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Every Woman Is A Novel A Jest

Every Woman Is A Novel :A Jest Of God Essay, Research Paper


Rachel often addresses her thoughts to God. How does she imagine Him (Her


or It)? Does Rachel’s concept of God change during the course of the


Novel? Explain.


Rachel Cameron, the heroine of "A Jest of God", is not simply as an


individual literary character but as a psychological portrayal of women


of Rachel’s time and inclination. Even we can easily find someone who has


the same problem Rachel has in the friends of us, or maybe in an early


morning when we get up; stand at front of the mirror; we will suddenly


have a idea, "I am Rachel too."


She has a common Cameron heritage. She is a gawky, introverted spinster


schoolteacher who has returned home to Manawaka from university in


Winnipeg, upon the death of her alcoholic undertaker father Niall


Cameron, to care for her hypochondriac mother May. Nevertheless, the


family resemblance is obvious: their shared Scots Presbyterian ancestry,


which Laurence views as distinctively Canadian, provides an armour of


pride that imprisons her within their internal worlds, while providing a


defence against the external world. To overcome that barrier between


personalities, she must learn to understand and accept their heritage in


order to liberate her own identities and free herself for the future. She


must also learn to love herself before she can love others. Rachel


receive a sentimental education through a brief love affair: as a result


of learning to empathize with their lovers, she learn to love herself and


the people she lives with. Laurence’s emphasis is, as always, on the


importance of love in the sense of compassion, as each of her solipsistic


protagonists develops from claustrophobia to community.


The beginning of "A Jest of God" extends beyond its Canadian perimeters


in Rachel’s branching imagination, both into the fairytale dream world


which gives depth and pathos to the disappointment and despair of her


present and out into a wider world in time and space than the grey little


town of Manawaka. The first lines of the novel tell us everything basic


to Rachel’s mind, her temperament, and her situation.


The wind blows low, the wind blows high


The snow comes falling from the sky,


Rachel Cameron says she’ll die


For the want of the golden city.


She is handsome, she is pretty,


She is the queen of the golden city.


They are not actually chanting my name, of course, I only hear it that


way from where I am watching the classroom window, because I remember


myself skipping rope to that song when I was about the age of the little


girls out there now. Twenty-seven years ago… (p. 1)


The reader is engaged in sympathy with Rachel by the sadness of the gap


between her dream-self, "Queen of the Golden City," and her reality, shut


in behind her classroom window, looking out and worrying about becoming


an eccentric spinster, that stereotyped butt of cruel laughter. But we


are also engaged by the range and the quality of Rachel’s imagination –


and it is this, continuing through the book, that holds our sympathy, our


interest, and our increasing respect. The golden city is at first the


dream world of Rachel’s sexual fantasies where she and her prince live


happily ever after; later in the novel it becomes identified with the


golden city of Jerusalem reinterpreted as the growth of the spirit within


the individual, a new dispensation which makes it possible for her to go


on liveing, if not happily ever after, at least affirmatively.


Rachel makes a double journey. She is just thirty-four, a frustrated


spinster, outwardly in bondage to her marcelled, blue-rinsed, anxious,


and superficial mother, but actually in bondage was braking of proper


appearances as set up in her own mind by Manawaka and its expectations.


She is afraid of life and death hangs over her always, especially


symbolized by her dead father’s vocation, undertaking, and by the


presence underneath her home of the undertaking establishment that had


been her father’s. She makes a journey into her own mind and personality,


and finally she dares to act upon what she finds there. "A Jest of God"


is a record of a tortured but unremittingly honest journey of


self-analysis and self-therapy. (George Bowering, "That Fool of a Fear")


It is both complicated and daring, in terms of the novelist’s techniques.


