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{{Short description|1970 novel by Robertson Davies}}
{{More citations needed|date=March 2010}}
{{Infobox book
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'''''Fifth Business''''' (1970) is a novel by [[Canadians|Canadian]] writer [[Robertson Davies]].
First published by [[Macmillan of Canada]] in 1970, it is the first installment of Davies' best-known work, the ''[[The Deptford Trilogy|Deptford Trilogy]]'',<ref>[http://www.athabascau.ca/writers/rdavies.html "Writers"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100324161556/http://www.athabascau.ca/writers/rdavies.html |date=2010-03-24 }}, Athabasca University</ref> and explores the life of the narrator, Dunstan Ramsay. It was the novel that brought Davies to international attention.<ref>[https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/fifth-business "Fifth Business"] ''The Canadian Encyclopedia''</ref>
==Plot summary==
Dunstan Ramsay, an aging history teacher at Colborne College, becomes enraged by the patronizing tone of a newspaper article announcing his recent retirement, which appears to portray him as an unremarkable old man with no notable accomplishments to his name. Hoping to prove that he has lived a worthwhile and fulfilling life, Ramsay pens an indignant letter to the school's headmaster relating the story of his life, beginning with a childhood memory of an incident that occurred in his hometown of Deptford, [[Ontario]] in December 1908.
During a quarrel with a ten-year-old Ramsay (then known as "Dunstable Ramsay"), Ramsay’s wealthy friend Percy Boyd Staunton angrily hurls a snowball (inside of which is hidden a stone) at him, but accidentally hits his heavily pregnant neighbor Mary Dempster, causing her to prematurely give birth to a sickly child called "Paul". Apparently afflicted with severe mental trauma by the incident, Mrs. Dempster's behavior grows progressively more erratic until she is ostracized from polite society after being found having sex with a homeless tramp in a gravel pit, leading Paul Dempster to become an outcast in the village. While Ramsay takes pity on Paul and often keeps him company, Staunton refuses to take responsibility for throwing the snowball. The rift between the two deepens after Staunton begins a romantic relationship with Ramsay's crush Leola Cruikshank.
When Ramsay's gravely injured brother Willie apparently makes a miraculous recovery after Mrs. Dempster prays at his bedside, Ramsay comes to suspect that Mrs. Dempster is capable of performing miracles, which is seemingly confirmed after Ramsay himself has a vision of her shortly before miraculously surviving an artillery blast at the [[Battle of Passchendaele|Battle of Ypres]] in [[World War I]], losing his left leg in the process. Upon awakening in a military hospital from a six-month coma, he learns that he was initially presumed dead and posthumously won a [[Victoria Cross]], and that his parents died from Spanish Influenza before learning that he was still alive. While recovering in the hospital, Ramsay has an affair with nurse Diana Marfleet, but breaks up with her after rejecting her marriage proposal, prompting Diana to playfully nickname him "[[Dunstan]]" after the 10th-century English saint who supposedly resisted the temptations of the [[Devil]]; this conversation later inspires Ramsay to have his first name legally changed to "Dunstan". Upon returning to Deptford, he learns that Staunton has become engaged to Leola, while Mrs. Dempster has been taken in by a relative after apparently going insane, and Paul Dempster has run away from home to join the circus.
After becoming a schoolteacher, Ramsay earns a reputation as an eccentric due to his interest in [[hagiology]] (the study of saints). Meanwhile, Staunton—now known as "Boy," shortened from his middle name—becomes a fabulously wealthy businessman. Despite tacitly resenting Boy for his money and status, Ramsay maintains an uneasy friendship with him and Leola, often accepting his financial assistance. Later, Ramsay becomes convinced that Mrs. Dempster is a [[saint]] following a chance encounter with Joel Surgeoner—the man who had sex with her in the gravel pit—who miraculously turned his life around after his sexual encounter with her. After successfully tracking Mrs. Dempster to Toronto, Ramsay offers to become her caretaker.
Following the birth of her son David, Leola becomes increasingly unhappy with her marriage to Boy, finding herself unable to adjust to high-society life due to her provincial upbringing. The Stauntons' marital difficulties culminate in Leola unsuccessfully attempting suicide on Christmas Eve in 1936 after a fight with Boy. When Leola dies of pneumonia a few years later, Ramsay suspects that she intentionally brought about her death by leaving her window open.
Ramsay's deepening obsession with hagiology leads him to travel to Europe to meet with the [[Bollandists]] (a society of [[Jesuit]] scholars who chronicle the lives of saints) after they agree to publish one of his articles. During his trip, he develops a close relationship with elderly Jesuit priest Padre Blazon, who specializes in chronicling the earthly side of saints' lives, believing that most saints are much more flawed and human than history might choose to remember them.
While in [[Mexico City]] on a six-month [[sabbatical]] from Colborne College, Ramsay attends a magic show put on by the mysterious illusionist Magnus Eisengrim, who is revealed to be an adult Paul Dempster. Intrigued by Eisengrim's spectacular illusions, Ramsay joins his entourage as he tours the world with his magic act, and gradually becomes close to Eisengrim's wealthy patroness Liesl, an eccentric woman with a bizarre androgynous appearance. Liesl, who becomes Ramsay's lover, senses that he has never been truly happy, having spent most of his life being overshadowed by other people whose lives have intersected with his own. To help him make sense of his role in the world, Liesl suggests that Ramsay is fated to play the part of "fifth business," a term for a supporting player in a stage show whose role can’t be easily classified, but nonetheless plays a vital role in resolving the plot.
