In Search of Arcadia

In several recent posts we have considered the concept of “Arcadia” and its contribution to Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited, and vice versa. BBC Four earlier this week transmitted a documentary entitled “In Search of Arcadia” presented by Dr Janina Ramirez and John Bailey. It considered a 12 mile stretch of the Thames from Hampton Court to Chiswick House and explained how landscape gardening developed there and how this was intended to incorporate the more natural and wilder Arcadian concept into the English garden that was previously more formal in construct. Dr Ramirez begins with a look at the 1638 painting of Nicholas Poussin usually referred to as “Et in Arcadia Ego” after the inscription on the tomb depicted. She shows the painting on her iPad rather than in its museum setting, so one assumes she is looking at the one in the Louvre and not its predecessor at Chatsworth House which would be of an earlier date.  See previous post.

Most of the program is taken up by consideration of the gardens and houses at Hampton Court, Twickenham, Marble Hill, Chiswick House and Syon House. These are used to illustrate the progression from Baroque formality at Hampton Court’s gardens to Arcadian naturalism of those at Syon House. Most of the literary discussion relates to Isaak Walton who wrote The Complete Angler and Alexander Pope who built a house and garden at Twickenham. All that remains of that is an underground grotto he built to connect the house with the garden. Pope is considered more as a gardener than a a poet. Waugh’s citation of the inscription from Poussin’s painting doesn’t get a mention nor does Brideshead Castle as an Arcadian concept, but one can’t have everything. To be fair, Waugh was more interested in describing the architecture of the house than the design of the garden.

The program can be viewed on the internet on BBC iPlayer for about the next four weeks. A UK internet connection is required.

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Huntington Waugh Conference Reviewed

Veteran Waugh scholar Robert Murray Davis has written an assessment of the recent Evelyn Waugh Conference at the Huntington Library in Pasadena, California. This is posted on the University of Leicester’s internet site:

The symposium can’t be compared to previous Waugh gatherings in Oxford, Austin, Downside, or Leicester because the sponsorship and focus of each were quite different. This was the most luxurious (if you don’t count the dinners in Oxford and Austin hosted by Bill Wendt), with quarters at the Cal Tech Athenaeum and dining at the Athenaeum and at the Huntington.

One sign of the efficiency of the service was the omelet I ordered on Friday morning, which not only arrived hot but stayed hot until I finished it. And at Rothenberg Hall at the Huntington, the paper towel dispenser was designed so well that single towels  could be picked up without dampening five others in the stack. This may seem minor– acting Huntington president Steve Hindle said that I was the only person who noticed the towels or for that matter the omelet–but it testifies to the care with which the institutions are designed and maintained.

Once problems with the sound system were overcome–sometimes by turning on the microphone switches–the papers were well received and the responses were varied, often lively, and sometimes carried on outside the sessions, even beyond the boundaries of the symposium.

What had earlier seemed a division between those who have studied Waugh for years and those brought in to work on the Complete Works of Evelyn Waugh because of their expertise in textual editing turned out in practice to be illusory or readily bridged. Several people of ages ranging from the twenties to the eighties mentioned that they were discouraged from working on Waugh, and this led, indirectly, to brief discussions of how to counter this disparagement of Waugh’s importance as a writer and increasing the number of people studying Waugh and his work. No conclusions were reached.

 

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Telegraph Names Brideshead Among Top TV Costume Dramas

On the occasion of ITV’s announcement of a new TV adaptation of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, the Daily Telegraph has produced an album from what its fashion editors consider the most sumptuous costume dramas of all time. Granada’s 1981 production of Brideshead Revisited is the earliest drama on the list. The Telegraph in this case is focused on costume over drama and includes a still of Diana Quick (who played Julia Flyte) wearing what it describes as “a cloche hat with a cream dropped waist dress.” Others included in the album of 20 range from three earlier adaptations of Jane Austen novels to the more recent Jackie, Mad Men and Game of Thrones.

In the National Geographic magazine, another chapter in the round-the-world walk of Paul Salopek (“Out of Eden Walk: Into Eden”) focuses on the plant life of Kyrgyzstan.  As he describes various wild flowers, Salopek is reminded of a passage from Evelyn Waugh:

As I hike out of Kyrgyzstan, traversing the lush valleys of the Alai Mountains bound for the neighboring state of Tajikistan, I rack my brain to recall the names of the constellations of flowers that, mile upon mile, I wade through: Poppies. Vetches. Bedstraws. St. John’s wort. Naturally I lifted these delightful names from the British press.

