A forlorn week in which my mother died. She was
ninety and had been ill for some months. But it has knocked me sideways.
My Grandmother & mother in 1926 |
This is not to say that one part of her did not remain, for me at least, closed off and mystifying. There were things about her background she flatly refused to discuss. What was admirable was the way she hurled herself into wifehood and motherhood, having four children and nine grandchildren on whom she lavished smiles and delicious meals, always with the fullest-fat ingredients.
She was an old-fashioned Scottish Liberal to the
core. She was furious when she appeared in a novel called The Cellar at the Top of the Stairs written by an alleged friend of
mine. He had modelled its classically educated detective Ethel on his psychedelic impressions of me. He
portrayed Ethel’s mother as a keen flower arranger (which she was)
but also as a supporter of the Conservative Party (which was unthinkable).
May 2016 in Hospital |
I have no idea how to make an index beyond word-searching
proper names, and find myself sobbing all over the pdf. She was a
world-class professional indexer and is no longer sitting by her computer at the end of the phone. From my
first book in 1989 to Adventures with
Iphigenia in Tauris just two years ago, my mother created brilliant,
detailed, thematic, conceptual, intellectually sophisticated and unbelievably useful indexes to almost every
book I have published, especially most of the string of collaborative volumes which have come out of the Archive of Performances of Greek & Roman Drama at Oxford.
Prizewinning Index! |
She was the Best Indexer of Humanities books ever.
She won a National Prize Commendation for the sophisticated research tool which is her
index to the enormous Greek Tragedy and
the British Theatre 1660-1914 which I co-authored with Fiona Macintosh in
2005. Mum transformed a monster volume crammed with wildly unfamiliar data into a usable document enhanced by an index of intellectual and aesthetic beauty.
In honour of her I always comment on the
quality of indexes in books I review. I hate the mediocrity
of the one I'm failing now to compile. She was correct that nobody
should index their own books. Like the insightful indexer Claire Minton in Kurt
Vonnegut’s Hiroshima novel Cat’s Cradle (1963),
she could psychoanalyse any author who indexed their own book just by looking
at the concepts they chose to feature.
She was many things to many people, but in adulthood I forged a new collegial bond with her in discussing the minutiae of dating conventions and sub-headings. I doubt if her indexing will feature much in other funeral tributes. So this is my way of saying thanks, mum, and good-bye.
Commendation for Wheatley Medal |
She was many things to many people, but in adulthood I forged a new collegial bond with her in discussing the minutiae of dating conventions and sub-headings. I doubt if her indexing will feature much in other funeral tributes. So this is my way of saying thanks, mum, and good-bye.
My dear Edith,
ReplyDeleteI still find myself sobbing over my pdfs when I think of my mum who died nearly two years ago. Your mother must have been a remarkable woman; and I am sure that she was very proud of you, for you are a remarkable woman too.
My deepest sympathies go out to you and your family.
Effy
Dear E. K.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words in reaction to the Edithorial - you should know here that I am Edith's "big" (i.e. elder) brother, and I am only too happy to set on public record in this forum that our mother, Brenda Mary, was indeed a remarkable woman. But I can reassure everyone who may read this blog that among the numerous tributes which have rightly been offered, Mum's contributions to scholarship have by no means been neglected.