By the early twenty-first century, the notion of women in their seventies rediscovering a zest for life and rekindling possibilities of passion is no longer dependent on comedy. Both Alice Munro and Mary Gordon portray their women of a certain age with empathy and nuance as they face surprise visitors from the distant past. In Gordon’s novella “The Liar’s Wife” and Munro’s short story “Dolly,” a woman who has lived a full life experiences an important internal shift and a heightened appreciation of living when a visit from a former lover prompts a renewed sense of vitality in the former and a relaxing of rigidity in the latter. I end the chapter with these two stories because I enjoyed reading them and because they remind me that even after years of increasing routine and familiarity, one is capable of pleasure and that the opening of old memories can sometimes allow an unexpected release. Unlike the “Deathbed Bookends” stories of the previous chapter, these plots explore passion in the present.
“Dolly” by Alice Munro
Like “The Liar’s Wife,” Alice Munro’s 2012 short story, “Dolly,” tells a tale of a visit that stirs up old emotions. Set in Canada, “Dolly” is an interior monologue narrated by an elderly woman whose name we never learn. The narrator recollects a visit from a saleswoman who turns out to be her partner’s long-ago lover, a woman he memorialized decades earlier in a published poem whose raw power has always disturbed her. The narrator also recounts the details of the thoughts and experiences that bracket her life before and after the visit. Munro’s story explores the ways in which life-changing epiphanies are possible, even when one is old and mired in seemingly unchangeable habits and behaviors. Her quiet but powerful narrative demonstrates how a life is made up of the stories we tell ourselves and how small shifts in perspective may open new chapters and revelatory capacities to choose new narratives, even—and perhaps most importantly—within our existing stories, our current lives. Dolly’s visit changes the way the narrator “reads” her common-law marriage and revitalizes her and her partner’s experience of one another and their options.
Munro does not introduce the Dolly of the title until nearly halfway through the narrative. The story opens with the narrator’s account of an even more distant time in the past, prior to the upsetting visit, when she was seventy-one and her partner, Franklin, was eighty- three, and they were contemplating mutual suicide because they both assumed that their predictable lives were unlikely to contain anything of future importance. On a perfect autumn day, they went searching for just the right location for their deaths, wanting privacy yet also wanting fairly quick discovery. However, after locating the ideal spot, in the woods near a country road, they disagreed about whether or not to leave a note explaining their actions. This disagreement led Franklin to pronounce his wife too young to make the decision, declaring that they would revisit the discussion when she reached seventy-five. When she told him that she was actually bothered by his assumption that nothing more of any importance was going to happen in their lives, he pointed out that their argument about leaving a suicide note was an event, and one sufficient for him to decide the entire subject needed to be postponed.
In this interaction, Franklin evinced little passion—they usually avoided all arguments and assumed that whatever was right for him was right for her. We get a glimpse into the dullness into which their lives had settled, a dullness both undercut and oddly reaffirmed by their planned mutual suicide, itself rendered a task whose details became minor irritations, annoying enough to him to insist on sidestepping the conversation.
Recalling the argument about the propriety of, or need for, a suicide note, the narrator ruminates on other ways she and Franklin differ. He is a retired horse trainer and a poet, though he downplays his occupation as poet, seeming to be embarrassed by the apparent idleness of writing poetry in contrast to the obvious business of training horses. She describes him as a reticent man except for his best-known poem, a blatantly explicit account of a two- week sexual adventure with a woman named Dolly, a poem that the local folks, and he himself, still call “pretty raw.” She describes herself as a retired high school mathematics teacher who tried staying home with Franklin after retirement, grew bored, and began writing “tidy” yet entertaining biographies of little-known Canadian women novelists “who had been undeservedly forgotten or have never received proper attention.” Although she duly credits Franklin’s reputation as a poet for helping her get acceptance as a writer, she admits to having more sympathy for novelists than poets. She is generally satisfied with her solitary days at home and usually enjoys the control and quiet of writing on her own after years in classrooms.
