David Pryce-Jones’s Signed Books

Literary critic and historian David Pryce-Jones has written another memoir. This one is called Signatures: Literary Encounters of a Lifetime and consists of 90 memoirs of the authors of books in his collection which contain their signatures. In each case the signings were made at his request, usually in a book he already owned. Typically, the signings took place when he arrived to interview the signer. The book has been reviewed widely (e.g.,Wall Street Journal, National Review and Washington Post) and excerpts have appeared in Standpoint (Arthur Koestler) and The Spectator (several subjects) . It was published in the USA last month and in the UK last week.

Among those memorialized, there are several of Waugh’s generation or the next one up or down. These include Harold Acton, Cyril Connolly, J B Priestley, Rose Macauley, Somerset Maugham, Aldous Huxley, Kingsley Amis and V S Naipaul. According to Joseph Epstein, who reviews the book in the Wall Street Journal, the essays provide a record of the decline of English culture over the period they cover: “traditions in dress, wit, intellectual life, were admirable in all ways” as exemplified in the early periods by those such as Winston Churchill, Evelyn Waugh, Rebecca West and Hugh Trevor-Roper. But those described from more recent times make England “seem more than a touch shabby, dull, dreary, symbolized by those two knights of woeful countenance Sir Mick Jagger and Sir Elton John” as well as the yet unknighted Jeremy Corbyn.

Epstein singles out for special praise Pryce-Jones’s portrait of Cyril Connolly who “was much taken by the endurance of writing. His own, though still readable, has not held up and he never came near writing the masterpiece that was the name of his desire.” That portrait ends with Epstein’s thoughts  “on the relations among Connolly, Evelyn Waugh and George Orwell about whom Mr Pryce-Jones writes, ‘These three writers disagreed but their opinion of each other is in the literary centerpiece of the age’.”

It seems odd that Pryce-Jones does not include a memoir of Waugh. But this may well be due to the fact that Waugh didn’t meet the criterion of having signed a book for Pryce-Jones. As noted in a previous post, Waugh seems to have kept him at some distance on the few occasions when they met, which were mostly arranged through the efforts of Theresa Waugh or her mother. Evelyn had a particular dislike for David Pryce-Jones’s father, Alan, and that may have made him wary of befriending his offspring. And it can’t have helped things that David Pryce-Jones wrote an unfavorable review in his 20s (Critical Heritage, p. 272: In an editorial comment, Martin Stannard wrote, “The piece offended Waugh who lost no time in informing its author of the fact”). Waugh wasn’t to know at the time that, after his death, Pryce-Jones would edit what has turned out to be a very valuable source of biographical material: Evelyn Waugh and His World (1973).

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Waugh’s Selfie

In a recent post we mentioned Evelyn Waugh’s appearance in a response to  Spectator competition #3148-Selfie. This was set by Lucy Vickery in the 10,000th edition of the magazine:

‘Some famous painters are thought to have slipped small self-portraits into their work. What if a well-known novelist had done the same with an added minor character? You are invited to submit the resulting extract (up to 150 words and please specify the author).’

When the results of the competition were announced, the Waugh entry, alas, was not among the five winning entries. It did, however, receive what can fairly be described as an honorable mention by Lucy Vickery:

‘There were creditable Hemingway cameos […] and I enjoyed J C H Mounsey’s sketch of self-confessed misanthrope Evelyn Waugh, and Martin Hurst’s of the rather less self-aware Jeffrey Archer.’

After our reader/contributor Dave Lull contacted Mr Mounsey, he kindly agreed to our publication of his Waugh pastiche:

Presently another figure appeared. He was short and stout and wore a tweed suit in a rather noticeable check. He had a florid complexion and fierce blue eyes and seemed to be furious about something.

‘Where is my butler?’ he demanded, waving a walking stick.

The attendant stepped forward. ‘He is assisting Lord Brassock with his morning bath.’

The angry man considered this. ‘Oh. Well. If his lordship needs him .
’

‘Quite so,’ said the attendant. ‘If you will return to your room, I will call you when Mr Bossom reappears.’

‘Mr Wagg has been with us for many years,’ he said as the little man stumped off. ‘He is under the delusion that he has a large staff waiting on him. In fact, there is only myself, the other nurses won’t have anything to do with him.’

‘Why not?’ asked William.

‘Because he finds it so hard to be nice.’

(Evelyn Waugh)

Thanks to all concerned.

 

 

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Brideshead Webinar Scheduled for 28 May

Castle Howard has announced a webinar to be conducted via Twitter on Thursday, 28 May. Here’s the text of the announcement:

The 28th May will mark the 75th Anniversary of the first publication of Brideshead Revisited. Our Curator will run a special free webinar on 28th to celebrate Castle Howard’s relationship with Evelyn Waugh’s classic novel.