It is reassuring to know—in these anarchic, shark-pool, digital media days—that English newspapers still not only employ “gardening correspondents” but also send them on far-flung assignment to remotest Kyrgyzstan to botanize, on horseback, for readers. (“Under hot sun we trot ever higher past wild white roses and rocks crammed with saxifrage and campanulas.”) It is no accident that Evelyn Waugh chose a mild-mannered nature writer as his foil in the novel Scoop, his classic satire of war correspondence. (“Feather-footed through the plashy fen passes the questing vole,” writes his garden-columnist hero, who is shipped off to an African war zone by mistake.)

Finally, an unnamed Twitter user has set up a page for posting favorite quotations from the works of Evelyn Waugh. Here’s a link provided by one of our readers: Evelyn Waugh (@waughquotes) | Twitter

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The Roman Empire and Freedom of Movement

The feature of EU membership which more than any other seems to have contributed to Britain’s exit from that institution is freedom of movement. Yet, as explained in a recent article in the Catholic Herald, there is nothing particularly innovative about this concept as is demonstrated by a look at several early Christians. St Paul, St Augustine and several others (including St Helena) are examples of the free movement that existed within the Roman Empire where subjects considered being Roman more important than belonging to a more narrow ethnic or linguistic group into which they were born. The article offers this by way of discussion:

You may recall Evelyn Waugh’s wonderful novel Helena, where the heroine, daughter of Old King Coel, born in Colchester, sees Rome for the first time as an old lady. Of course, we know very little for sure about the origins of the Empress Helen, but one thing is for sure, she travelled widely all over the Empire, as did her son, and considered herself Roman, an identity that transcended birthplace and ethnicity.

Similarly, St Augustine was likely a dark-skinned Berber and St Paul was a Jew and a Pharisee but these were details as opposed to the importance of their Roman citizenship which allowed them to move freely from place to place. While it is not spelled out in the article, the implication is that this freedom of movement was important to the spread of early Christianity. The historic concept has been popularized recently in writings of historian Mary Beard but these have come too late to be of any use in the campaign against Brexit.

Another Roman Catholic source, this one an apparently unofficial weblog called The Rad Trad, has published an article on the ever-vexing topic of birth control (referred to in religious circles as “Natural Family Planning” or “NFP”). In the course of the discussion, published during NFP Awareness Week, it quotes Evelyn Waugh at some length:

“Evelyn Waugh mocked the rise of the birth control movement in his 1932 novel Black Mischief, when the Minister of Modernization in a small African nation attempted to spread propaganda to the uneducated masses by means of a colorful poster design:

It portrayed two contrasted scenes. On one side a native hut of hideous squalor, overrun with children of every age, suffering from every physical incapacity — crippled, deformed, blind, spotted and insane; the father prematurely aged with paternity squatted by an empty cook-pot; through the door could be seen his wife, withered and bowed with child bearing, desperately hoeing at their inadequate crop. On the other side a bright parlour furnished with chairs and table; the mother, young and beautiful, sat at her ease eating a huge slice of raw meat; her husband smoked a long Arab hubble-bubble (still a caste mark of leisure throughout the land), while a single, healthy child sat between them reading a newspaper. Inset between the two pictures was a detailed drawing of some up-to-date contraceptive apparatus and the words in Sakuyu: WHICH HOME DO YOU CHOOSE?

Interest in the pictures was unbounded; all over the island woolly heads were nodding, black hands pointing, tongues clicking against filed teeth in unsyntactical dialects. Nowhere was there any doubt about the meaning of the beautiful new pictures.

See: on right hand: there is rich man: smoke pipe like big chief: but his wife she no good: sit eating meat: and rich man no good: he only one son.

See: on left hand: poor man: not much to eat: but his wife she very good, work hard in field: man he good too: eleven children: one very mad, very holy. And in the middle: Emperor’s juju. Make you like that good man with eleven children.

And as a result, despite admonitions from squire and vicar, the peasantry began pouring into town for the gala, eagerly awaiting initiation to the fine new magic of virility and fecundity.”