The present, the past, the questionings and fantasies of Rachel are all


woven together instead of being completely separated and counterpointed


as in the former work. All the strands come together in the aftermath of


her affair with Nick Kazlik. Rachel is symbolically biblical in her


"mourning for her children," the children she has never had. Nick is real <

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to Rachel as a lover, and yet she needs him more urgently as a fther for


her children than as a lover. She cannot understand the depth of Nick’s


own problem as the son of a Ukranian immigrant and as the child who


cannot do for his parents what Steve, his dead brother, would have done


(Class Notes). Steve would have preserved the land that Nestor Kazlik


loved and would have given himself to it; Nick cannot.


If we try to compare "A Jest of God" with the Bible, there are lots of


interesting things we can find. Just as Rachel is associated with


Jerusalem and the golden city, so Nick is identified with the prince of


romance and with the Israelites. ("a hidden Caucasion face, one of the


hawkish and long-ago riders of the Steppes." Characteristically, his


first kiss is absorbed back into her fantasy world; "It’s unreal, anyway.


If it isn’t happening, one might as well do what one wants." Yet this


encounter does function as the prince’s kiss of fairy tale and Rachel’s


affair with Nick marks the beginning of her transition to the real


world.) Describing his family he states explicitly; "I have forsaken my


house — I have left mine heritage — mine heritage is unto me as a lion


in the forest — it crieth out against me — therefore have I hated it’.


Because a Jacob-Esau relationship is implied to exist between Nick and


his dead brother and because Rachel’s speech, "If I had a child I would


like it to be yours," is immediately followed by the words of Rachel of


Genesis:"Give me my children," Nick is identified as a Jacob figure.


Ironically, however, the character of Nick is dual in aspect; he is both


the bringer of gifts that his name implies (St. Nicholas) but also one of


the devil’s party (Class Notes). Identified with the shadow prince of


Rachel’s dreams, he carries with him an inheritance of death and so cannot


make a covenant of the spirit with Rachel.


Nick understands Rachel better than she understands him. When he says,


"I’m not God, I cannot solve anything," and produces the photo graph of


a young boy. This particular detail, together with Nick’s indictment of


his father: "It’s this fantastic way he has, of creating the world in


his own image," and Rachel’s concurrent relization: "Have I finished


with facades?" all strongly suggest the thematic that Rachel does


finish with her false self to go on as an authentic person, and we can


see step by stey she find her God, but Nick (whose past almost exactly


parallels Rachel’s), is still tied to his own false God, his image of


himself as child and his relation to his dead brother. We know the depth


of Nick’s meaning, but at this moment, Rachel still has to learn it,


painfully. She does not lose Nick, because she never had him in any


committed sense (Class Notes), and she does not bear his child as she had


hoped and feared she would do. Instead she is humiliated and taunted by


the irony of knowing that the growth within her was not life but a kind


of random nothingness, a benign tumor. Through the pain of the emotional


and physical ordeals, however, she does learn to accept and to live with


her limitations and with life’s. As Nick could not be God for her, so she


cannot, need not, and must not be God for her mother. Her choices are


human and humanly limited, but she does have choices and she makes one of


them — the decision to move. She is no longer afraid to leave Manawaka,


for she is no longer dependent on her fear of the town for a kind of


tortured security of identity. She is free at least to the point of


knowing that Manawaka is with her forever, both its strength and its


constraints. These she will always carry within her to deal with as she


is able.


Rachel was looking for an Old Testament’s patriarch God, a father-figure


who would direct and protect her, and she was also looking for a New


Testament’s Christ who would redeem her. She moves finally to a reliance


on whatever strength she can find or forge within herself.


I will walk by myself on the shore of the sea and look at the


free gulls flying. I will grow too orderly, plumping up the chesterfield


cushions just-so before I go to bed. …I will ask myself if I am going


mad, but if I do, I won’t know it.


God’s mercy on reluctant jesters. God’s grace on fools. God’s pity on


God (p. 202).


At the end of the novel, Rachel recognizes the irony of her condition but


she also asserts that the jest of god which had given her a tumor instead


of the desperately wanted child has been a "beau geste" resulting in the


birth of a new spirit, the New Testament dispensation of Christ’s grace,


"God’s mercy on God". It is very clear, that a step-by-step journey


into the self.


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