About halfway through the story, we get the impression that age seventy-five has come and gone prior to her next rumination with no further talk of suicide. The narrator recalls an afternoon when she yearned for some company and so, uncharacteristically, invited a door-to- door cosmetic saleswoman into her home, a saleswoman who (unbeknownst to them both) turns out to be the Dolly (real name Gwendolyn) of her husband’s poem. The narrator compulsively relives every detail of that initial encounter with Gwen/Dolly as if it were happening in present time.
The scene is one of mutual discomfort and awkward conversation across class lines.
Gwen has brassy, thin hair, is ill at ease, requests an ashtray, and then apologizes for interrupting the narrator’s letter writing. However, when she learns that the narrator is writing the biography of a neglected woman writer, not a letter, Gwen gushes, “You must be one smart person. Wait till I get to tell them at home that I saw a book that was just getting written.” We learn that Gwen’s common-law husband has died, and the narrator surprises us, telling Gwen that she, too, is unmarried. We sense she is trying to find a way to connect with her less- sophisticated acquaintance.
Although she does not use cosmetics, the narrator orders “some lotion that would restore her youth,” and Gwen promises to drop it off next time she comes around. When Franklin comes home, she tells him all about Gwen and then dislikes herself for admitting, “ . . . it’s another world. I rather enjoyed it,” suggesting the depths of her boredom and her curiosity about someone different from herself, and potentially her pleasure in perceiving herself as an unmarried woman who strikes up unusual conversations. Rather than showing any curiosity, Franklin suggests she needs to get out more and should apply to be a substitute teacher.
On Gwen’s return visit to deliver the lotion several days later, the two women chat, and the narrator is again embarrassed by her acute discomfort with Gwen’s grammatical mistakes and her obvious awe at speaking to a writer. She feels, she says, “as if I had no right to be so superior,” but we also sense her enjoyment of the attention. She gives Gwen a copy of the novel by the author whose biography she is writing and is startled when Gwen says she has never read a book through but will read this one. The narrator feels flattered and then a bit embarrassed and cautious, as she once did when a student had a crush on her. Through the exposition to this point, Munro’s tone is conversational and her pace is slow, as if the narrator is still pondering the significance of the visit, what she learned about herself through the event.
Only later in the story, when we learn that Gwen is the Dolly of Franklin’s poem (a poem about which Gwen knows little), do we begin to understand the significance of the scene that has unfolded between Gwen and the narrator, and yet Munro invites us to see the import of the exchange even before the narrator is (or we are) aware that her heightened emotional response will soon be pushed to uncharacteristically dramatic heights.
In the period before Gwen is revealed as Dolly, we learn that, after their long conversation, Gwen’s car will not start and is blocking the driveway when Franklin arrives home after dark that evening. Without coming in to meet the owner of the car, he tries unsuccessfully to start it and calls the village garage only to learn that it is closed until morning. Reluctantly, and with a sense of good manners, the narrator invites Gwen to stay for supper and overnight. She worries about Franklin’s reaction to the stranger, fearing that polite conversation with Gwen will mean upsetting Franklin’s usual routine of quietly watching the news, and she speculates whether Franklin will remain in the room and eavesdrop or whether he will slip away upstairs. She suggests Gwen call home and secretly hopes someone will come and get her.
When Franklin finally enters the kitchen and sees Gwen, the narrator vividly recalls that “both she and Franklin . . . were struck at the same time.” Gwen blurts out, “Oh my Lord,” to which he responds, “No, it isn’t . . . It’s just me.” They recognize each other, are uncomfortable in the narrator’s presence, and repeat each other’s names in tones of mockery and dismay:
“Frank.”
“Dolly.”
The narrator shares her sense that, if she were not present, they would have immediately fallen into one another’s arms.
She remembers that Franklin’s voice “insisted on going back to normal,” while Dolly/Gwen emphasizes the enormous or even supernatural joke of their finding each other. In retrospect, the narrator realizes the oddity of her own participation in the general merriment of that evening, bringing out a bottle of wine, though Franklin no longer drinks. Dolly explains that she had been working as a nursemaid in Toronto when she met Frank on his last leave before he went overseas during World War II. They had “as crazy a time as you could imagine,” and then lost track of each other. She makes vague references to being too busy to answer his letters and then marrying a young man she met on shipboard after the war while accompanying two evacuated children back to Europe from Canada.
