Lois Rosenthal, Philanthropist (my image of Nedra) |
She was born in Altoona, to a nondescript family in about
1930. At 17 she turns into a stunning beauty. When she marries Viri, an
architect, he sees her as a woman “condemned to live with him. He could not
define it. She had escaped. Perhaps it was more; the mistake she knew she would
have to make was made at last. Her face radiated knowledge. … She had accepted
the limitations of her life. It was this anguish, this contentment which
created her grace.”
Nedra and Viri live in a house on the banks of the Hudson
with their two daughters, Franca and Danny. The book begins as a meditation on
their life and their home. They go into New York often, to art galleries, to
eat and to shop; they have wonderful conversations with friends at dinner; and
they indulge their children with extravagant stories, puppets, pets and Easter
egg hunts. In the summer they go to Amagansett. “Summer is the noontime of
devoted families. It is the hour of silence when the only sound is sea birds.
The shutters are closed, the voices quiet. Occasionally the ring of a fork.”
But Nedra and Viri are both
having affairs. Viri is not very successful. Nedra wants to live in Europe. At
16 Franca tells Nedra, “I want to be like everyone else, not like you.” Nedra
and Viri do go to London and Kent, finally, in 1970. English friends tell them:
“I’m more or less obsessed with the idea of your country which has, after all,
meant so much to the entire world. I find it very disturbing now to see what’s
happening. It’s like the sun going out.”
Upon their return, Nedra and Viri
divorce. By this time Franca at 20 and Danny at 18 both have boyfriends. Nedra
leaves immediately for Europe. “She felt confident, a kind of pagan happiness.
She was an elegant being again, alone, admired.”
When Nedra returns to the United
States, she interviews with an experimental theatre group because she has been
taken with their work. They reject her because is already 43, but she becomes
the lover of one of the actors, living in a studio among the warehouses in New
York. “A breakfast of chocolate and oranges. Reading, falling again into sleep.
He said very little. They were deep in contentment; it was full, beyond words.
It was like a day of rain.” “Your life,” Nedra’s friend tells her, “is the only
real one I know.”
Danny marries. Nedra arrives at
the wedding with Viri. Nedra weeps with Danny, wiping tears from each
other’s faces. That summer Nedra and Franca live at the beach. “Her [Nedra’s]
life was like a single, well-spent hour. Its secret was her lack of remorse, of
self-pity. She felt herself purified. The days were cut from a quarry that
would never be emptied. Into them there came books, errands, the seashore,
occasional pieces of mail. She read them slowly and carefully, sitting in the
sunshine, as if they were newspapers from abroad.”
But Nedra did not last much
longer. She became ill, taking a small house by the sea. Franca comes to visit
her. Nedra believes that the love of one’s children is the best love. “To be
close to a child, for whom one spent everything, whose life was protected and
nourished by one’s own, to have that child beside one, at peace, was the real,
the deepest, the only joy.” She died suddenly, in the fall of the year. “As if
leaving a concert during a passage she loved.” Her daughters have a small funeral for her. Viri has been living in
Italy. He comes home to walk in the garden of the house by the Hudson where he
had been happy. “Those afternoons that would never vanish, all ended. He,
resettled. His daughters, gone.”
For some readers, these lives
which are blessed with so little to worry them may seem unreal. For me, they
seem like some of the last lives to celebrate reality: sensual, joyous and
content, without a flicker of television in them. Salter writes in his memoir Burning
the Days, “Of those years, the 1960s, I remember the intensity of family
life, its boundlessness. It was an art of its own – costume parties; daring
voyages in an old sailboat, a leaky Comet, far out on the river; dogs; dinners;
poker on Christmas night; ice skating.”
Nedra was a woman James Salter
knew, as described here. In Burning
the Days he writes: “I loved her, her frankness and charm, the extravagance
and devotion to her children. I never tired of seeing her and listening to her
talk. … Hers was a singular life. It had no achievements other than itself. It
declared, in its own way, that there are things that matter and these are the
things one must do.” He has given us an exquisite portrait of a woman, of a
life.
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