E-mail at (click to email) to participate.

More details will be posted as they are received. Meanwhile, Chris Ridgway, who is Curator at Castle Howard and has previously written of its Brideshead connection, has recently posted an article that briefly addresses that theme. He first writes a fairly detailed description of the approach to Castle Howard from the south (ie. from York) which is the direction by which most visitors arrive. The 1981 Granada TV adaptation presumably used that approach for their arrival but the later film adaptors decided to arrive from the other direction to avoid repetition. As Ridgway notes in his article:

Nor should we forget the small print that states “Other approaches are available”. Evelyn Waugh first saw Castle Howard, from the less embellished northern end of the Avenue, and that inspired his creation of Brideshead Castle, and in particular Charles Ryder’s rapturous description of arriving there on an idyllic summer’s day. And Waugh’s novel offers another perspective, the ‘Revisited’ in Brideshead Revisited is a reminder that departure can be as significant as arrival, if only because when leaving one has a strong urge to return.

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Stephen Tennant: Underachieving Novelist

The publicity surrounding the shuttered Cecil Beaton exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery (see earlier posts) has apparently stirred up interest in Beaton’s friend and sometime collaborator Stephen Tennant. The Paris Review has posted an article reviewing Tennant’s career, with a particular focus on his writing, hardly any of whch was ever published. The article by Emma Garman is entitled “The Great Writer Who Never Wrote” and opens with this:

Stephen Tennant’s letters, thought Stephen Spender, were “the essence of English retention—objects for private consumption, deluxe samizdats.” Tennant also wrote poems, painted pictures, and worked on a novel, never to be completed. His most significant published work was his 1949 foreword to his friend Willa Cather’s essay collection, commended by Cather scholars and still in print today.

After a brief description of his eclectic childhood and his participation with Beaton as Bright Young People of the 1920s, the article takes up his writing, or lack thereof:

The […] phobia of being seen thwarted Tennant’s literary ambitions. As a young man, he wrote at least one novel, which he chose not to publish. And he spent many decades on his projected magnum opus, a Marseilles-inspired novel to be titled “Lascar,” conceived in 1938 and never to be completed. He revised, rewrote, and reconfigured the story of, in his words, “crude desires, lusts, fidelities, and treacheries.” He began other novels, and engaged in such procrastinatory activities as illustrations and designing covers, only to return to it. In 1941 Cyril Connolly’s magazine, Horizon, published a “Lascar” cover featuring one of Tennant’s own paintings. In Connolly’s opinion, he was “an interesting and pathetic phenomenon, a great writer who can’t write.” E. M. Forster, meanwhile, read sections and urged Tennant to stick with it. Various other author friends offered kind words and advice, including Elizabeth Bowen, Rosamond Lehmann, and Willa Cather, whose work he idolized. (He wasn’t very interested in male writers.) The American novelist, an unlikely but close friend, said she had high hopes for “Lascar.” In the eighth decade of Tennant’s life, and of the century, by which point he rarely ventured beyond the perimeter of Wilsford, he was still, supposedly, working on it.

The introduction suggests his literary brilliance surfaced in his letters, but so far as I am aware, those have never been published. Garman also credits him with appearing in other artists’ works, including works of fiction:

He inspired Nancy Mitford and Evelyn Waugh characters, was sculpted by Jacob Epstein, wrote style columns, and stole the show in the group photographs that helped launch Cecil Beaton’s century-defining career.

As noted in the article, Stephen also appears in his later years as V S Naipaul’s “landlord” in his novel The Enigma of Arrival. In Mitford’s case it is easy to see to see some of Stephen’s flamboyant campiness in the character of Lord Merlin in her Pursuit of Love trilogy, although Gerald Berners would seem to be the primary model. In Waugh’s case, however, it is difficult to see what character Stephen may have influenced. Aside from his homosexuality and domineering mother, his descriptions do not sound much like Sebastian Flyte:

Tennant’s gift for high camp, cultivated as least partly as camouflage for shyness, was always displayed at heroic levels. On one visit to New York, he disembarked the ship in full makeup, his hair in marcel waves, with a bunch of orchids in his hand. “Pin ‘em on!” jeered a customs officer, to which Tennant responded: “Oh, have you got a pin? What a wonderful welcome 
 you kind, kind creature.” John Waters, who in 2015 named Philip Hoare’s excellent biography of Tennant as one of his ten favorite books, put it thusly: “Aubrey Beardsley, Ronald Firbank, Denton Welch—believe me, Stephen Tennant made them all seem butch.”