Until that evening, the narrator had not known anything about this part of Franklin’s life other than the erotic details of his poem. In it, he is enthralled by Dolly, enraptured by her lavish lovemaking during their adventurous two weeks together and fascinated by all her superstitions, such as her belief that she is protected from pregnancy by wearing “her dead sis’s hair in a locket” around her neck. The poem recounts that she gives him a magic tooth to protect him during the war. Years earlier, the narrator had teased some details out of Franklin and had somewhat hoped that Dolly might have been made up, but even then, she thought that unlikely given the particularity of her poetic representation and how foreign her qualities seem to the Franklin she knows.
In contrast to her earlier uneasy feelings of superiority to Gwen/Dolly, we can tell the narrator’s discomfort now stems from a sense of failed competition. Her assumptions have been thrown off course in ways both big and small. The narrator recounts in detail each “abnormal” behavior of the never-to-be-forgotten morning after their visitor stays the night.
She dresses and does her hair—which she would not normally do so early in the morning. Franklin uncharacteristically offers to make her breakfast. She notices, with discomfort and annoyance, that Gwen not only cleaned up the dishes she had been too tired to do the previous night but also washed a row of long-neglected dusty jars that formerly sat on a high shelf.
When Franklin goes outside to prepare Gwen’s car for towing, the narrator is convinced Dolly follows him “as if she didn’t want to lose sight of him for a moment.”
Recalling the full force of her anger and jealousy, the narrator admits she wanted to run after them and “pound them to pieces” as they drove off together. Usually complacent, she is overtaken by a sense of “grievous excitement” and rashly determines to leave Franklin. Flushed with feeling, she leaves him a terse note about going to check facts on her current novelist. She then packs a suitcase, drops her house key through the mail slot, and drives off in her car. She had written a longer note, but then takes it with her, not wanting Gwen to see it “when she came back with him as she surely would.”
In that letter, she writes, without dignity or grace, about his deception and self- deception, using words such as lies and cruel and puke. She had planned to rewrite it, but ends up mailing it without revision. The intensity of her letter and the rashness of her departure reveal how much she has tamped down her emotions during her years with Franklin. They seem to have taken each other for granted, settling mostly into his routines. Her jealousy appears to remind her of a time she and Franklin were passionate rather than simply careful with one another. Munro suggests through this rekindling of emotion, even if negative, that there was once passion between them, and a non-narrated and buried history when feelings were not so carefully managed.
Dolly’s visit shows the extent of the narrator’s docile adaptation to Franklin’s whims, such as not eating in restaurants or rarely purchasing anything for herself. In her one night away from Franklin, sleeping alone in a strange motel after dining in a restaurant and nearly purchasing a silk scarf, she recalls herself as a young student teacher spending the night with a married man in a cheap motel, when she was reckless and unconcerned about anything but her pleasure. The contrast between her youthful, passionate self and her present dull routine is sharp.
The narration of the aftermath of the Dolly visit has the urgency of present tense although it is a recollection. By 6:00 a.m. the next morning, she knows she made a “terrible mistake.” Driving home, she is slowed by an accident on the highway, and she realizes that she or Franklin might, too, have an accident and never see each other again. She is eager to get home to him. When she arrives home, she argues passionately with Franklin about Dolly, who has left. After reassuring her, he remarks, “We can’t afford rows.” She realizes she had temporarily forgotten “how old [they] were, forgotten everything. Thinking there was all the time in the world to suffer and complain.” She decides she does not want to fight, does not want to engage the jealousy or bitterness, and that she would have to be on the lookout for the letter she had mailed the previous day, since “you can think yourself in reasonable shape and then die, just like that.”
Munro implies that the narrator’s decision to stay, to choose a life with Franklin that is peaceful, kind, and without rancor is not the same as her previous, more passive acquiescence but suggests a different sort of conscious appreciation and desire. As a result of their unexpected visitor, they realize the value of days together, in contrast to the opening explanation of such days as unworthy of life itself. They realize they have to appreciate what little time they have left together.