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Dutch Newspaper Features Brideshead

Rotterdam newspaper Algemeen Dagblad (or AD) has published an article about the attitude toward homosexuality in films. The two film adaptations of Brideshead Revisited are used as as a case study of developments over the more than 35 years that separates them. Film editor Ab Zagt explains that:

…the television series Brideshead Revisited (1981) from writer Evelyn Waugh impressed him. The friendship between the aristocratic student Sebastian Flyte (the somewhat oblivious Anthony Andrews) and his bosom friend Charles Ryder (fabulously interpreted by Jeremy Irons) initially looks platonic, but Sebastian, who was very attached to his teddy bear, was gay, as could be seen by a blind person. According to a later biography, Waugh had relationships with three male fellow students during his stay in Oxford. His masterpiece from 1945 would be based on that. The first television series remained chaste. In 2008, a new Brideshead version was made for the cinema, in which Sebastian tries to kiss Charles. He keeps on trying, because Charles was not responsive to this approach. Yet, this moment, caused much fuss among British viewers.

The article goes on to consider the treatment of homosexual themes in films from Ben Hur (1959) to La vie d’Adele (2013) and concludes:

Nowadays, directors do not have to pretend to be so secretly gay and lesbian in their movies. A movie like Brokeback Mountain (2005), about two homosexual cowboys, has certainly done groundbreaking work. It is the best viewed and award winning gay film of all time.

Translation is by Goggle with a few edits.

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Waugh and Solitude

In an article on the weblog PanAm Post, Alejandro Jenkins declares the novel One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez to be overrated. One reason for this is the underdeveloped characters:

The idea behind Hundred Years of Solitude (to create a saga-esque mythology for post-independence Latin America) is attractively ambitious, to be sure, but the actual execution is almost entirely lifeless. The key problem is that there’s hardly any character in it that can hold any interest for the reader, or that even has a well defined personality. … García Márquez himself must’ve been aware of this, because he re-uses the same names over and over, until the reader hardly knows or cares who’s who. … But this is a huge weakness in a work of literature (it reminds of the joke in Evelyn Waugh’s Decline and Fall about an avant-garde film that failed at the box office because of its “austere elimination of all human characters”).

Another novel (this one more recent and described by Amazon as a #1 international best seller) is said to have been influenced by Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited. This is The Awakening of Miss Prim by Natalia Sanmartin Fennolera. This influence is explained by its author in a paper presented at a recent conference at Clear Creek Abbey in Oklahoma:

The reason I mention Evelyn Waugh and the clear understanding he had about the effect of grace in himself, is because his Brideshead Revisited served as a model for me, as I traced out the story of conversion in The Awakening of Miss Prim. In his magnificent novel, Waugh tried to explain, within the bounds of possibility, how grace guides us through the events of our lives, through the people we know, through our joys and our pains, through the contemplation of beauty and, most especially, through our wounds and failures. That is what I tried to do in the book, within all the limitations imposed by this theme…Waugh himself once said that conversion is like climbing up a chimney, passing from a world of shadows, where everything is like a caricature, to the real world. Cardinal John Henry Newman’s epitaph reflects a similar idea: “Out of shadows and images unto the Truth.”

The paper is available in The American Conservative.

Finally, in today’s Yorkshire Post there is an illustrated story of the Temple of the Four Winds at the Castle Howard estate near York.

…in both the film and the television series, The Temple of the Four Winds was the location for a frivolous day of wine-tasting and indulgence for central characters Charles Ryder and Sebastian Flyte. Building of Castle Howard began in 1699 and took more than 100 years to complete, with work on The Temple of the Four Winds starting in 1724 and not being completed until 1738. Architect Sir John Vanbrugh who designed the temple modelled on the Villa La Rotonda is a Renaissance villa just outside Vicenza in Italy did not live to see its completion, dying in 1726.

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Scribble, Scribble, Mr Waugh

In their Daily Express column, Richard and Judy are reminded of Evelyn Waugh in a noisy pub where they can hardly here a conversation:

But then the background cacophony dropped momentarily, just long enough for me to pick up a patrician, upper-class drawl saying: “Of course, my dear, if he hadn’t been your grandfather he never would’ve got a single, solitary f***.”

Uhh?!? I spun around from our table. Impossible to detect where the remark had originated as the background sound level surged to deafening again.

