Waugh’s Religion

In the current issue of the U.K. paper The Catholic Herald, an article (“Seduced by the ‘Devil’ Hitler” by Francis Phillips) opens with a familiar quote from Evelyn Waugh:

There is a well-known story about the novelist Evelyn Waugh. He was once very rude and his hostess remonstrated: “How can you behave so badly – and you a Catholic!” Waugh replied: “You have no idea how much nastier I would be if I was not a Catholic. Without supernatural aid I would hardly be a human being.” We remember this riposte both because it is redolent of Waugh’s mordant humour and because it reminds us that, without grace, we would all “hardly be a human being”…But it is the shocked reaction to Waugh’s behaviour that interests me. His hostess had assumed a higher standard of behaviour on the part of Catholics than for others.

The source of Waugh’s quote is apocryphal, and not something from his writings. It is reported to have been made by him to Nancy Mitford in Paris after he had been particularly rude to a guest (an unnamed young French intellectual) she had invited to dinner to meet him.  It was recorded by Christopher Sykes who claims he was told by Nancy Mitford (Sykes, A Biography of Evelyn Waugh, Penguin, 1977, pp. 448-49). Another biographer, Selina Hastings (London, 1994, pp. 505, 679), quotes a slightly different version from a letter of Nancy Mitford to Pamela Berry, dated 17 May 1950:

So I had Evelyn from Friday morning to Monday & still love him though at one point I felt obliged to ask how he reconciles being so horrible with being a Christian. He replied rather sadly that were he not a Christian he would be even more horrible (difficult) & anyway would have committed suicide years ago…He met my publisher, a charming middle class Frenchman, & was so dreadful to him I had to apologize. (The Letters of Nancy Mitford, Charlotte Mosley, ed., London, 1993, pp. 256-57).

Of the two versions, the letter written by Nancy Mitford herself more or less contemporaneously with the remark, would appear to be the more accurate. It is, however, the Sykes version, based only on hearsay and apparently reduced to writing more than 20 years after the event, that has engraved itself into the journalistic canon.

Share
Posted in Biographies, Catholicism, Letters, Newspapers | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Waugh’s Religion

Waugh and the Winter Break

One of the bloggers on the New Criterion magazine became so depressed by the New York weather he looked for books describing adventures in warmer climes:

With that in mind, I’ve been reading Evelyn Waugh’s riotous A Tourist in Africa, which details a late-1950s jaunt down and around the African continent. On the first page, Waugh “declare[s] smugly that I am at the time of my life when I have to winter abroad, but in truth I reached that age thirty years ago.” As a man of similar age to the young-fogey Waugh, I can’t help but agree.

Thanks to David Lull for this reference to what must be one of Waugh’s least read and seldom cited works.

Share
Posted in A Tourist in Africa | Tagged , | Comments Off on Waugh and the Winter Break

Waugh and the Country House Revival

A recent article in Spear’s magazine by its editor-in-chief and founder William Cash deals with several subjects, including the revival of the country house. The magazine is devoted to asset/investment management and the good life and has been described as a cross between Forbes and Vanity Fair. In the appropriately-named Cash’s view, Waugh (or more particularly his novel Brideshead Revisited) played a key role in saving the country house:

Evelyn Waugh liked to describe the English country house as our nation’s greatest contribution to Western civilisation. But it nearly didn’t survive as an art form. A … little-noticed anniversary in 2015 was the 40th of the ‘Destruction of the Country House, 1875-1975’ exhibition at the Victoria & Albert Museum. The show is a rare example of how an art exhibition can change the political mood.

Following the V&A show, public and government appetite for saving our great heritage improved. But it wasn’t until the 1980s, with the TV adaptation of Brideshead Revisited, combined with the ‘Treasure Houses of Britain’ exhibition at the National Gallery in Washington, opened with a gala ball attended by the Prince and Princess of Wales, that the idea of the English country house was reborn and fĂȘted again.

That may overstate somewhat the importance Waugh attributed to the country house. Cash goes on, however, to describe a recently increased interest in reviving country houses in response to favourable government tax policy.