I chose to include this story in this chapter about sexuality because of Munro’s portrayal of the awakening of the narrator’s anger and jealousy brought about by Dolly’s visit—proof of the existence of the sexuality celebrated in Franklin’s poem and of the narrator’s own repressed desire. Dolly’s appearance stirs in both of them a suppressed love, a passion long forgotten. The story reminds the reader that our relationships define us, that there is some balance between choice and accommodation, useful passion and hurtful rows, partnership and loss of self. The story is not upbeat, nor is it bleak. We sense that the narrator is more self- aware and will no longer compare herself to the Dolly of the poem who has always haunted her imagination. Franklin is no longer the inexperienced service man, and the narrator is no longer the young graduate student who had an affair with a married teacher. They are now in their eighties and nineties—still capable of strong feelings and also more capable of kindness, of quiet choices, and of care. Dolly’s visit was an anomaly for both of them, jarring them out of their comfortable indifference, and suicide is now untenable. Munro reveals the ways in which aging people have the capacity to redefine their attitudes, subtly but significantly recalibrating the emotional tenor of their lives in ways that fundamentally shift their vision of themselves, of time, and of life itself.
Conclusion
The stories in this chapter begin with the mistaken notion that erotic desire is meant to disappear along with youth and is either a matter of embarrassment or ridiculous humor in women of a certain age. From tales of childish crushes to near-death memories of past entanglements to regrets for missed experiences, desire, passion, and sex permeate literature and life. While women are consistently the objects of a male desire, which is treated as normal (“wild oats,” “boys will be boys,” etc.), female sexual desire is often portrayed in literature as dangerous and even monstrous. From Eve’s first bite of the apple, to the insatiable appetite of the Lady of Bath, to Shakespeare’s erotic Cleopatra, to the lusty or languid women of the eighteenth-century seduction plot, women’s erotic passions may result only in marriage or death, and the sexier the passion, the more likely death is the answer!
Even in contemporary fiction, erotic love and lust are usually assumed to be dead in women over sixty. Long after medical research has revealed the falseness of such notions, noting that women do experience orgasms well into old age, outlasting the common erectile dysfunction often experienced by men and treated with drugs such as Viagra, outmoded ideas about the death of women’s erotic passion persist. We see this both in cultural narratives and in the internalized notions of women themselves.
This chapter opened with two novels set in boarding homes for the able-bodied, well- off, elderly residents who have outlived their partners and cannot live on their own. In the first novel, we learned that the residents all retained some desire or passion that was unfilled.
Underlying all the various sexual proclivities was a desire to continue to matter as a person, to be viewed in a positive light, to exercise some individual control. Similarly, in the second novel, Mrs. Palfrey continues to care about appearances as well as to long for tenderness. Reading these two novels heightened my sense of the importance of maintaining friendships with younger people throughout our lives and of learning to live with one’s self before one becomes elderly. None of the characters in either novel has a spiritual life or a deep set of beliefs. They are not comforted by art or music or literature. They do not have an internal store of imagination, fascinations, or beliefs to comfort or bolster themselves.
In comparison, the second set of stories is entertaining and upbeat. Both stories portray the discomfort adult children feel when confronted by their mothers’ sensual behavior. Miss Hazel and Julie are far less imprisoned in stereotypes of maternal behavior than are their children. Whether or not Miss Hazel goes to bed with the old blind man, she is happy to dance in public and to enjoy her body. Although she cares about her children and will cook for them the next day, she will not repress her enjoyment at the community meeting. And, after years of being a proper divorced grandmother who is available to babysit on a moment’s notice, Julie allows herself to experience her own dormant passion and, in the process, frees her daughters to follow their own hearts.
In the final set of stories, two long-married women who have settled into predictable patterns over decades are shaken out of their habits and reconnect with their submerged desire in time to enjoy their final years. The protagonist of “The Liar’s Wife” is able to appreciate how much she has matured and how repressed she had become, and the unnamed first-person narrator of “Dolly” is able to lose her sense of competition with the Dolly of Franklin’s early erotic poem. We leave these stories with a sense that each woman may continue to discover some of the unexplored parts of herself that she gave up in her youth.
Running through all six stories are portrayals of the persistence of desire and passion beyond any arbitrary age limit. We all want to love and be loved, to experience ourselves in new ways, to continue to matter as individuals. We need to nurture interests and friendships throughout our lives if we do not want to be bored and lonely in our old, old age. Our age does not prevent self-discovery or preclude happiness.