That sounds a bit like Anthony Blanche/Ambrose Silk, but it is questionable how much room there may have been for Stephen in those characterizations after the contributions from Brian Howard and Harold Acton had been incorporated. Waugh would have have known Stephen from the BYP period but not as well as he knew Brian and Harold both of whom he had met at Oxford.

The topic of appearances of real life characters in novels recently featured in the Spectator’s competition 3148 set by Lucy Vickers in which she asked readers:

… to imagine what the result might have been had a well-known writer slipped a self-portrait into a scene from one of their works. […] There were creditable Hemingway cameos […] and I enjoyed J C H Mounsey’s sketch of self-confessed misanthrope Evelyn Waugh, and Martin Hurst’s of the rather less self-aware Jeffrey Archer.

Unfortunately, the Waugh example was not reprinted with the winners, which included scenes from works of Hilary Mantel, Sally Rooney, Raymond Chandler, P G Wodehouse and Charles Dickens. Perhaps they can be persuaded to print it in a later issue or allow the EWS to do so.

The Beaton exhibit at the NPG (also mentioned in the Paris Review article) continues to be shut down. This hasn’t prevented David Platzer from reporting on it in the Exhibition Note section of the current issue of The New Criterion:

Interest in Cecil Beaton, since his death aged seventy-six in 1980, continues to flourish. Hugo Vickers’s biography (1985) was so complete as to forestall other biographers, but regular Beaton exhibitions have appeared. Some shows have examined specific aspects of Beaton’s work, such as his war pictures or his royal portraits. Others have taken in his career as a whole from his 1920s beginnings through to his war work, his triumphs as a stage and screen designer, and even his turn as a 1960s “Rip-van With-It,” as Cyril Connolly, Beaton’s friend since prep school days, put it, though Beaton was wise enough to remain an observer rather than a participant in switchedon antics. This new exhibition is the first to concentrate on Beaton’s early achievements in the late 1920s.

In some ways, this was Beaton’s most attractive period. It was then that, aided by his Box Brownie camera, an original eye, and boundless creativity, he emerged from middle-class obscurity into the stratospheres of Vogue and aristocratic bohemia, a key player in and sometimes organizer of costumed country house “Lancret parties”-named after the French painter of outdoor fetes-with his celebrity caricatured as “David Lennox” in Evelyn Waugh’s Decline and Fall.

Two portraits of Waugh appear here, the first the famous 1930 Henry Lamb painting, the second Beaton’s 1932 photograph of him, at Beaton’s house in Ashcombe, Wiltshire, an alert Waugh looking severely out of an open French window. Waugh’s hostility to Beaton went back to early childhood prep school days, when Evelyn tormented Cecil, who must have struck him as girlish. Each enjoyed a meteoric rise to fame in the later 1920s. Moving in simi- lar circles and sharing friends, they were forced to meet again until Waugh’s death. Beaton, dreading Waugh the man, admired his writing, but Waugh dismissed Beaton’s achievements. The story of the way their paths crossed cries out to be described in a novel, the names and details changed.

Although the NPG exhibit remains closed, the catalogue by its curator Robin Muir is now for sale in the USA as well as the UK. Here’s a link.

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Another Tourist in Africa

What is probably Evelyn Waugh’s least read book is A Tourist in Africa (1960). Cyril Connolly proclaimed it to be “quite the thinnest piece of book-making which Mr Waugh has undertaken.” The hardback copies were remaindered after his death and there were no paperback reprints until 1986 (USA) and 1989 (UK). The first Penguin reprint, a hardback, did not appear until 2012.

It is ignored with good reason, as he wrote it quickly under a contract with the steamship company Union Castle Lines to pay for his voyage on their ship the SS Rhodesia Castle as well as a fee and expenses. Much of it reads as if he adopted some passages from Union Castle’s promotional material. Another travel writer has, however, used Waugh’s description of his 1959 trip to East Africa as a springboard for a description of his own trip to the same area 8 years later in 1967. This appears in the recent article by John Fox in the Kenyan paper Daily Nation:

[Waugh’s trip] was in early 1959. And I came out (as a very young man, let me add) on the SS Uganda eight years later. So he came to Kenya four years before independence; I came four years after. But I should be talking about our impressions of the voyages rather than our impressions of Kenya in transition.

Both the Rhodesia Castle and the Uganda were one-class boats. This made watching interesting for both Waugh and myself. On my ship, for example, a retired General and his wife made their own first-class by choosing to always have their meals on a small raised platform in the corner of the otherwise non-segregated dining room.

Waugh was struck by the way men, particularly the upper-class English, who wore shorts as soon as the ship entered the tropics. It made them look, he suggested, like overgrown little boys. He also pondered whether the loss of European prestige in hot countries was connected with this craven preference for comfort over dignity.

