A Companion to Evelyn Waughs
Brideshead Revisited
Book Two
Brideshead Deserted
Chapter Three
Mulcaster and I in defence of our country - Sebastian abroad - I take leave of Marchmain House
193 General Strike
a national strike of British trades union
members in key industries from 4th to 12th May 1926. The Trades Union Congress,
an organisation of all the major trades unions in the country, called it in
support of miners who were resisting the imposition of lower pay and longer
hours. The government, however, was prepared for it and called out troops and
volunteers to distribute food and keep services running. Charles becomes one of
those volunteers, some of whom, on doubtful authority, exercised a coercive
discipline. The T.U.C. decided to stop the strike after only nine days because
its members were horrified at the prospect of violence, and because the miners
were unwilling to moderate their demands in any way and so blocked any
compromise.
193 Futurist
an adherent of Futurism, an early 20th-century
movement in art that rejected all tradition and instead glorified contemporary
life, especially machines. Many of its artists (e.g. Giacomo Balla, 1871-1958)
tried to capture the effect of motion in their works. Futurism at its peak
lasted only a few years and by 1926 had been overtaken by other movements,
especially surrealism.
M. la Motte seems also to be influenced by Fascism,
which did in fact take over Futurisms love of modern machinery.
194 all parts of Europe
At the end of World War I, the regimes
of many countries in central and eastern Europe collapsed. Syndicalist or
communist revolutions ensued on a more or less large scale and were opposed by
government or counter-revolutionary action. The whole era was characterised by
violence and confusion, though by 1926 stability was returning or being imposed
in most of Europe.
194 mud of Flanders
flies of Mesopotamia
These are two
of the war zones of World War I familiar to the British public. Flanders is in
northern France and Belgium, where rain could result in vast paddy fields of
almost impassable mud. They had a reputation for horror because wounded men
often drowned in them; the mud was sometimes waist-high. Mesopotamia (modern
Iraq) is where British forces fought Turks in desert conditions often of
extreme heat.
194 garçonnière
Auteuil
an
apartment in one of the fashionable suburbs of west Paris near the racecourse.
A garçonnière was originally a place, often an attic, where the
boys slept, supposedly safely away from the girls. In modern times it is an
apartment generally for one person (usually a bachelor). The fact that the
girls are living in one can be taken as an assertion of sexual
equality.
194 Café Royal
a famous restaurant in Regent Street in
London, just by Piccadilly
194 one group, from Cambridge
The Oxford men may seem to be
supporting the government and employers, the Cambridge men the strikers. In
reality it was not like that - university men flocked to both sides from either
place. EW, having been at Oxford himself, likes to have the Oxford men doing
what he approves. He himself became a special constable during the General
Strike, and was appalled by the poor quality of his fellow-guardians of public
order.
194 Transport House
the headquarters of the Transport and
General Workers Union, and also of the Labour Party. The strike was
co-ordinated from here.
195 Budapest
Horthy
Admiral Miklós Horthy
(1868-1957) had a distinguished career in World War I and was asked by the
anti-Communist parties in 1919 to organise resistance to the Communist coup in
Budapest, the capital of Hungary. He won the consequent civil war within a
year. He went on to be Regent of Hungary until 1944.
195 Black Birds
A London review by a black American
group was named Blackbirds of 1926. Its company was led by Florence
Mills, who had already made a great name for herself in London in 1923 in the
musical Dover Street to Dixie. The popularity of American jazz bands and
singing groups increased enormously in the 1920s, especially with the
easy availability of records. Many of these groups crossed the
Atlantic.
195 Bricktops
Bal Nègre in the Rue Blomet
nightclubs in Paris specialising in cabaret. Bricktop was the nickname
of the clubs founder, Ada Smith (1894-1984). Bal Nègre was
the name of a 1927 review starring Josephine Baker (1905-1975) which inspired a
famous poster; the club became famous for its promotion of the beguine.
195 Belgrave Square
the very centre of high societys
residential area in London (Belgravia)
196 Lesley and Roberts
fashionable tailors in Hanover Square.
The Oxford aesthetes employed them to make wasp-waisted suits, according to
Cyril Connolly.