But I spotted a suspect. A well-known stage actress with a much older man I reckoned was probably her agent. If Evelyn Waugh were still with us he’d have scribbled the remark down for his next novel.

Perhaps they were reminded of the incident described by Waugh in his diaries when he was a schoolteacher in Wales. This is included in a report in the North Wales newspaper the Daily Post about the real life counterpart of the Llanaba School from Decline and Fall (known as Arnold House):

Depressed by the spartan atmosphere at Arnold House Waugh often sought solace in the local pub Fair View Inn – known as “Mrs Roberts’ pub” in both his diaries and in Decline and Fall. Waugh’s diary entry made on March 16, 1925, said he went to the Fair View where a eunuch taught him a toast in Welsh. He wrote it down on an envelope which he later lost. However, it meant ‘Here’s success to the temperance workers’.

There is also a quote from a student who attended the school when Waugh was a teacher:

…Tim Kershaw, of Preswylfa, in Tyn-y-Groes, contacted the Weekly News in 1988, with his memories of one of England’s most revered writers. He said: “I remember Waugh well.” Tim went to the school in 1925 as a boy of nine. He was glad he wasn’t in Waugh’s class as “he was very sarcastic, which doesn’t go down well with little boys of nine. “Once I ran out of writing paper in a school exam, and had to go to his desk to ask for more.He looked at me with some disgust, and said: ‘Filthy little boy, you’ve got ink on your face.’ When I had to go back for more paper sometime later, he remarked ‘Filthy little boy, you’ve still got ink on your face.’ I thought this was a bit unreasonable, but got even with him on a school walk, when I pushed a snail down his neck.” The boarding house where the children slept is still called Arnold House and is presently a sheltered housing for vulnerable adults.

Finally, the Guardian reports the death of a Waugh fan. This is Andrew Keogh a London barrister who recently died at the age of 66. According to the obituary:

He enjoyed Indian, Greek and Italian food, good wine, especially Malbec, and real ale, especially Young’s bitter, marijuana, the novels of Evelyn Waugh, and the music of the Grateful Dead, New Riders of the Purple Sage and Bob Marley and the Wailers.

The Guardian also reports that he was a convert from Roman Catholicism to Anglicanism and “author of the longstanding White Rabbit blog, of two published novels, twentytwelve (2006), and The Killing Room (2013), and of the unfinished Diary of a Jobbing Barrister.” Sounds like an interesting guy.

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POMF and the ISBN

An article in the TLS discusses the history of the ISBN (International Standard Book Number) which appears on the copyright page of all books. According to Adrian Tahourdin, this was introduced in the late 1960s and became more important after computers came into general use in the 1990s. After describing what a typical copyright page looks like today, Tahourdin selects the Penguin 1951 edition of Waugh’s Put Out More Flags as an example of what was included in pre-ISBN days:

It was different in pre-ISBN days. Take, for example, Evelyn Waugh’s Put Out More Flags (1942) in the old orange and cream Penguin edition – in this case from 1951. The back cover has only a black-and-white photograph of the youngish author (by Yevonde) and a potted biography. The price of the book appears on the front – 1/6, i.e. one shilling and sixpence. (At least it doesn’t have the rather offputting “Not for sale in the US/Canada” that used to appear on so many books.) On the inside flyleaf there is a precis of the book we are about to read: “The characters with whom Evelyn Waugh has entertained us in such novels as Decline and Fall and Vile Bodies are here encountered in a different environment . . .”. On the title page is an Author’s Note: “The military operation described in Chapter III is wholly imaginary. No existing unit of His Majesty’s Forces is represented there, or anywhere, directly or indirectly. No character is derived from any living man or woman. E.W.”

Tahourdin doesn’t explain why this book was selected  nor does he indicate how this edition might differ from the original Penguin of 1943 (a scarce wartime printing) or from current Penguin editions that carry the ISBN. Indeed, recently Penguin has been selling both a paperback and hardback edition of the novel. Are there different ISBNs for each one, I wonder?