However, Waugh was old enough and a more frequent voyager than I, to notice a marked difference about the passengers. The majority were no longer adventurers or empire builders but, as he described them, ‘young, returning to work employees of governments and big commercial firms, taking up secure posts as clerks and schoolmasters and conservators of soil — sons of the Welfare State, well qualified, well behaved, enjoying an easy bonhomie with the stewards.

John Fox is apparently only a part-time writer and seems to have made a career in Kenya as a business executive rather than visiting the country as a tourist. He is said to have recently written a book about railroad journeys but no further information is provided. His 1967 trip to East Africa was more arduous than Waugh’s because, at the time he travelled, the Suez Canal was closed due to a war between Egypt and Israel, and he had to travel around the Cape of Good Hope, stopping only in Cape Town. Waugh’s ship proceeded directly through the Suez Canal, stopping in Port Said and Aden. The article concludes:

Waugh compares the privacy and spaciousness of a cruise ship to what he calls the squalor of a flight. There is something else too. In a plane, you can be whisked in only a few hours from the winter cold of Europe to the enduring warmth of the tropics. The journeying is more natural by ship. You have time to acclimatise to the changes in culture as well as in the weather. You have time to prepare yourself for the destination by talking to those fellow passengers who have experienced it. And there is also time to make friends — as well as enemies.

 

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Evelyn Waugh and “Sylvia Scarlett”

The Turner Classic Movies channel will tomorrow broadcast the 1935 George Cukor adaptation of Compton MacKenzie’s 1918 novel The Early Life and Adventures of Sylvia Scarlett. Waugh came close to adapting the screenplay for the film.

According to TCM’s notes for the film:

For years, Cukor had dreamed of filming Compton MacKenzie’s 1918 novel about a female con artist who dresses as a boy to elude customs inspectors. He had proposed the project at MGM, where he was currently under contract, but studio head Louis B. Mayer had turned him down. Then Cukor’s friend Hepburn, who had just scored a hit at RKO with Alice Adams (1935) proposed the film as her next project. The role seemed a natural for her; she had already set tongues wagging as one of the first women in the U.S. to wear trousers in public. Not only did she make a very convincing young man with her hair cut short, but Time Magazine’s reviewer would quip that “Sylvia Scarlett reveals the interesting fact that Katharine Hepburn is better looking as a boy than as a woman.” To play Hepburn’s partner in crime, a Cockney crook named Jimmy Monkley, she suggested Cary Grant, whom she had only recently met through their mutual friend Howard Hughes.

This is the point at which Waugh enters the story. The TCM notes say that “Cukor wanted British novelist Evelyn Waugh to write the screenplay. When that didn’t work out, he turned to John Collier, a noted author of bizarre short stories who had never written a film before.

They don’t explain why the Waugh proposal didn’t work out. The A D Peters Papers at the University of Texas show that Waugh agreed by telegram to Peters, his agent, on 27 April 1935 to write the adaptation. He followed up  the same day with a letter which is paraphrased as follows:

[Waugh] is certain that the Amercans will not be satisfied with his work, but Hollywood is close to the South Seas. G Miller, an American, says that Waugh can ask ÂŁ200 per week, but Waugh does not believe him. Can leave within seven to ten days but only if absolutely necessary. (R M Davis, Catalogue of Evelyn Waugh Collection, p. 112)

Matters were apparently still pending on 30 April 1935 when Waugh informed Peters that the Americans could find him at the Savile Club and that the G Miller was the source for the salary information. This would suggest that RKO may have choked on the ÂŁ200 per week asked by Waugh.

The man who got the job, John Collier, discussed his hiring in a 1973 interview with Max Wilk. He says that he was paid $500 per week for 8 weeks, and it was his first job in Hollywood. That would be about half the amount Waugh had asked at the then prevailing exchange rates. Collier explains that his selection:

“
was something of a mistake. Hugh Walpole had told George [Cukor] I’d be right for the job. George thought he was talking about Evelyn Waugh
he was very surprised when I showed up, and I wasn’t Evelyn Waugh.” Max Wilk, Schmucks with Underwoods: Conversations with Hollywood’s classic screenwriters (2004), pp. 128-29.

There is then a break in Waugh’s correspondence in the Peters papers from 1 May until 11 July. By the month after that he was already making arrangements to travel to Ethiopia to cover the expected war.

