Jean Rhys Biography
For the Jean Rhys
Tour
August 24, 1890
Birth of Ella Gwendolen Rees Williams at Roseau, Dominica.
1907
Sails away from Dominica to England.
1907-8
Attends the Perse School, Cambridge.
1909
Attends Academy of Dramatic Art
1909-10
Tours England as a chorus girl.
1910
Her father Dr. Rees Williams dies at Roseau
1919
Marries Jean Lenglet and moves to Paris. 29 Dec., birth of a son who dies three
weeks later.
1922
Meets the American writer Ford Madox Ford in Paris. Begins to write short stories.
Birth of her daughter Maryvonne.
1923-4
Husband in jail, has an affair with Ford.
1932
Divorce.
1934
Marriage to Leslie Tilden Smith (Died 1945)
1936 Returns to Dominica. Visits Geneva,
meets her brother's children, stays at Hampstead
Estate, visits the Carib Reserve, walks across the island.
1947
Marriage to Max Hamer.
1957-66
Works on Wide Sargasso Sea after public interest following a radio broadcast
of her work tracks her down to a house in Devon.
1966
Wide Sargasso Sea published.
1979
May 14. Death of Jean Rhys.
The following has been compiled with the input of
literary analysis from the site: http://www.qub.ac.uk/english/imperial/carib/rhysbio.htm
Jean Rhys was born Ella Gwendolen Rees Williams,
in Roseau, to a Creole mother of the Dominican Lockhart family, and a Welsh-born
doctor William Potts Rees Williams. As a white girl in a predominantly black
community, Rhys felt socially and intellectually isolated; in 1907 she left
the island for schooling in England, returning only once, in 1936. Although
Rhys's attitude to her birthplace remained ambivalent throughout her life, the
Caribbean shaped her sensibility. She remained nostalgic for the emotional vitality
of its black peoples, and the conflict between its beauty and its violent history
became enmeshed in the tensions of her own often-fraught personality.
Jean Rhys's great-grandfather, John Potter Lockhart,
acquired Geneva plantation in 1824. After his death in 1837 his widow was left
to run the estate. The "Census Riots" at Grand Bay, also called "La Guerre Negre",
in 1844 following Emancipation, led to the destruction of the estate and the
burning of all the Lockhart possessions in the yard after rioters raided the
house. In 1930 the Geneva Estate house was completely burned by arsonists. Rhys
visited the plantation during her trip to Dominica in 1936 and was affected
by the experience. An awareness of this may help to explain some of the more
ambiguous attitudes in Wide Sargasso Sea, such as Antoinette's caustic remarks to Christophine and
Tia about their blackness. Rhys's own background, as well as Antoinette's, was
that of the former slave-owning Creole community. The attacks on Geneva became
the scene of the burning of Coulibri in Wide Sargasso Sea.
Rhys's Dominican background is important to her
works, playing a part in both her longer fictions like Voyage in the Dark
and Sargasso, and in short stories such as The Day they Burned the
Books. Dominica is the most rugged of the Caribbean islands. Its peaks rise
to almost 5000 feet despite being only 29 miles long. The violent contrasts
between dense vegetation, deep gorges, waterfalls and stretches of arid wasteland
are totally unlike the atmosphere that Rhys was presented with upon her arrival
in Britain. The irreconcilability of the landscapes is evoked in Wide Sargasso
Sea when Rochester's attitude to the beauty is to mistrust its lushness
- "too much blue, too much green".
Rhys identified with the black community in her
childhood, and indeed throughout her life, although she came to realise that
her world could never align itself with that of her nursemaid, Meta, and other
black mentors. She envied the black community its vitality and often contrasts
the sterility of the white world with the richness and splendour of black life.
Themes of attempted friendship with black girls recur in her work, an obvious
example being the figures of Tia and Christophine in Wide Sargasso Sea,
but Anna Morgan in Voyage in the Dark also attempts to find a friend
among the black community.
Rhys's early life paralleled that of other postcolonial
writers who have felt themselves betrayed by the reality of Britain; it was
only when she was in her seventies that she found a social niche in England.
Shaped by her instinctive drives and created out of the struggle to comprehend
her own isolated predicament; her writing was obstinately unconventional. In
part, this prevented her work from receiving due recognition for much of her
lifetime.
