BIOGRAPHY 3 OF EVELYN WAUGH
English writer, regarded by many as the leading
satirical novelist of his day. Among Waugh's most popular books is BRIDESHEAD
REVISITED (1945), depicting the Oxford world of the late 1920s. It was made into
a highly successful television series in 1981, starring Jeremy Irons and
Anthony Andrews. Waugh wrote sixteen novels. He also published travel books and
biographies.
'I have been here
before,' I said; I had been there before; first with Sebastian more than twenty
years ago on a cloudless day in June, when the ditches were creamy with
meadowsweet and the air heavy with all the scents of summer; it was a day of
peculiar splendour, and though I had been there so often, in so many moods, it
was to that first visit that my heart returned on this, my latest." (from Brideshead
Revisited)
Evelyn Waugh was born in London into a
comfortable middle-class family. Catherine (Raban) Waugh, his mother, was born
in India, but grew up in England. Evelyn had a better relationship with her
than with his his father, Arthur Waugh (1866-1943), a publisher and literary
critic, who preferred Evelyn's older brother Alec. Waugh was educated at
Lancing College, Sussex, and at Hertford College, Oxford, where he read modern
history. For his disappointment, the behavior of the upper-class student was
not especially sophisticated - it was savage and amoral, and at
Lancing College Waugh was was bullied by his classmates. Later he returned to
his experiences in his novels. His college years Waugh spent in drinking.
Alec, his brother, had an homosexual
relationship at the Sherborn College. After being dismissed, Alec Waugh wrote
an autobiographical book of the event, which in practice had prevented Evelyn
from entering the same college. After studying in London at Heatherley's Art
School and working for a short time as a schoolmaster at Arnold House in North
Wales, Waugh devoted himself to writing.
Three years before starting his career as a
writer, Waugh attempted suicide. He walked out into the water and began
swimming but decided to return. Fuelled with admiration for Pre-Raphaelites,
Waugh wrote his first book, ROSSETTI, which appeared in 1928. In the same year
Waugh established his literary reputation with the novel DECLINE AND FALL, an
episodic story of Paul Pennyfeather who is expelled from Oxford. Paul is caught
in the web of London Society, but in the end he escapes to a saner and happier
life. "Aim high" has been my motto, 'said Sir Humphrey, 'all through
my life. You probably won't get what you want, but you may get something; aim
low, and you get nothing at all. It's like throwing a stone at a cat. When I
was a kid that used to be great sport in our yard; I daresay you were throwing
cricket-balls when you were that age, but it's the same thing. If you throw
straight at it, you fall short; aim above, and with luck you score. Every kid
knows that. I'll tell you the story of my life.' (from Decline and Fall)
Decline and Fall was loosely based on Waugh's experiences while
he worked as a schoolmaster at Arnold House. Like Waugh's other works,
continued the tradition of Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw - Waugh is as
flippant and irreverent. "'The Welsh,' said the Doctor, 'are the only
nation in the world that has produced no graphic or plastic art, no
architecture, no drama. They just sing, 'he said with disgust, 'sing and blow
down wind instruments of plated silver...'" Waugh's next novel, VILE
BODIES (1930), which the author described as "a welter of sex and
snobbery," caricatured the world of the Bright Young People. Vile
Bodies gained a huge success, and contributed to the end of "the freak
parties". BLACK MISCHIEF (1932) was inspired by the coronation of the
Emperor Haile Selassie in Abyssinia. A HANDFUL OF DUST was an embittered story
of adultery, in which the hero is called Tony Last. "What I have done is excellent,"
Waugh said of his book. Virginia Woolf complained that Waugh did not show
interest in social matters as they really were. Also SCOOP (1937), which mocked
foreign correspondents, was set in Africa, this time in a fictitious country
called Ishmaeliah.
The "happy ending" of Vile Bodies was
not in tune with Waugh's own life, which was falling apart. He had fallen in
love with Diana Guinness (later Diana Mosley), and his wife had left him for a
BBC news editor. In 1930 Waugh converted to Roman Catholicism. After the
collapse of his marriage with Evelyn Gardner, Waugh travelled in Africa and
South America. Waugh published several travel books, and worked as a foreign correspondent,
notably in Abessinia to cover the Italian invasion in 1936. In 1937 he married
Laura Herbert; they had six children, though he was believed to be a
homosexual.
From 1928 to 1937 Waugh travelled widely in
Europe, Near East, Africa, and America. In the 1930s, he became a well known
figure in aristocratic and fashionable circles, and gradually developed his
grandiose vision of aristocracy. His friends and acquaintances provided him
with materials for his fiction. During the early part of World War II, Waugh
served in the Middle East. PUT OUT MORE FLAGS (1942) satirized W.H. Auden and
Christopher Isherwood, who did not serve in the army, but emigrated to the
United States. Waugh called them "Parsnip and Pimpernell".
With his friend, Randolph Churchill, he joined
in 1944 a British military mission into Yugoslavia and was injured in a plane
accident. Most of his company died in the flames - Churchill and
Philip Jordan were among the other fortunates. The Scottish writer Eric
Linklater, who met Waugh in Rome, was shocked to see his colleague's frail and
shrunken look, "so different from his ordinary compact and hardy
appeareance."