196 Nada Alopov ... Jean Luxmore
I have not identified these
characters. I imagine they are fictional though EW may have based them on real
people whom some of his readers might have been able to identify. In the first
edition it is made clear by the punctuation (a semi-colon after Alopov)
that Jean Luxmore and all the others had visited Nada Alopov.
There has been
some interest aroused by Blanches mentioning that Nada Alopov was
quite the best man. Best man for what? Judging from the context it seems
to mean, the best man for intoxicating Sebastian. Some commentators therefore
think that Alopov was an experienced male prostitute. He might equally easily
be a drug-dealer - his having thug friends might suggest drugs more
readily.
196 Regina Bar
a popular spot to meet at in Marseilles, though
I have not identified where it was
196 s-s-stumer
a worthless cheque
196 Tangier
a city on the Moroccan coast, since 1923 an
international city with its permanent security provided for by Great Britain,
France, and Spain
196 footman in Warning Shadows
a character in a German
silent film (German title Schatten, 1923), directed by Arthur Robison,
which was both popular and very influential (on Alfred Hitchcock, for one). It
starred Fritz Kortner and Ruth Weyher. EW saw it in November 1924 and thought
it quite superb.
196 Foreign Legion
a unit of the French army consisting of
volunteers of other nationalities, in 1926 based in Algeria. It could be sent
anywhere in the world to protect French interests. Its regimen is famously
tough.
196 Kasbah
the older part of a north African city where the
markets are found
197 Florence Mills
(1896-1927), African-American singer and
dancer, one of the most famous black entertainers of the Jazz Age. There appear
to be extant no film of her dancing (which was admired in all circles,
including ballet) and no recording of her singing, with the result that her
status as the first great black female entertainer is unappreciated today. She
was nicknamed Blackbird from her signature song Im a Little
Blackbird Looking for a Bluebird. During her stay in Europe she became
seriously ill, returned to New York and died following an operation for
appendicitis. 150,000 people reputedly attended her funeral.
198 Like Australians.
Charles and Mulcaster are
undoubtedly thinking of the large number of Australian soldiers who died in the
unsuccessful Gallipoli campaign (1915) in World War I.
198 Commercial Road
a main road into London from the east. It
is therefore in the East End, a working-class area where sympathy for the
strike was strong.
199 Camden Town
a district in London, then a working-class area
but now gentrified
199 bandanna
a large square of brightly coloured cotton or silk
cloth which can be worn over the hair or around the neck. Sir Adrian uses his
for a handkerchief.
200 Hansard
the official (and supposedly) verbatim account of
the debates in the Houses of Parliament. The clerks are usually gracious enough
to tidy up the realities of the speeches.
201 kudos
a word from Greek meaning credit or
glory.
201 Casablanca
Fez
towns in Morocco, then ruled by
France as a protectorate except for a part of northern Morocco that was
Spanish
201 remittance man
a man living abroad who depends on a regular
allowance from home. There is a hint of scandal about the term, since it was
applied generally to men who were paid by their families to stay away. The
point of the consuls remark is that, though things will generally be all
right in peaceful times, there are no certainties about Sebastian being able to
sustain himself in times of disturbance and war. Actually, the consul has
misunderstood Sebastians finances. We learn later, on page 207, that
Sebastian did not have a regular allowance at all but cabled home for money
when he thought he needed it. Charles is able to regularise the situation and
make Sebastian a true remittance man.
201 Milord
a French term for the stereotype French people
entertain of a British aristocrat
201 Abdul Krims army
Abd al-Karim (1882-1963) (full name
Muhammed ben Abd al-Karim Khattabi), leader of the Rifs and only President of
the Republic of the Rif (1921-1926), organized a revolt in Spanish Morocco in
1920. After driving the Spanish forces out, he turned upon the French in their
part of Morocco. France and Spain then agreed to work together against him and
appointed Marshal Pétain as commander-in-chief. Pétain had won
the campaign by 1926, though sporadic outbreaks continued for another decade.
Krim (as he was known in the West) was exiled to Réunion Island for over
twenty years but then escaped and went to Cairo to take part again in North
African nationalist politics. He died just as he was about to return home after
more than 35 years absence.