It may be just as well he didn’t write the script since it might have prevented him from going to Ethiopia and writing Scoop. Moreover, as described in the TCM notes, the scriptwriting was a chaotic process and involved the rescue efforts of two additional scriptwriters. But even those extra efforts failed. According to TCM:

…the preview was like a cold blast of reality. The audience hated the film, hooting and jeering at it. Moreover, when the seductive maid kissed Hepburn, three quarters of the audience walked out. Afterwards, producer Pandro S. Berman was furious. Realizing they had a flop on their hands, Cukor and Hepburn begged him to destroy the film, offering to make another picture in its place for free. But he wasn’t having any of that. He yelled, “I never want to see either of you again,” and stormed out. His threat held true where Cukor was concerned. The director would never work at RKO again. Hepburn still had a contract there, however, though later films would do little to repair the damage done by Sylvia Scarlett. Within a few years, she left Hollywood a failure, branded “box office poison” by exhibitors. Although the film would eventually win a devoted cult audience, it has yet to show a profit on its $1 million budget.

The film’s flop does not appear, however, to have ended John Collier’s career as a screenwriter. Nor did Katherine Hepburn and George Cukor stop making movies.

TCM will air the film tomorrow, Tuesday, 5 May 2020 at 1245p (presumably EDT). The film adaptation is also available on DVD, and the book itself is available in both print and digital editions.

 

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Roundup: Booklists Abound

There have been several lists of recommended books or TV adaptations published in the last week as the Wuhan coronavirus lockdown continues. A number of these have included works by Evelyn Waugh:

–The Daily Telegraph published two “Top 100” lists early in the week. The first was a list of British TV programs compiled by its identified staff writers. This included  Brideshead Revisited in its 1981 Granada TV adaptation:

This sumptuous adaptation of Evelyn Waugh’s novel was obsessively faithful to its source material and it showed. Leisurely and literary, this examination of the aristocratic Marchmain family seen through the eyes of Charles Ryder (Jeremy Irons, pictured right, with co-star Anthony Andrews) remains the benchmark for costume dramas.

A few days later, a list of the Top 100 novels appeared. It was described as extending “from Tolkien to Proust”. This was compiled by unidentified DT reporters and included translations as well as English language works. At #18 on the list is:

Scoop by Evelyn Waugh (1938). Waugh based the hapless junior reporter hero of this journalistic farce on former Telegraph editor Bill Deedes.

–Perhaps the most ambitious of the postings (more a catalogue than a list) is that in Sight & Sound magazine prepared by its contributors and entitled “Flick lit! 100 great novels about cinema”. The selection of  Waugh’s contribution is no surprise:

50. The Loved One. Evelyn Waugh, 1948

Fitfully a film fan – his diaries of the 1920s are flecked with references to silent comedies by Harold Lloyd and the like – Evelyn Waugh first travelled to Hollywood in 1947 to work on a screen adaptation of his smash novel Brideshead Revisited for MGM. The movie was never made, but Waugh went home with bile enough to fill this slender, scabrous volume, subtitled “An Anglo-American Tragedy” in what seems a jibe at Henry James. In its pages Dennis Barlow, a minor poet, comes to southern California from England to work for the Megalopolitan film studio, only to find himself in the employ of a posh pet cemetery, the Happier Hunting Ground, and drawn in by the idiot allure of AimĂ©e Thanatogenos, cosmetician for the dead at Whispering Glades, a spoof of state-of-the-art Forest Lawn cemetery. A biting burlesque of the death industry in the capital of screen immortality as later exposed in The American Way of Death, a muckraking nonfiction work by Jessica Mitford, who Waugh had known as a little girl in his Bright Young Things days. Tony Richardson drew on both Waugh and Mitford’s works for his film of The Loved One, released in 1965, and excoriated in a series of transatlantic cablegrams by Waugh, who after a sudden heart attack went to his own reward the following year, administered conditional absolution by the attending priest, though denied the much-desired active participation in last rites.

— Nick Pinkerton

The article is posted on BFI’s website.

Harper’s Bazaar devoted its #BazaarBookClub column to “the classic novels you now have a chance to read”. At the #3 slot was:

Brideshead Revisited, Evelyn Waugh

All of Evelyn Waugh’s novels are brilliant – and devastating – but a good place to start is his most famous, Brideshead Revisited. Charles Ryder recalls his relationship with the charismatic aristocrat Sebastian Flyte and his troubled family. The two meet at Oxford after a drunken Flyte is sick through the window into Ryder’s ground-floor room; as an apology Flyte fills Ryder’s room with flowers and invites him to a breakfast of quail’s eggs. This gilded opening, already tinged with longing and regret, is increasingly overshadowed by family secrets, damaged lives and broken relationships: it is at once elegiac and richly funny.