Ramsay's recollections ultimately reach their climax in 1968 after Ramsay and Eisengrim both cross paths with Boy following a show in [[Toronto]]. In a tense conversation, Eisengrim reveals his true identity to Boy, and Ramsay tells Eisengrim about the events in December 1908 that led to his premature birth. Recalling the incident, Ramsay states that the snowball that Boy threw at Mrs. Dempster had a rock concealed in it, and claims that he still has the rock. Boy, however, still refuses to admit to throwing the snowball, denying any responsibility for Mrs. Dempster's misfortunes. After Boy and Eisengrim storm out of the room, Ramsay finds the rock missing.
Hours later, Boy is found dead in his car after apparently driving into a river, leaving the police unsure whether his death was [[murder]] or [[suicide]]. Curiously, a stone is found placed in his mouth, which Ramsay believes to be the rock that Boy threw at Mrs. Dempster as a child. Later, while watching a fortune-telling display at Eisengrim's magic show, Ramsay collapses from a sudden [[heart attack]] after someone in the audience cries out "Who killed Boy Staunton?" Onstage, the fortune-telling "[[Brazen Head]]" cryptically replies that he was killed by five people: by himself, by the woman he knew, by the woman he did not know, by the man who granted his inmost wish, and by "the inevitable fifth, who was keeper of his conscience and the keeper of the stone."
With that, Ramsay concludes the story of his life, saying only, "And that, headmaster, is all I have to tell you."
==Themes==
{{original research|section|date=October 2016}}
Davies discusses several themes in the novel, perhaps the most important being the difference between [[materialism]] and [[spirituality]]. Davies asserts religion is not necessarily integral to the idea—demonstrated by the corrupt Reverend Leadbeater who reduces the Bible to mere economic terms.
Davies, then an avid student of [[Carl Jung]]'s ideas, deploys them in ''Fifth Business''. Characters are clear examples of [[Jungian archetype]]s and events demonstrate Jung's idea of [[synchronicity]].
Robertson Davies' interest in psychology has a massive influence on the actions in the book. The prominence of matriarchs in Dunstan's life can be linked to [[Sigmund Freud]]'s [[Oedipus complex]] (Dunstan loves Diana and Mrs. Dempster, despite their motherly positions in his life). Carl Jung's concept of individualisation plays a role when Liesl discusses Dunstan's yet-unlived life and the idea that he must have balance in his life. Erik Erikson's stages of psychosocial development can also be seen in the choices Boy makes compared to the choices Dunstan makes (e.g. Boy chooses intimacy while Dunstan chooses isolation).
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Davies allows us to peer through a window into his childhood in [[Thamesville, Ontario|Thamesville]], [[Ontario]] and through his young life into higher education and beyond through the character of Ramsay and the novels of the Deptford trilogy. In ''Fifth Business,'' Davies provides an account of his spirit, his memories, and his deeper life experiences. Or, as Diane Cole wrote in the ''New York Times'' soon after Davies' death, "Davies used his personal myths and archetypes to probe the possibilities of human good and evil, but always with a wickedly humorous wink."<ref name="cole">[https://www.nytimes.com/1996/02/18/books/the-grand-illusionist.html Diane Cole, "The Grand Illusionist"], ''New York Times,'' 18 February 1996</ref>
Some of the elements of character Percy Boyd Staunton's life resemble that of Davies' friend [[Vincent Massey]]. Both men became rich from their father's agricultural businesses. Both men enlisted in World War I, went into politics afterward and held cabinet positions, and strengthened Canada's ties with the [[Great Britain|mother country]]. Massey was appointed as the first Canada-born Governor General, Boy is likewise appointed Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario. The most convincing parallel is that Boy becomes the chair of the board of Governors which runs the school at which Ramsay teaches, much as Robertson Davies spent his career at the University of Toronto as the Master of [[Massey College]]. But the Staunton character is highly fictionalized. Davies has said that aspects of the character are more reflective of his father.
==Title==
{{quote|text=Those roles which, being neither those of hero nor Heroine, Confidante nor Villain, but which were none the less essential to bring about the Recognition or the denouement were called the Fifth Business in drama and Opera companies organized according to the old style; the player who acted these parts was often referred to as Fifth Business.|sign=purportedly [[Thomas Overskou|Tho. Overskou]]|source=''Den Danske Skueplads''}}
Pressured by his publisher to define "Fifth Business," Davies added this opening quotation.
==Principal characters==
*Dunstan (Dunstable) Ramsay – The protagonist and narrator. Ramsay has been offended by his retirement notice in the ''College Chronicle'' and intends to prove he has had an interesting life. He served in World War I and received a [[Victoria Cross]]. He
*'Boy' (Percy Boyd) Staunton – Ramsay's "lifelong friend and enemy" who
*Mary Dempster – Ten years older than Ramsay, she plays a pivotal role in his life. She has some saint-like qualities and is held in an insane asylum.
*Paul Dempster – Son of Mary Dempster. Ten years younger than Dunstan Ramsay, he outshines Ramsay in conjuring. He leaves town with a travelling circus. He becomes the magician known as 'Magnus Eisengrim,' and is the protagonist of ''[[World of Wonders (novel)|World of Wonders]]'' in this trilogy.
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