Biography
British novelist, playwright, short-story
writer, highest paid author in the world in the 1930s. Despite his popularity, Maugham did
not gain serious recognition. This was expressed in his autobiography The
Summing Up (1938), that he stood 'in the very
first row of the second-raters'. Maugham's skill in
handling plot has been compared by critics in the manner of Guy de Maupassant.
In many novels the surroundings are international and the stories are told in
clear, economical style with cynical or resigned undertone.
"I have never pretended to be anything but a
story teller. It has amused me to tell stories and I have told a great many. It
is a misfortune for me that the telling of a story just for the sake of the
story is not an activity that is in favor with the
intelligentsia. In endeavor to bear
my misfortunes with fortitude." (from
Creatures of Circumstance, 1947)
W.
Somerset Maugham was born in Paris as the sixth and youngest son of the
solicitor to the British embassy. He learned French as his native tongue. At
the age of 10 Maugham was orphaned and sent to England to live with his uncle,
the vicar of Whitstable. Educated at King's School, Canterbury, and Heidelberg
University, Maugham then studied six years medicine in London. He qualified in
1897 as doctor from St. Thomas' medical school but abandoned medicine after the
success of his first novels and plays.
Maugham
lived in Paris for ten years as a struggling young author. In 1897 appeared his
first novel, Liza of Lambeth, which drew on his experiences of attending
women in childbirth. His first play, A Man of Honour, was produced in
1903. Four of his plays ran simultaneously in London in 1904. Maugham's
breakthrough novel was the semi-autobiographical Of Human Bondage
(1915), which is usually considered his outstanding achievement. The story
follows the childhood, youth, and early manhood of Philip Carey, who is born
with a clubfoot. Philip never knew his father and his mother only for a brief
space. He is raised by a religious aunt and uncle, but the real process of his
education, after the end of an unsatisfactory social life, begins in
Heidelberg. Philip goes to Paris to study art, and at the age of thirty he
qualifies as a doctor. Finally he marries Sally Athelny,
a normal, healthy, happy girl.
Disguising
as a reporter, Maugham worked for British Intelligence in Russia during the
Russian Revolution in 1917, but his stuttering and poor health hindered his
career in this field. He then set off with a friend on a series of travels to
eastern Asia, the Pacific Islands, and Mexico. His most famous story, which
became the play Rain and was made into several movies, was inspired by a
missionary and prostitute among his fellow passengers on a trip to Pago Pago. In the 1928 he settled in Cape Ferrat
in France. His plays, among them The Circle (1921), a satire of social
life, Our Betters (1923), about Americans in Europe, and The Constant
Wife (1927), about a wife who takes revenge on her unfaithful husband, were
performed in Europe and in the United States. Maugham's famous novel The
Moon and the Sixpence (1919) was the story of Charles Strickland (or
actually Paul Gauguin), an artist, whose rejection of Western civilization led
to his departure for Tahiti. There he is blinded by leprosy but continues
painting. Trembling of a Leaf (1921) included the story 'Rain,' made
into a play by John Colton and Clemence Randolph in
1922. Razors Edge (1944), about a spiritual quest, was made into film
two times. "This book consists of my recollections of a man with whom I
was thrown into close contact only at long intervals, and I have little
knowledge of what happened to him in between," Maugham wrote in the
beginning of the story. "I have invented nothing." Maugham tells of a
young American veteran who moves through superbly described settings: Italy,
London, the Riviera, Montparnasse. He seeks in the end
relief in India from the horrors of war and gains a sense of being at one with
the Absolute, through the Indian philosophical system known as Vedanta.
As
an agent and writer Maugham was a link in a long tradition from Christopher
Marlowe, Ben Johnson and Daniel Defoe to the modern day writers Graham Greene,
John Le Carré, John Dickson Carr, Alec Waugh and Ted Allbeury. It is said that the modern spy story began with
Maugham's Ashenden; or the British Agent
(1928). It was partly based on the author's own experiences in the secret
service. Alfred Hitchcock used in his film Secret Agent (1936)
specifically the stories 'The Traitor' and 'The Hairless Mexican'. In the film,
set in Switzerland, agents kill a wrong man and then they go to after the right
one. A chocolate factory is used by the crooks' as a headquarters.
Maugham
believed that there is a true harmony in the contradictions of mankind and that
the the normal is in reality the abnormal. "The
ordinary is the writer's richest field", he stated in The Summing Up
(1938). In his satirical short story 'The Ant and the Grasshopper' he
juxtaposed two brothers, the unscrupulous and carefree Tom and the hardworking,
respectable George, who expects that Tom would end in the gutter. However, Tom
marries a rich old woman, she dies and leaves him a
fortune. "I burst into a shout of laughter as I looked at George's
wrathful face. I rolled in my chair, I very nearly fell
in the floor. George never forgave me. But Tom often asks me to excellent
dinners in his charming house in Mayfair, and he occasionally borrows a trifle
from me, that is merely from force of habit." Although he became world
famous he was never knighted and his relationship with Gerald Haxton, his secretary, have been subject to speculations.
Maugham died in Nice on December 16, 1965. It is said that as he lay dying he
asked Sir Alfred Ayer visit him and reassure him that there was no life after
death.
A
number of Maugham's short stories have been filmed. Quartet (1948)
consisted of four stories introduced by the author - 'The Facts of Life', 'The
Alien Corn', 'The Kite', and 'The Colonel's Lady.' In 'The Kite' the
protagonist, Herbert, starts to fly kites with his parents in childhood. After
marriage Herbert continues his hobby, although Betty, his wife, considers it
childish. When Herbert wants to buy a new kite, Betty packs his bag and Herbert
returns to his parents' house. Betty smashes the kite. The magistrate orders
him to pay Betty alimony, twenty-five shillings a week, but Herbert don't obey
the order and chooses the prison. "It may be that in some queer way he
identifies himself with the kite flying so free and so high above him, and it's
as it were an escape from the monotony of life. It may be that in some dim,
confused way it represents an ideal of freedom and adventure, And you know, when a man once gets bitten with the virus of
the ideal not all the King's doctors and not all the King's surgeons can rid
him of it."
"Most people cannot see anything, but I can se
what is in front of my nose with extreme clearness; the greatest writers can
see through a brick wall. My vision is not so penetrating."
After
the 1930s Maugham's reputation abroad was greater than in England. Interest in
him revived again in his 80th birthday, which he celebrated by the special
republication of Cakes and Ale (1930), a novel satirizing London
literary circles and 'Grand Old Men'. Among the characters are Maugham as Ashenden, Thomas Hardy as Driffield,
and Hugh Walpole as Kear. Barbara Belford listed in Violet:
The Story of the Irrepressible Violet Hunt and Her
Circle of Lovers and Friends (1990) Maugham among the lovers of Violet Hunt
with such names as H. G. Wells and Ford Madox Ford.
The novelist Hugh Walpole portrayed Maugham as the arrogant pessimist in John
Cornelius (1937), he appeared as John-Blair-Kennedy in Noel Coward's South
Sea Bubble (1956), Leverson Hurle
in Gin and Bitters by A Riposte, the homosexual novelist in Noel
Coward's Point Valaine (1935), Kenneth Marchal Toomey in Anthony Burgess Earthly Powers
(1980), Willie Tower in S.N. Behrman's Jane (1946), and Gilbert Hereford
Vaughn in Ada Leverson's
The Limit (1911). Maugham collected his literary experiences in The Summing
Up, which has been used as a guidebook for creative writing.
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Used with permission.
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