201 the Moors
Moors are nomadic people of Arab and Berber
descent who originally occupied lands in various parts of North Africa.
201 Rabat
the capital city of Morocco, on the Atlantic
coast
202 A thoroughly bad hat
English upper-class slang for an
objectionable person, a phrase deriving from the Duke of Wellingtons
observation about the middle-class M.P.s elected to the Reform Parliament of
1832. He had, he said, never seen so many shocking bad hats in my
life.
202 Dubonnet, Michelin, Magasin du Louvre
Dubonnet, the tonic
wine, aperitif or vermouth according to taste, and Michelin the tyre company
both thrive today. Les Grands Magasins du Louvre, founded by Alfred Chauchard
in 1855, disappeared in 1974. It was a fashionable store in Paris; as Somerset
Maugham wrote of his character Mildred in Of Human Bondage, she
had heard of the Magasin du Louvre, where you could get the very latest thing
for about half the price you had to pay in London.
202 Sudan police
Technically Sudan was ruled at this time by a
joint British and Egyptian condominium. In practice Britain ruled the country
and organised the police force.
203 a French record of a jazz band
The French adopted jazz in
the 20s with even more enthusiasm than did the British.
204 the Atlas
mountains of North Africa where some of the
heaviest fighting in the war against Krim took place
205 Franciscans
order of friars founded in 1208 by Saint
Francis of Assisi (1182-1226), devoted to missionary and charitable work. They
are frequently found working in the impoverished parts of the world.
205 grippe
the flu (French). Possibly in
Sebastians case it is a euphemism for pneumonia.
206 secondary syphilis
Syphilis is a disease contracted by
sexual intercourse. The secondary stage is a latent period of the infection in
which no outward signs or symptoms occur, but inflammatory changes may take
place in the internal organs. The secondary stage can last 20 or even 30 years.
The tertiary stage that often follows is invariably fatal.
206 A real Samaritan.
a reference to Christs parable of
the Good Samaritan (Gospel of St Luke 10, 30-37). A foreigner helps a
Jew who has been attacked and beaten by robbers. His own people had not given
him aid and out of fear hurried on past him as he lay on the ground unable to
help himself.
206 poor booby
Booby means simpleton, a foolishly
simple person. At this point Charles appears to believe that Sebastian has not
taken Kurt in for purely charitable reasons, and consequently judges the friar
to be a booby for thinking so. The only other reason, surely, is sexual
interest. Later, however, Charles tells Bridey that he is sure there is no vice
in the relationship (page 208). Either he has changed his mind (which is
possible after Sebastian tells him that Kurt is the only kind of man whom he is
fit to look after) or he is dissembling.
206 Seven Dolours
the Seven Sorrows of Mary (see note for
page 182)
206 femme fatale
an attractive but dangerous and
destructive woman (French)
208 P&O
a ship belonging to a prominent British shipping
line
209 D.T.s
delirium tremens - tremors and hallucinations
which occur when one is attempting to recover from alcoholism
209 You know its being pulled down?
The destruction of
Marchmain House, besides acting as a staging post in the decline of civilised
values, echoes a real process which accelerated in the early years of the
twentieth century. Many large town houses belonging to the aristocracy were
pulled down in that period so that today there are very few left in London.
They were expensive to maintain, and the money gained from developers was
welcome.
210 Adam room
a room designed by Robert Adam (1728-1792),
Scottish architect of immense talent whose designs were popular all over
Britain. They are always impressive in their cool, classical elegance. A number
of Adam designs were destroyed in the inter-war years with the result that the
growth of conservation societies was encouraged.
210 Green Park
one of central Londons major parks. Iain
Gale (in his book Waughs World) places Marchmain House in
Arlington Street next to Green Park. It certainly is in Saint Jamess, and
so close to Buckingham Palace.