Share
Posted in Articles, Brideshead Revisited, Television | Tagged , | Comments Off on Waugh and the Country House Revival

Evelyn Waugh and Lady Chatterley

The latest online edition of the Journal of the Law Society of Scotland contains a review of the book Jeremy Hutchinson’s Case Studies published last year. The review mentions the case of R. v Penguin Books in which prosecution was brought against Penguin’s publication of Lady Chatterley’s Lover by D.H. Lawrence. Hutchinson appeared for the defence and the book describes their selection of witnesses:

The defence vetted nearly 200 potential witnesses from the cultural world, grading them on a scale from A (“probably excellent or necessary”) to D (“those not in top category”). Intriguingly, the latter group included both Robert Graves and Evelyn Waugh, the latter dubbing Lady Chatterley “dull, absurd in places and pretentious”.

The quote is taken from the letter Waugh wrote to Michael Rubinstein, solicitor for Penguin Books, who was responsible for vetting potential witnesses. The text of the letter has not, apparently, been published, but Christopher Sykes (Penguin, p. 574) says that Waugh “declined the invitation to give evidence.” In a letter to Ann Fleming at about the same time (10 November 1960, Letters, p. 552), Waugh says that he wishes he had been called as a witness

to explain to the bemused jury that Lawrence’s reputation had been made by an illiterate clique at Cambridge. He couldn’t write for toffee. He is right down in the Spender class.

The clique at Cambridge is no doubt the group of scholars that gathered around F.R. Leavis, Director of English Studies at Downing College and editor of the magazine Scrutiny, and his wife Queenie.

Share
Posted in Letters | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Evelyn Waugh and Lady Chatterley

Former Easton Court Hotel Now Holiday Cottage Rental

One portion of the Easton Court Hotel, where Waugh wrote Brideshead Revisited in February-June 1944, is now on offer as a self-catering holiday cottage. This is described on the website Trip Advisor:

A thatched 16th century Devon Longhouse, full of character, exposed beams, an inglenook fireplace, and much more … a real opportunity to live in a bit of history. Just over a mile from the centre of Chagford…The house has a strong literary history, being frequented by famous authors such as Evelyn Waugh who wrote Brideshead Revisited while staying here in 1944… Besides the three double, en-suite bedrooms, the property offers a modern dining kitchen, dining room, library and formal lounge with wonderful inglenook fireplace.

The current price for a week’s rental is ÂŁ794. The library, where Waugh is said to have done his writing, is pictured in the rental offer and seems to be a part of the rental.

Share
Posted in Brideshead Revisited, Items for Sale | Comments Off on Former Easton Court Hotel Now Holiday Cottage Rental

Heywood Hill Bookstore Still Thriving

The Mayfair bookstore where Waugh was a customer and his friend Nancy Mitford was a manager is profiled in this week’s New York Times “T” magazine (“Shelf Life” p. 196). This is the Heywood Hill book store, in an article by Sarah Lyall. She describes part of the shop’s business as putting together book collections for the private libraries of those who don’t have sufficient time to do so themselves. They also offer specialized book of the month services and continue to stock books for walk-in customers (who are described as more smartly dressed than the average tourist). Waugh’s regular correspondence with Nancy Mitford began while she was running the shop, and he continued to correspond with the new manager, Handasyde Buchanan, after she left. As Waugh’s barber was located next door, he was probably a regular visitor as well. While not mentioned in the article, Waugh does get a visual notice. In the photo of the shop’s present manager Nicky Dunne, he is holding a small book with a bright red and blue cover that is, in fact, a U.K. first edition of Waugh’s last novel, Unconditional Surrender.

Share
Posted in First Editions, London, Newspapers, Unconditional Surrender/The End of the Battle | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Heywood Hill Bookstore Still Thriving

George Osborne and the Brothers Waugh

In his latest column for the Independent newspaper (soon to be digital-only), D.J. Taylor expresses sympathy for Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne. This is on the occasion of the announcement last week that Osborne’s brother Adam had been stricken from the rolls of psychiatric practitioners for unprofessional behavior. This situation causes Taylor to think about previously embarrassing sibling behavior that has plagued politicians, most notably that of President Jimmy Carter’s brother, Billy. But Osborne’s embarrassment is distinguished from the outright rivalry which has arisen in families where two siblings pursue the same profession. This is particularly common in the fields of interest to Taylor such as sport, music and (and luckily for our readers) literature:

Much of Evelyn Waugh’s career, for example, was animated by the resentment he felt towards his elder brother, Alec, and the favouritism extended towards him by their father, Arthur. Although far more successful than his sibling, Evelyn could never let matters lie, noting in jacket copy that he was “the brother of the popular novelist Alec Waugh”, in feline disparagement of Alec’s pot-boiling trifles, and telling his friends that in the aftermath of his one late-period success, the best-selling Island in the Sun (1956), Alec “never drew a sober breath”. Handicapped by the fact that he greatly admired Waugh Jnr’s work, Alec made one or two feeble efforts to get even, but, when summoned to the witness box in a libel action that Evelyn brought against the Daily Express, denied all imputations of fraternal jealousy.