Harper’s Bazaar was an early venue for Waugh’s writings, most notably for the serial version of his 1934 novel A Handful of Dust. This version was shortened to exclude the ending based on “The Man Who Liked Dickens” due to copyright issues and was retitled in the magazine “A Flat in London”. The serial appeared in both the New York and London editions of the magazine.

–The New York Public Library has published a list of recommended reading by satirist and comedian Andy Borowitz. His list is entitled “Six Comic Novels To Lift Your Spirits” and the first book mentioned is:

Scoop by Evelyn Waugh
An exuberant comedy of mistaken identity and brilliantly irreverent satire of the hectic pursuit of hot news.

— Forbes magazine in a book review that recommends the recent republication of what it considers a sensible guide to drinking habits is reminded of an earlier satirization by Waugh of more pretentious examples of the genre:

Waugh, in fact, sent up such drivel long ago when he had his effete characters in Brideshead Revisited describe wine thus:

‘…It is a little, shy wine like a gazelle.’

‘Like a leprechaun.’

‘Dappled, in a tapestry meadow.’

‘Like a flute by still water.’

‘…And this is a wise old wine.”A prophet in a cave.’

‘…And this is a necklace of pearls on a white neck.’

‘Like a swan.’

‘Like the last unicorn.’

So it is always good to find a new book on the shelves that regards wine with both pleasure and common sense, including a good deal about manners and drunkenness. How to Drink: A Classical Guide to the Art of Drinking (Princeton U. Press; $16.95) was written by a garrulous fellow named Vincent Obsopoeus, who did so in reaction to the barbarous drunken behavior demonstrated by the Germans of his day, who were consuming 120 liters of wine per person per year. His day was the 16th century. [See previous post.]

–Finally, Quadrant magazine, the Australian literature journal, has posted an obituary of Alexander Thynn,  the 7th Marquess of Bath. They may be the only mainstream paper to cite Waugh’s mention of his chance meeting of Alexander as a young man. See previous post.  Quadrant’s article, written by Waugh admirer Mark McGinness also cites an interesting anecdote about a visit by James Lees-Milne to the 5th Marquess regarding a possible National Trust takeover of the Longleat Estate. The visit did not go well for the NT as Lees-Milne recounts in his diaries, as quoted in the Quadrant:

“Old Lord Bath, the most distinguished and courteous of patricians, received me a in a frockcoat. At the conclusion of a fruitless interview he rang the bell and ordered that my motor-car be brought round. He insisted on accompanying me to the front door. The steps to the drive were flanked on either side by a row of footmen in livery. In place of my uniformed chauffeur an extra footman wheeled my bicycle to the front of the steps. I shook my host’s hand, descended the perron and mounted. At the end of a straight stretch of drive 
.. I looked back for a last view of the glorious façade. Lord Bath, attended by a posse of open-mouthed and doubtless disdainful servitors, was in the old world manner of true hospitality still standing at the top of the steps until his guest was out of sight.”

 

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Waugh Transformed

Simon Heffer in the Daily Telegraph has written an article entitled “How the Second World War transformed British literature”. The subject is a good bit more narrow than the title suggests. In fact, he considers primarily how WWII transformed the writing of Evelyn Waugh and Graham Greene. Other writers of the period briefly mentioned include Patrick Hamilton and Nigel Balchin, who are dismissed as now forgotten, and Aldous Huxley and George Orwell, neither of whom participated in the war directly.

Huxley had moved away from literature to philosophy while Orwell during and after the war wrote the two books that “contributed more to English culture and idiom than any other novel of the last century, and were steeped in the author’s reflections on the evils of totalitarianism.” These were Animal Farm and 1984. It would perhaps be more accurate to say that Orwell was “transformed” by the Spanish Civil War, in which he did participate, than by WWII. His two novels were directly influenced by that transformation.

As to his two main subjects, both of whom witnessed the war at first hand, Heffer has more to say:

…their experiences in the war years and in the turbulent times that followed VE Day changed them and, inevitably, how they wrote. Both men served their country during the conflict, if in different ways. Greene was recruited into MI6, where he reported to and became friends with Kim Philby. Waugh, thanks to his friendship with Randolph Churchill, son of the prime minister, secured a commission in the Royal Marines. He proved a thoroughly unpopular officer and therefore, like Greene, was transferred to intelligence work.

This, though, set them apart from the other major novelists of the 1940s. Although both men would have rejected any idea that they were self-consciously intellectual, both were converts to Catholicism; and their conception of religion and of that faith in particular becomes central to their works […]

Heffer then proceeds to consider separately how the war affected each of his two subjects, starting with Waugh:

Waugh’s 1942 novel Put Out More Flags represents a pivotal moment in his career as a writer. Using a tone and sense of characterisation that would be familiar to readers of his earlier novels – notably Decline and Fall, Vile Bodies and Scoop – the approach darkens as the novel, about the preparation of the often feckless upper-middle classes for total war, and the way in which they reconcile themselves to it, becomes an unconscious prelude to the more querulous cynicism of his later works.