211 penthouse
a top-floor apartment; clearly an
unfamiliar term to Cordelia though already well established in London society
in the 1920s
211 Requiem
the mass for the dead which may, as here, accompany
the funeral and burial services
211 altar stone
a consecrated stone container containing two
relics of canonized saints in a concealed cavity. It is what converts an
otherwise unconsecrated structure into an altar. During Holy Mass the priest
places the chalice and the Sacred Host (the body of Christ under the appearance
of bread) on this stone. As Cordelia implies, it is removable and easily
transportable for use elsewhere, though naturally in acknowledged churches it
is usually considered a permanent fixture.
211-2 wads of wool with holy oil on them
There are three oils
commonly used in rituals in churches : the oil of catechumens which is to serve
at the anointing of candidates previous to baptism with the intention of giving
them the strength to combat evil; the oil with which the sick are anointed in
the Sacrament of the Sick; and the chrism which is used in the administration
of the Sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation, Ordination and for the consecration
of altars. They are usually made of olive oil though chrism also has a pleasant
perfume, invariably balsam.
It is not entirely clear why there are wads, as
oil is usually stored in bottles or vials. Perhaps the priest has just mopped
some of it up.
212 as if it was always to be Good Friday
The tabernacle is
left open and empty at the end of the Maundy Thursday service and remains so
until just before the Easter Vigil service on Holy Saturday. No mass is said
during this period though there is a Good Friday service.
212 Tenebrae
a service for the last three days of Holy Week,
actually the combined offices of Matins and Lauds brought forward to the
previous evening. The name means darkness or shadows and refers
to the fact that the services end in darkness. There were many variations to
the service, but essentially, during the service fifteen candles were
extinguished one by one after each psalm until only one was left, perhaps to
represent Christ, the light in a world of darkness. Then that candle was hidden
or extinguished and the service was concluded in tenebris (in
darkness); having been begun in daylight it ended with dusk. The
effect was inexpressibly beautiful, though that beauty was shattered by a loud
noise at the end to represent the earths shaking upon Christs
death. Sometimes the single candle was returned to its place as a symbol of
Christs coming resurrection.
Perhaps unfortunately, the Church
reformed the Holy Week services in the mid-1950s and Tenebrae in the form
described here scarcely exists, though many variants of it survive or have been
revived in other denominations and in recent years the Vatican itself has
encouraged bishops to reinstate the service.
212 Quomodo sedet sola civitas
the
first words of the Lamentations of Jeremiah in the Latin translation (the
Vulgate Bible). They are a lament for the desolation of Jerusalem. This first
verse provides the opening of the first lesson of Tenebrae of Maundy Thursday
(actually celebrated on the Wednesday evening). You can read and hear it if you
click here.
212 Father Brown
Cordelias quotation comes
from a story entitled The Queer Feet, in the opinion of many people
(including mine) the best of the Father Brown stories of G.K.
Chesterton.
212 Adrian Porsons poem in The Times
It was quite
customary then for newspapers to commemorate occasions of solemnity or
rejoicing by commissioning, or at least printing, a poem.
213 I heard almost the same thing once before - from someone
very different.
Charles is remembering his conversation with Cara
towards the end of his holiday in Venice with Sebastian. Cara said, When
people hate with all that energy, it is something in themselves they are
hating (page 99). She was talking about Lord Marchmains hatred for
his wife, which arose out of his immature love for her as a youth.
213 Brownings Renaissance
As the following sentence makes
clear, Charles identifies at this point in his life with a Renaissance devoid
of religious significance, something which Browning also did in his many poems
with Renaissance settings. His religious figures are a weird set of maladjusted
neer-do-wells. Of course, EWs point is that the art and achievement
of the Renaissance cannot be separated from religion.
213 Genoa velvet
a very lush form of velvet on a satin ground
and heavily plushed, with patterns (usually multi-coloured) created during the
weaving process. It was very expensive to manufacture and to buy.
213 Galileos tube
i.e. a telescope. Galileo Galilei
(1564-1642) used one of the early telescopes to look at the planets and in 1610
discovered four of the moons which circle Jupiter. The discovery dismayed the
Church because it showed that not all bodies circled the earth, as had been
commonly thought.
213 spurned the friars
In his imagination Charles is
fancying himself as a great creator. He feels superior to merely ordinary men
as in his day Galileo had been to the narrow scholars around him.