The Custom of the Country
The Custom of
the Country
By Edith Wharton
One couldn’t really describe Undine Spragg as a
‘heroine’. But she is certainly the main
protagonist of this book. The spoilt only child of a successful businessman and
a compliant mother, Undine has grown up to expect her every whim to be
satisfied. The novel follows her
attempts to rise above her roots.
What
gives Undine distinction is her exceptional beauty, which she believes will
enable her to leave behind her modest beginnings in backwater Apex and achieve the
heights of New York
society by making a favourable marriage. To this end, her parents remove themselves and
Undine to New York for her to begin what she
sees as her inevitable progress, through marriage, to the heights of the
sophisticated world of mid-Nineteenth century New York
Everything
we need to know about Undine’s family background and attitudes is neatly
summarised by Wharton when Ralph Marvell, whom Undine eventually marries, asks
her mother to explain how she came to be called ‘Undine’ He says: ‘It’s a
wonderful find – how could you tell it would be such a fit?’ Undine’s mother
replies easily, ‘’Why, we called her after a hair-waver father put on the
market the week she was born.’ Ralph remaining struck and silent, she goes on
to explain: It’s from Undoolay’, you know, the French for crimping.’
Modern American marriage customs and divorce in
the upper eschelons of American society are the two main themes of the novel. The phrase: ‘the custom of
the country’ is used early on in the narrative by Charles Bowen, a character
who serves as a social analyst, and who observes that ‘it is the custom of the
country’ for a man to slave away to pay for his wife's extravagances without
ever telling her anything about the work he does. The
consequence is that there is little if any shared life in many American
marriages. The centre of the man's life, the world of business, remains a mystery
to his wife. The centre of her life, a social world of opulent display, becomes
an expensive drain on his resources when business is not going well. Undine
early on gives her view of the purpose of American marriages when she observes
that her friend Mabel Lipscomb will probably soon be getting a divorce since
her husband has ‘been a disappointment to her.’
However, to me, ‘the custom of the country’ must also refer to Undine’s
chronic, and ultimately disastrous, inability to understand any social world
but the one she grew up in. Despite her meteoric rise through the social
strata, her values remain basically Apex values. Her attempts to ‘learn’ ways of sounding
well-informed and intelligent are doomed. Marrying, first, into a family who,
as well as their aristocratic connections, are educated and embrace all aspects
of cultural life, Undine is out of her depths; worse than that, Ralph Marvell
turns out to be a man whose creative bent is the main focus of his life. Being
forced to take on uncongenial work to support Undine in the manner to which she
is accustomed, he bravely soldiers on. When
eventually, she divorces him, leaving young Paul with his father, Ralph
focuses all his affection on his son. Later, after divorce and re-marriage, Undine decides that having the son she had
previously rejected to live with her will create the best impression in her
new, aristocratic family, which is the final humiliation for Ralph and he
shoots himself.
In
her marrying into the aristocratic de Chelles family and becoming a Marquise, Undine
believes that has finally achieved her highest ambition and reached the
pinnacle of French society. But she very
soon discovers that the customs of that particular country are completely alien
to her. Instead of the dazzling
social life in Paris
she anticipated, she is forced to live in her husband’s decaying chateau in the
depths of the country and to join the other women of his family in quiet
pursuits like housekeeping and needlework.
Undine’s story reminds me of the story of the
Little Old Woman who Lived in a Vinegar Bottle: a kind fairy hears her sighing
that she wished she could get out of her vinegar bottle and live in a nice
cottage. The wish is granted. But the little old lady is never satisfied; from
the cottage she moves into a house, then into a mansion, then into a palace.
Finally she asks for a castle. The next day she wakes up and she’s back in her
vinegar bottle! So Undine gets her
richly-deserved come-uppance, although in a rather unexpected way and one which
shows Wharton deploying her well-developed sense of irony at its best. The only
way in which she can enjoy the level of wealth she deems necessary to achieve
recognition in ‘the best society’ is to re-marry the man whom she’d first
known, married, then rejected, in her far-off youth in Apex. He has now become
fabulously wealthy – but the social life Undine aspires to eludes the reach of
the couple who are very slightly scorned as ‘nouveau riche.’ Her marriage is a
hollow sham and she’s left with a deep sense of somehow having failed in life.