Anyone reading the Sword of Honour trilogy – Waugh’s three mildly autobiographical novels of 1952-61 – should start with Put Out More Flags as a prelude. It marks the end of Waugh’s youthful and callous exuberance, and the beginnings of the presence of a soul in his writing. His next novel, published just after VE Day, remains his best known: Brideshead Revisited. It is a book of nostalgia, with many autobiographical elements, and not least a lament for a refined, aristocratic world of ease that Waugh assumed the war had buried forever.

He wrote it in early 1944 when recovering from an injury sustained in a parachute drop; the tide of the war had turned, but Waugh feared the social revolution that would come with victory. Writing to Graham Greene five years after Brideshead was published, Waugh claimed that the novel “appalled” him; but he and Greene both understood the journey of Charles Ryder, the central figure, who eventually sees the need to convert to Catholicism after years of exposure to the Catholic Flyte family. Waugh had changed profoundly from the man who wrote satire: that baton had, by the end of the war, been passed on to Compton Mackenzie. He now wrote about concepts such as reconciliation and grace…

Heffer goes on to consider Greene’s wartime and immediate postwar production, with his focus particularly on The Heart of the Matter (1948) and The End of the Affair (1951), which Heffer deems his masterpiece. He concludes with this:

…The experience of war had taken both men on a parallel journey. It may not have made them better men, but it did make them better novelists.

To be fair, Heffer’s article has a subtitle: “VE Day not only marked the defeat of Nazism – it ensured that the careers of our leading novelists would never be the same.” (Emphasis supplied.) It explains how that was to be the case with at least two of them.

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Waugh’s V-E Day

Milena Borden has forwarded the following article to commemorate the 75th anniversary of V-E Day as experienced by Evelyn Waugh:

A few days before the Victory in Europe (V-E Day), which marked the formal end of Hitler’s war, Waugh was not entirely pleased with the war’s outcome, given Communist advances in Central Europe and the Balkans and wrote in his diary in London on 13 April 1945:

“Armies monotonously victorious. Gloomy apprehensions of V Day. I hope to escape it.” (Diaries, p. 625).

He later wrote on 1 May 1945 from Chagford in Devon where he had gone to escape V-E Day as well as his family and start writing his next novel:

“
The end of the war is hourly expected. Mussolini obscenely murdered, continual rumours that Hitler’s mind has finally gone. Communism gains in France. Russia insults USA. I will now get to work on St Helena.” (Diaries, p. 627)

Waugh’s two military missions, in Crete (1941) and in Yugoslavia (1944) have generated many controversies. There is also a fair amount of generally critical talk about his declared intellectual support for General Franco during the Spanish Civil War and his hatred towards the Yugoslav partisan leader and ally of the British, Marshall Tito, has been a subject of anecdotal industry. However, one other feature of his war-time personage, which is mentioned in the above diary entry, is his interest in the Italian fascist leader Mussolini who came to power in 1922.

Under Mussolini’s leadership, Italy’s participation in the Second World War was a succession of military disasters. Waugh had met Mussolini in Rome in January 1936. He was on his way back from Abyssinia where he was a Daily Mail correspondent (1935-36). Waugh arranged to interview Mussolini on the condition that it wouldn’t be published or talked about publicly. Presumably, Waugh would have trusted Mussolini’s military competence, if it was discussed, as is reflected in his 1936 book Waugh in Abyssinia. But this would have been a misjudgement, as the Abyssinia campaign failed. Furthermore, it is unclear in what language Waugh and Mussolini would have talked to each other. There is no evidence that there was an interpreter at the meeting. Mussolini was well known as good conversationalist but he only knew limited French, German and even more basic English. It is possible that they talked in any of these languages or in a mixture of all, but it is unlikely that the conversation was deeply nuanced or long.

Waugh’s later involvement with the war took him far away from Mussolini’s Italy both physically and mentally. In 1939 the Pact of Steel sealed the alliance between Mussolini and Hitler. It eventually led Italy to catastrophe and the Duce to his death. In March 1945, Waugh stopped in occupied Rome on his way home from Yugoslavia. He lobbied successfully for an audience with the Pope Pius XII to report on the treatment of Catholics in Croatia. Mussolini was in exile in the north of Italy and on the 28 April (after Waugh’s return to England) he was executed by the partisans then dragged to Piazzale Loreto in Milan to be spat on by the Italian citizens who once admired him.