Disenchantment with the war, Waugh took leave
in order to write Brideshead Revisited (1945), a nostalgic story about
beauty and corruption. It gained a great popular success but was also
criticized because of its glorifying of the upper class. Subtitled 'The Sacred
and Profane Memories of Captain Charles Ryder' it depicts the story of the
wealthy Roman Catholic Marchmain family. The narrator, Ryder, is a friend of
the family. At Oxford he meets Sebastian Flyte, the younger son of the Marquis
of Marchmain, and his sister Julia. Sebastian flees to North Africa and becomes
a menial in an African monastery and Julia marries a non-Catholic politician.
By the end of the novel, each has shown some sign of acceptance of the faith.
Anthony Blanche, one of the minor characters, was modelled on Brian Howard, a
poet and aesthete, who worked for MI5 during World War II. (see 'An Oxford
Spy' by John Branston, Morning Star, Tuesday 22 March 2005) The acclaimed Granada television
drama from 1981, based on the novel, was more homosexually oriented than the
novel.
After the war, Waugh spent much time at Combe
Florey in Somerset, sporting exaggeratedly in Edwardian suits, and using and
exaggerated large ear-trumpet. One of his favorite suits was made of checked
cloth. Waugh's major work was the trilogy SWORD OF HONOUR (1952-1961). Its
central character, Guy Crouchback, enlists in the Royal Corps of Halberdiers to
establish his identity. He loses his illusions and departs for action in
Alexandria. In the last volume Guy volunteers for service in Italy. Eventually
he goes to Yugoslavia as a liaison officer with the partisans and rescues a
group of Jewish refuges. In the Epilogue Guy has remarried and he is surrounded
with a family.
In 1947 Waugh visited Hollywood as a guest of
MGM to discuss a possible film version of Brideshead Revisited. "We
drove for a long time down autobahns and boulevards full of vacant lots and
filling stations and nondescript buildings and palm trees with a warm hazy
light. It was more like Egypt - the suburbs of Cairo or Alexandria - than anything in Europe. We arrived at the Bel Air Hotel - very
Egyptian with a hint of Addis Ababa in the smell of the blue gums."
Hollywood saw Brideshead purely as a love story. Waugh refused to accept
proposed changes and confessed in his diary that he was relieved when the
project failed. Next year he made fun of the work of morticians in California
in THE LOVED ONE (1948).
The biography of Ronald A. Knox (1959) was
about Waugh's friend, Father Knox, who was a priest and scholar and prolific
essayist, satirist, and novelist. Knox's translation of the Bible, for which he
devoted his later life, appeared in 1955. He also published detective novels.
THE ORDEAL OF GILBERT PINFOLD (1957) was based on the Waugh's bout of
hallucinations caused by his use of both alcohol and sleeping potions. The
first volume of Waugh's unfinished autobiography, A LITTLE LEARNING, appeared
in 1964. His letters were published in 1980. Waugh died on April 10, 1966, in
Combe Florey, Somerset - he collapsed and died in the
toilet. The posthumously published DIARIES OF EVELYN WAUGH (1976) was described
by Auberon Waugh as showing "that the world of Evelyn Waugh did, in fact
exist." According to an literary anecdote, the author Nancy Mitford had
asked Waugh how he could behave so abominably and yet still consider himself a
practicing Catholic. "You have no idea," had Waugh replied, "how
much nastier I would be if I was not a Catholic. Without supernatural aid I
would hardly be a human being."
For further
reading: Roman Holiday by A.A. DeVitis
(1956); Evelyn Waugh by M. Bradbury (1964); The Satiric Art of Evelyn
Waugh by J.F. Carens (1966); My Brother Evelyn, and Other Profiles
by A. Waugh (1967); Evelyn Waugh by D. Lodge (1971); Evelyn Waugh by
Christopher Sykes (1975, rev. 1977); Evelyn Waugh by C.W. Lane (1981);
The Picturesque Prison by J. Heath (1982); Evelyn Waugh by Martin
Stannard (1986); Evelyn Waugh by Selina Hastings (1994); The Life of
Evelyn Waugh: A Critical Biography by Douglas Lane Patey (2001) - Note
1: The Finnish writer Anja Kauranen used Brideshead Revisited as a
basis for her novel Arabian Lauri (1997). The structure of story,
characterizations of central persons and the general nostalgic atmosphere are
similar. Kauranen set the events in the 1980s Helsinki. The novel can be read
as an independent piece of art. Kauranen acknowledged the source when the
question of plagiarism arose. - "Evelyn Waugh concealed - beneath a
camp façade of tweediness, snobbery, literary argumentantiveness, downright
insulting behaviour - a tenacious insecurity, social, sexual, and aesthetic,
which never left him." - From Camp: The Lie That Tells the Truth
by Philip Core (1984) - Note 2: Evelyn Waugh's father was head of the
publishers, Chapman and Hall, and had contributed to The Yellow Book. -
Alec Waugh's (1898-1981) works include The Loom of Youth (1917), Island
in the Sun (1956), The Mule on the Minaret (1965), My Brother
Evelyn and Other Profiles (1967), A Spy in the Family (1970), A
Year to Remember (1975). - Evelyn Waugh's eldest son Auberon Waugh (d.
2001) published his first book, The Foxglove Saga, in 1960. Among his
other works are Country Topics (1974), The Diaries of Auberon Waugh:
A Turbulent Decade 1976-85 (1985), Another Voices (1986)
© http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/ewaugh.htm
Academic
year 2008/2009
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente Forés López
©
Gala Rodríguez Montesano
garomon@alumni.uv.es
Universitat de València
Press