To embellish or not to be

Normal, Weekender

CHARLES Dickens remains one of the most influential British writers of all time in many corners of the world, including ours, as revealed in an award winning novel: Mister Pip by Lloyd Jones.
“I have tried to describe the events as they happened to me and my mum on the island. I have not tried to embellish. Everyone says the same thing of Dickens. They love his characters. Well, something has changed in me. As I have grown older I have fallen out of love with his characters. They are too loud, they are grotesque. But strip away their masks and you find what their creator understood about human soul and its suffering and vanity. When I told my father of my mum’s death he broke down and wept. This is when I learnt there is a place for embellishment after all. But it belongs to life, not to literature.”
This is the voice of Matilda Laimo, a young Bougainvillean lass, researching her Masters thesis on Mr Dickens in England.
Ms Laimo is a fictional character in Lloyd Jones’s novel: Mister Pip (2006), published by the Text Publishing Company of Melbourne Australia. The novel has won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, Japan’s Kiriyama Prize, Montana Deutz medal and was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize.
Ms Laimo’s story began during the Bougainville crisis in the early 1990s. She grew up in the middle of the civil war where men had gone into the jungle to join the rebels or had been killed in the conflict. Her father lives in exile in Townsville, Australia. Ms Laimo and her mother, Dolores Laimo, lived through the crisis and experienced some of the darkest moments of their lives.
The book also traces the life of Mr Watts, a self-appointed teacher of the tiny primary school where the only textbook is the Mr Dickens novel Great Expectations. Mr Watts teaches the children about their lives through the words, lines and images painted by Mr Dickens during the Victorian era in England. Mr Dickens world comes alive for the young children in Mr Watt’s class.
In the beginning of the novel Ms Laimo tells us about the background of her life in Bougainville: “During the blockade we could not waste fuel or candles. But as the rebels and redskins went on butchering one another, we had another reason for hiding under the cover of night. Mr Watts had given us another world to spend the night in. We could escape to another place. It didn’t matter that it was Victorian England. We found we could easily get there…By the time Mr Watts reached the end of chapter one I felt like I had been spoken to by this boy Pip. This boy who I couldn’t see to touch but knew by ear. I had found a new friend.”
Pip captured all her imagination while Ms Laimo lived through the ordeal.
The word embellishment, as used in the book, captures my attention. Embellishment is a noun, meaning adornment or enrichment. Adding ornaments or decorations to increase beauty of something is one meaning of the word embellish. Another meaning is to add false details to something by making an account or description more interesting by inventing or exaggerating details, and in the context of music adding ornamentation to melody such as extra notes, accents, or trills to a melody to make it more beautiful or
interesting.
Ms Laimo declares that embellishment is more true to life than it is to literature. Embellishment is the outcome of adding something to enrich what is already present. She grew up with the wondrous and exciting world of Mister Pip as embellished by Mr Watts.
Ms Laimo discovers the place of embellishment in life in her search for the world described to her by Mr Watts. She comes to the shocking conclusion that Mister Pip’s England was never that fantastic, magical, or the fairytale world she envisioned, but one which went through periods of defining moments that shaped its contemporary history. Mister Pip’s world was stark, harsh, plain, and grim. Mr Dickens capitalised on that experience for most of his fiction, revealing nothing of the future that England would become.
Mr Watts, the self-appointed envoy for Mr Dickens and the bearer of Western knowledge who risked his life for the Bougainvilleans, was caught up in the armed conflict between the PNG Government and Bougainvilleans. 
In much the same way Great Expectations was a window into the world of Mister Pip, I think of Lloyd Jones’ Mister Pip as a window into the world of Ms Laimo, her people, and Mr Watts, during the Bougainville crisis. Her escape from the dangers of the Bougainville conflict to Australia provides us a window into one of the defining moments in our history.  She joins up with her father in Australia and grows up in exile from her country.
Ms Laimo’s discovery, that embellishment belongs to life rather than literature, is our observation of life. We need also to ask how embellishment might have anything to do with our lives. Embellishment occurs the moment we adorn ourselves with underserved titles to appear powerful. Others accentuate self-importance without demonstrating the solid foundations for such titles and offices they hold. Still others make themselves look so big without evidence of productivity, progress, or substance. Our society is now saturated with such people. Striping away their masks would reveal their emptiness, hollowness, and a magnitude of fictitious lives.
At least that is one thing I learnt from reading Lloyd Jones’ Mister Pip, which gave me a new sense of appreciation of the works of Mr Dickens.

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