Evelyn brought the libel action against Nancy Spain and the Express for having suggested that Alec’s works were the better selling of the two (Martin Stannard, Evelyn Waugh: The Later Years, pp. 377 ff). Evelyn won the case with his brother’s help. Another literary rivalry offered is that between sisters A.S. Byatt and Margaret Drabble who have written dueling novels about writers engaged in sisterly competition.

Taylor has just written a book, The Prose Factory, in which the careers of the brothers Waugh and the sisters Antonia and Margaret are compared. Alec Waugh is, in fact, held out as perhaps the last example of a middlebrow “man of letters” who was able to succeed by the pen alone. Evelyn’s career also receives ample coverage.

Share
Posted in Alec Waugh, Articles, Newspapers | Tagged , , | Comments Off on George Osborne and the Brothers Waugh

Boot Magna School of Economics

A reporter for the Idaho Statesman is reminded of a character from Scoop in a recent story:

Robert Gordon’s new book on productivity in the U.S. economy, “The Rise and Fall of American Growth,” is masterful, but reminds me of the character in Evelyn Waugh’s comic novel “Scoop,” who sings, “change and decay in all around I see” while looking in the mirror to shave.

The character is William Boot’s Uncle Theodore, who frequently sings this line from the hymn Abide with me! Fast falls the eventide. He sang “with startling loudness” as he gazed out the morning-room window at Boot Magna. As Waugh described the scene:

Decay, rather than change, was characteristic of the immediate prospect…It was his habit to sing the same line over and over [as he awaited] the morning papers. (Scoop, pp. 18, 23)

The decay he witnessed was in the surroundings of Boot Magna rather than his own face in the mirror. Although as the oldest member of the household, his face would probably have reflected change and decay as well.

Share
Posted in Newspapers, Scoop | Tagged , | Comments Off on Boot Magna School of Economics

Comedian Ben Miller Names Waugh Among Favorites

The online edition of the Daily Mail carries an interview by Gwendolyn Smith of British comedian Ben Miller for the paper’s Event Magazine. Miller recently appeared in the BBC TV series Death in Paradise and has previously been seen in the the Armstrong and Miller shows on both Channel 4 and the BBC. He will present a new show called It’s Not Rocket Science starting next Tuesday on ITV.

In the Mail interview he describes his literary tastes:

Both my parents were English teachers, so I read a lot of books as a kid. Some of my favourites were by Dickens, and I adore Evelyn Waugh’s books, too. I remember crying with laughter over Decline And Fall and Scoop. I’ve read a lot of popular science recently, such as The Accidental Species by Henry Gee. It’s a really funny, punchy book that makes you think again about evolution.

Earlier this month he issued a book of his own entitled The Aliens Are Coming!:The Exciting and Extraordinary Science Behind Our Search for Life in the Universe.

Share
Posted in Decline and Fall, Interviews, Newspapers, Scoop, Television Programs | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Interview in The Lady Cites War Trilogy

Veteran British actor, Nicholas Farrell, is interviewed in a recent issue of The Lady magazine. He has appeared in numerous stage, screen and TV productions, including notably Chariots of Fire, The Iron Lady, and Foyle’s War, and is currently working on a double-bill stage production of Alan Bennett plays: An Englishman Abroad and A Question of Attribution. When asked his favorite book, he named Waugh’s war trilogy, Sword of Honour. The digital version of the interview is accompanied by a photo of the three books in the original UK dust wrappers. Farrell’s favorite film is The Third Man, written by Waugh’s friend Graham Greene.

Share
Posted in Interviews, Sword of Honour | Tagged , | Comments Off on Interview in The Lady Cites War Trilogy