During that time Waugh was preoccupied with what he saw as the ‘unconditional surrender’ of the West to the influence of communism with Tito, Stalin and Churchill being the main actors in his mind. The war changed everything and Waugh’s interest or involvement with the Italian empire idea and Mussolini seem to have faded completely. Waugh was deeply disappointed with the political and cultural shape of the new realities, with the Soviets taking over the states in Europe east of the Elbe and driving yet another wedge into the continent.

On the eve of V-E Day he found very little to be proud of and felt perhaps more than a little guilty:

“Sunday 6 May 1945
All day there was expectation of V-E Day and finally at 9 it was announced for tomorrow
It is pleasant to end the war in plain clothes, writing. I remember at the start of it all writing to Frank Pakenham that its value for us would be to show us finally that we were not men in action. I took longer than him to learn it. I regard the greatest danger I went through that of becoming one of Churchill’s young men, of getting a medal and standing for Parliament; if things had gone, as then seem right, in the first two years, that is what I should be now. I thank God to find myself still a writer and at work on something as ‘uncontemporary’ as I am.” (Diaries, p. 627)

The foregoing is an excerpt from a more detailed article in preparation about the subject of Waugh and Italy: politics and history that is intended for a future edition of Evelyn Waugh Studies.

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Posted in Anniversaries, Diaries, Evelyn Waugh, Evelyn Waugh Studies, Helena, Interviews, Waugh in Abyssinia, World War II | Tagged , | Comments Off on Waugh’s V-E Day

Penguin Promotes Waugh

Penguin Books, Waugh’s UK paperback publisher since the 1930s, has posted an article by literary journalist John Self about Waugh’s works, most of which are in print in Penguin editions (including some volumes of the attractive 2011 hardback series). The article is entitled “Beyond Brideshead: why Evelyn Waugh needs to be reclaimed as our funniest writer” and is headed: “Sharp, sparkly and endlessly versatile, ‘Evelyn Waugh’s overlooked novels make him the perfect choice to cheer us all up, says John Self…'”

The article ranges over most of Waugh’s fiction and contains several interesting insights. Here is an excerpt:

…It’s possible that if you know only one novel of Waugh’s, you weren’t aware that he’s supremely funny, because he is, tragically, famous for the wrong book. His work is overshadowed by the monolith of Brideshead Revisited, his 1945 novel of nostalgia, aristocracy and Catholicism. It was given a boost by the mimsy 1980s TV adaptation – a soft-focus alliance of Jeremy Irons, Anthony Andrews and a teddy bear – and that legacy lingers, but even in Waugh’s lifetime it was his most popular book, which “led me into an unfamiliar world of fan-mail and press photographers.” But its popularity is hard to fathom to anyone who has read Waugh’s other, funnier novels. Brideshead is solemn and dreary, and the key to this is that it was written during the war, “a bleak period of present privation and threatening disaster,” as Waugh later commented. “In consequence the book is infused with a kind of gluttony, for food and wine, for the splendours of the recent past, and for rhetorical and ornamental language, which now on a full stomach I find distasteful.” Exactly so.

Indeed, it’s Waugh’s usual care for language that makes his best books so funny and piercing. “I regard writing not as an investigation of character but as an exercise in language, and with this I am obsessed.” It is his obsession with getting the right words in the right place that makes his jokes funny, his plot turns shocking and – despite himself – his characters so affecting. […] But as a comic writer, Waugh had a vast range: he was (with all due respect to dear old Plum) the P. G. Wodehouse whose books aren’t all the same.

It is odd that in an article that is obviously intended to promote sales of “overlooked” books, no mention is made of what are probably Waugh’s least read novels: Black Mischief and Helena. On the other hand, nothing is coming to mind that would compare with the article’s lively recommendations of his other novels. Perhaps for Black Mischief: “Don’t let dated racial prejudice stop you from reading brilliant comedy where even cannabilism gets a laugh.” And for Helena: “Waugh thought this his best book; read it and see if you agree.” Penguin does have some other nonfiction works in print that are also worth a mention, such as Waugh in Abyssinia (the Penguin Modern Classics cover art alone is worth the purchase price), Labels, and A Little Order. (Amazon.uk is temporarily out of stock of the latter two but they appear to be available from Penguin directly at this link.) They even offer an edition of the selected travel writings When the Going was Good.

There is an active dialogue going about the article on Twitter: @john_self.  There are several Waugh Penguin covers posted.

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Posted in Bibliophilia, Black Mischief, Brideshead Revisited, Helena, Labels, Twitter, Waugh in Abyssinia, When the Going Was Good | Tagged , | Comments Off on Penguin Promotes Waugh