Rhys's short fiction shows a remarkable variety
of themes. A significant number of stories recall her childhood in the Caribbean
and range from a girl's cruel sexual awakening ("Goodbye Marcus, Goodbye
Rose") to incisive sketches of the narrowness of small-island life ("The
Day They Burned the Books"). Others, such as "Vienne," reflect
Rhys's restless bohemian life in Europe. In "Let Them Call it Jazz,"
she assumes the personality of Selina, a black West Indian in London, whose
struggles parallel her own. However, although Rhys declared, "I have only
ever written about myself," it is important that her life and her writing
not be confused. Her first published novel was Postures (1928, American
title Quartet: A Novel, 1929). While it lacks the confidence of her later
work, in the character of Marya Zelli it introduced what was to become the recognisably
Rhys heroine -- sensitive, sexually attractive, and vulnerable, with a tendency
to self-defeat. It also shows Rhys's stylistic control in moving within characters
and in observing them objectively, without irony.
In After Leaving Mr. Mackenzie (1930), the
heroine is Julia Martin, who is recovering from the experience of sexual betrayal
and attempting a futile liaison with the decent but inadequate Mr. Horsfield.
The moral descent is completed in Good Morning Midnight (1939), a brilliant
evocation of psychic disorientation and despair. The heroine, Sasha Jensen,
remembers a life of love and defeat and faces the ultimate darkness suggested
by the novel's title. Told in first person narrative, alternating between the
past tense and the continuous present, Good Morning, Midnight is a technical
tour de force.
Voyage in the Dark (1934), Rhys's third published
but first-written novel, is her most autobiographical work of fiction. Its heroine,
Anna Morgan, aged nineteen, has come to England from Dominica. The novel opens
with a compelling evocation of the Caribbean, its colours, sights, smells, and
warmth. As the novel recounts Anna's attempt to come to terms with her new life
the inner narrative traces a remembered life in the Caribbean.
Rhys disappeared from public view until 1958, when
the BBC dramatised her Good Morning, Midnight. The publication of Wide
Sargasso Sea followed in 1966.
Rhys's final years brought fame and freedom from
financial anxiety, but no work of similar importance. She published a collection
of new short stories, Sleep it off Lady, and worked on her autobiography,
unfinished at death, published posthumously as Smile Please: An Unfinished
Autobiography (1979). Her letters were published in 1984 in England as Jean
Rhys's Letters: 1931-1966, edited by Francis Wyndham and Diana Melly.
Places on Dominica
Associated with Jean Rhys
Jean
Rhys lived at this house on the corner of Independence Street (then Granby Street)
and Cork Street. She was born elsewhere in Roseau, but there are many descriptions
of it in her autobiography and short stories.
St. Ives on Turkey Lane is the site
of the Convent School that Jean attended. It appears in her autobiography Smile
Please and in Wide Sargasso Sea.
The St.George's Anglican Church
where Jean was christened and where her family worshipped. In 1902 it was enlarged
in response to the sudden rise in British investors in Dominica who soon declined
again. In her unfinished autobiography, Smile Please, Jean describes
the church and attending services there.
Dr. Rees William's grave near to
the entrance of the Anglican Cemetery has a headstone topped with a Celtic cross
of Welsh granite, a reference to his Welsh origins. It had fallen over, perhaps
in the 1930 hurricane, but was restored thanks to donations from Jean's biographer
Carole Angier and her publisher/editor Diana Athill.
The ruins of Geneva House at Grand
Bay upon which a modern building is now being constructed. Around it are the
remains of the garden that looked over the estate and down to the river, all
of which is described in Wide Sargasso Sea as 'Coulibri'. In 1844 it
was raided during the Census Riots and all the family's possessions were burned.
The present ruins date from a fire in 1930 set by politically motivated arsonists.
Geneva was an important Kalinago/
Carib settlement site (in the foreground) and was first taken over by Jesuit
missionaries in about 1700. A French Huguenot family, the Bertrands, based in
Geneva, Switzerland, bought it in the 1760s and named it after their hometown.
The Lockharts bought it in 1824 and owned it until 1949, when Elias Nassief
bought it. There were troubles in 1974, when the estate houses and old factory
were burned and the government took it over in 1976 and divided it up as it
is now. After Rosalie, Geneva was the largest estate on the island, being 1,550
acres in extent.
STOWE
When the young Dr. Rees Williams was the medical officer
for the Grand Bay district he lived at Stowe Estate. There he courted Jean Rhys'
mother, Minna Lockhart, and they spent their honeymoon there. A drawing done
at the time showing the Rees Williams' honeymoon house appears in Smile Please.
Stowe was named after a stately home in England, and it was also a military
site, incorporating a small fort for the defence of southern Dominica. The low
walls of the battery still exist and old iron cannons still lie near the sea.