Marjorie Wilenski's "Table Two" is a novel published in 1942, considering British office workers during the September 1940 London Blitz. At the time the uncertainty of how WW2 would end and not knowing if Germany would win or lose. Different personalities bring humor to the office politics during this dark time. I enjoyed the Anne/Sebastian/Elise scenario. Though Elise Pearne can be blunt and unsociable, I hoped that things would work out for her in the end.
Story in short -Ministry of Foreign Intelligence Table Two government women workers are a varied sort.
➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 4
Marjorie Wilenski’s only novel, as biting and funny as Barbara Pym at her crankiest, follows an office of women translators at the fictional Ministry of Foreign Intelligence in London as they bicker, manoeuvre, and shift allegiances just before and then in the thick of the London Blitz. Its two main characters are sharply contrasted—the clever, efficient but terminally bitter middle-aged Elsie Pearne and the cheerful, pretty young newcomer Anne Shepley-Rice, whose once
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 7
affluent family has fallen on hard times. Their colleagues include a fresh air fanatic, a busybody, an inept supervisor and her trusty deputy, the dithering, chatty Mrs Jolly, and a former lady’s companion who delights in bad news and disaster.
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 9
The cast of Table Two are instantly recognizable to any office worker of today. But this portrayal of a 1940s office is a rare treasure for modern readers, showing, with vivid detail and dark humour, how a group of
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 11
independent, capable women experienced some of the darkest days of World War II.
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 36
Marjorie Isola Harland (1889-1965) was born in Kensington, London, the elder daughter of Wilson Harland, an engineer, and his wife, Marie.
❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌spoiler alert
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 37
Her younger sister, Eileen, was born in 1893. Other details of Marjorie’s life are infuriatingly sketchy. The papers filed by both parents in a long-drawn-out case for judicial separation suggest that in her early years Marjorie witnessed many upsetting scenes in the family home, her mother citing in lurid detail numerous instances of her husband’s drunken violence and swearing. By 1902 the couple had separated, Wilson Harland returning to live with his mother
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 40
in Brixton while Marie retained custody of her daughters. In 1907 the three were living at 37 Dorset Square, Marylebone when Eileen died, aged only 14.
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 43
Nothing else is known of Marjorie’s early years other than that she was clearly well-schooled
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 43
schooled for she graduated from Bedford College in 1911 with a 2nd class degree in history. Three years later, on 5 August 1914, she married Reginald Howard Wilenski (1887-1975) at Kensington Registry Office. At this stage of his life Wilenski was something of a bohemian, having cut short his time at Oxford to try his luck as an artist in Paris. Returning to London he maintained a Kensington studio until 1915 but finding that creating art did not pay instead
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 47
turned his hand to art criticism, for which he became renowned. During the First World War he spent some time working in the intelligence department of the War Office and by September 1939 had again been recruited for war work, this time by the Ministry of Information. Marjorie, meanwhile, appears on the Register taken on 29 September 1939 as ‘luggage buyer in a department store’, a situation that would certainly have provided her with plenty of opportunity to
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 50
observe her fellow workers. With a nod to her own experience, one of the occupants of Table Two, Mrs Just, had previously been ‘an assistant-buyer in an Oxford Street store’. In fact Marjorie’s position in that department store might have been similar to that once held by 48-year-old Elsie Pearne, perhaps the novel’s most intriguing character, dominating as she does Table Two with her bad temper and sharp tongue. She had once ruled over offices in
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 53
Paris, Berlin, Barcelona, and Geneva but now, driven out of mainland Europe by war, was forced to accept work with lower status and pay. Like Elsie, four others of the group had worked all their lives to support themselves and now in 1940 faced worrying uncertainty as businesses closed or moved out of London, putting thousands out of work. No wonder Miss Purbeck, who had spent a lifetime in Italian pensions tending the demands of a series of old ladies, was so fearful
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 56
of losing her position as a translator. Others at the Table are voluntary ‘war workers’, never before having undertaken paid work but prepared now to ‘do their bit’ for their country. Like them, the pretty heroine, Anne Shepley-Rice, had never expected to work, but orphaned and with the family money lost, is setting out, aged 22, to earn her own living. Luckily she had the contacts and an ability in Portuguese to ensure she landed on Table Two. For what the women
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 59
have in common is a facility in at least one foreign language. For some, like Elsie, this had been earned through hard study; for others it is a by-product of an entirely different way of life. Aristocratic Hon. Cecilia Dunkerley had learned ‘several uncommon and useful languages’ when accompanying her diplomat father to the Balkans. The tension between the ‘professional workers’ and the volunteers is palpable, with, at its heart, the relationship between Elsie, soured by
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 63
life’s treatment, and Anne, on the brink of her new life and with romance blossoming. The author’s description of Elsie’s rented room in Brondesbury, which she had tried to make fashionable with a ‘carefully thought out’ colour scheme of yellow ochre and green, touches the heart. Hanging on the wall is a print of Titian’s ‘Young man with Gloves’, a faint likeness of a long-lost, nebulous, romantic attachment; while in her Kensington room Anne is able to display a photograph of Sebastian, her childhood sweetheart. We first meet Table Two at lunchtime on 2 September 1940 in the Ministry of Foreign Information, which Marjorie Wilenski places on the edge of Lincoln’s Inn Fields, as Elsie and Anne watch an aerial dogfight high in the ‘deep blue sky’. At this time ‘no-one in London was then expecting air-raids’ but five days later everything changed. On 7 September the women have their first experience of the Blitz,
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 69
night-time bombing that was to dominate life through the autumn. They, like other Londoners, become used to sleeping in shelters and rising the next morning to ‘gape and gaze at the great craters in the streets – [which] by Friday were just a familiar and tiresome obstruction to traffic; there were too many other things to think of . . .’ But this cataclysm is merely a background to the bickering and jousting for position around Table Two when it is revealed
Highlight (Yellow) | Location 72
that a new Deputy Language Supervisor will soon be required.
Elise really had no personalities skills and sometimes had a paranoia that seemed to stem from her inability to relate to others which started in her childhood. When she saw a chance at a new friend though more than 20 years younger, she wanted Anne to be this person and dreamed of them being roommates. Elise was jealous of anyone getting in the way of this friendship and not only that she was jealous of Anne's youth and her having someone who loved her. Elise was used to a life alone and though she caused the trouble with the lost letter, she also could not see someone else pay for something she did. She had lost her chance as a buyer by clearing Anne but in the end she had the job.
Many of the women were annoying and petty, especially since several were not very proficient in their assigned languages. The doom and gloom who got excited when tragedy happened was indeed sickening. Elise was very good at her job but did not have the skills to keep peace in the office. Back biting especially against Elise was top on the list. Anne started to change her attitude towards Elise after the dinner out with Sebastian because of her rudeness to him and O'Connor. Miss Saltman being in charge yet she needs the help of the Deputies.
Anne loved Sebastian but he seemed a bit like a coward when he had not told Mary about his engagement and his putting off cancelling his going to her friend's party. He even was going to kiss Mary when he thought she was expecting him to but the fire distracted him. I am sure that he will be true now but it seems that Anne will have to step up for certain things.
I loved that Anne and Mrs. Doweson loved dogs and any mention of them was delightful.