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Den of Geek Meets The Loved One

Yet another article has appeared linking Waugh’s 1947 novel The Loved One with Billy Wilder’s 1950 film Sunset Boulevard. See earlier posts. This is posted on entertainment website Den of Geek and is written by Tony Sokol:

Sunset Boulevard‘s cinematographer John Seitz said Wilder “had wanted to do The Loved One, but couldn’t obtain the rights.” British author’s Evelyn Waugh’s satirical 1948 novel was about a failed screenwriter who lives with a silent film star and works in a cemetery. At one point Norma mistakes Joe for a funeral director and asks for her coffin to be white, as well as specially lined with satin. White, pink, or maybe bright flaming red. Gossip columnist Hedda Hopper, who plays herself in the movie, wrote that “Billy Wilder … was crazy about Evelyn Waugh’s book The Loved One, and the studio wanted to buy it.”

Norma has actually called a funeral director to bury her pet chimpanzee, and failing scriptwriter Joe Gillis is mistaken for the pet cemetery’s employee. Waugh’s character Dennis Barlow, also a failed screenwriter, worked at the Happy Hunting Ground, a pet cemetery near Hollywood. So the link to Waugh’s novel is even closer than suggested. Whether Wilder could have done a better job adapting Waugh’s novel than did Tony Richardson in the 1960s is impossible to say (although it wouldn’t have been much of a challenge). But since Sunset Boulevard has become a classic with its own story, it may be just as well things worked out as they did. Sokol’s article adds some interesting details about an actual murder that contributed to the plot of Wilder’s film.

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Waugh’s Claret Phobia

London wine merchants Berry Bros & Rudd have posted on their internet site an article by Auberon Waugh about his father’s knowledge of wine. This originally appeared in their house journal Number Three St James’s Street for Spring 1986. They claim Evelyn Waugh to have been a regular customer but should not be confused with another wine merchant Saccone & Speed that published Evelyn Waugh’s booklet Wine in Peace and War (1947). In his article Auberon explains that his father’s wine knowledgeability is probably overrated:

I was never entirely convinced that my Father, for all his poetic gifts, knew very much about wine. Certainly his brother, Alec, knew much more. When Evelyn wrote those words [in a 1937 article], he was just laying down his first cellar. My Grandfather, Arthur Waugh, who was a publisher and critic, drank nothing but Keystone Australian Burgundy, a beverage which he believed to have tonic properties, much to the embarrassment of his two sons.

The most interesting feature of Auberon’s quite comprehensive article is his description of his father’s total aversion to claret (the red wine of Bordeaux) following the attack of mania that is documented in The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold:

Plainly, this violent repudiation of the world’s second best wine-producing area was the result of some psychological trauma, if not actual brain damage. He was quite happy to experiment with wines from unlikely places like Chile (probably of Cabernet base, although in those days they did not specify the grape) and once discovered a new enthusiasm for the red wines of Germany. Even more shaming than that, he came back from Rhodesia one day announcing a new discovery from Portugal called Mateus Rosé, and drank it through one whole summer. Whenever challenged with this, I loyally maintain that the Mateus Rosé of the late ‘50s was a quite different wine from the sugary pink fizz of today, but I do not honestly know where the truth lies…

I think I may have one clue, which is neither psychological nor biochemical, for Evelyn Waugh’s repudiation of claret. For some reason, he always referred to it as “clart”, even in such homely expressions as “to tap the claret”, meaning to draw blood in a fight. “Have a glass of clart,” he would say. Some had difficulty in understanding what he meant, but he persisted. Then in 1956 there was published a rather shameful book called “Noblesse Oblige”, edited by Nancy Mitford, with contributions from herself, Waugh, John Betjeman, Christopher Sykes and others discussing the characteristics of the English upper class. In the course of his contribution, Sykes – who was a friend of my Father’s despite being, as he frequently pointed out, of better breeding – mentioned “a Gloucestershire landowner” who believed “that persons of family always refer to the wines of Bordeaux as ‘clart’, to rhyme with cart”. Mr Sykes opined that “this delusion” showed “an impulse towards gentility” which might be preferable to the contrary impulse, among true aristocrats, towards affecting the mannerisms of the proletariat. My Father spotted the reference to himself immediately, and although he took it in good part, it must have left him in something of a quandary. Either he had to drop his harmless affectation in deference to the mockery of a younger man and lesser artist, which he did not deign to do, or he had to persist in the awareness that everyone was sniggering at him as the Gloucestershire landowner who said “clart” when he meant “claret”. I do not know how much influence it had on his subsequent behaviour, but it is fact that within a year he had sold not only his house in Gloucestershire but also all his claret, and never touched the stuff again.

 

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