(link)
I said I saw it as a mistake she'd made, and later, that I didn't think she was a particularly good mother.

You know, it was this comment that got me convinced - since you were rapidly denying things I thought I remembered you saying (and when I checked, found you had said) that I must have got two commenters confused.

Checked, and found I hadn't: just that you don't want to look at the assumptions you were making all down the thread. You don't even want to acknowledge that you made them.

I take back my apology.