Monday, April 19, 2021

The Master Sinner

There is a small sub-genre of letters-from-hell books. The most well-known of these is doubtless The Screwtape Letters (1942), by C.S. Lewis. But previous to Lewis there were two others that Lewis at least knew about. Breve fra Helvede by M. Rowel (the pseudonym of Valdemar Adolph Thisted) appeared in Denmark in 1866, with English translations to follow, including an 1884 one, as Letters from Hell,  with a preface by George MacDonald. Lewis is known to have read a part of this volume, leaving the whole unfinished. An earlier similar volume was Infernal Conference: or, Dialogues of Devils (1772) by John Magowan. I included extracts from each of these two books in my anthology Tales Before Narnia (2008). The Magowan book was, to me, the more interesting of the two. 

Not long after Tales Before Narnia was published, I learned of another similar book, The Master Sinner, by "A Well-Known Author." It was published by John Long in February 1901. The "Author of The Master Sinner" published a second novel, unrelated to the first, entitled The Curse of Eden (John Long, November 1901).

The Master Sinner is a sort of cynical response to books by Marie Corelli, like The Sorrows of Satan (1895) and (especially) The Master-Christian (1900). It tells of two friends, poor philosophers Anthony Grigg and Thomas Trelawny, who make a pact that whoever dies first will communicate to the other the facts about various eternal things. Trelawny dies suddenly, and Grigg receives two letters, a year apart, beginning on the anniversary of his friend's death, fulfilling the bargain, and telling him of the misrepresentation on earth of Hell and its ruling presence. In the second part of the book, Grigg reads his friend's diary, and then his own, with highlights by Satan about each of them wrecking another person's life. Trelawney made up for his mistake and so "earned" a place in "good" Hell (Trelawny describes hell as a good place, contrary to earthly understanding). The question is, can Grigg do the same?  The story is melodramatic, and has some nice descriptive passages.It keeps one reading through to the end. 

The Master Sinner has long been erroneously attributed to Herbert Vivian (1865-1940), even according to various library catalogues. This misattribution began early. In the section of "Table Talk" in The Literary World for 22 March 1901, there appeared the following:

The authorship of 'The Master Sinner', a new series of 'Letters from Hell', recently reviewed in these columns, has been unofficially fathered upon Mr Herbert Vivian, the former editor of The Whirlwind, and the prospective editor of The Rambler. There may be other claimants. 

The following lines, by an anonymous author, were picked up in the Strand:

The Hell-marked Christian was the first;
  He raved and Stormed and holloaed.
Next on the scene Corelli burst--
  The Master Christian followed.

Then for spell the lord of hell
  In peace could eat his dinner;
But not for Long, who seized his prong
  And raised the Master Sinner. 

The actual author of The Master Sinner was Wilfred Keppel Honnywill (1871-1909), the son of a clergyman, Rev. John Blake Honnywill (1824-1883) and his wife Anne Jane Montague nee Stephenson (1839-1901), born at Sompting, Sussex. He was educated at King's School, Sherborne, and served in the Royal Navy and the Mercantile Marines, before briefly owning a newspaper and turning to literature. Besides the two pseudonymous novels, he published only one other book, Irene and Other Poems (1900), as by W. Keppel Honnywill. A large inheritance following his mother's death in 1901 led to the abandonment of literature, which was furthered by alcoholism and eventually followed by suicide.  In the late morning of 21 September 1909, Honnywill jumped from a bridge above Farringdon Street, Holborn, fracturing his skull on impact. He was 38 years old.


4 comments:

  1. Brings new meaning to *What fresh hell is this?*

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  2. Don't leave out Mark Twain's Letters from Earth. The letters in question may not be from Hell, but they are authored by Satan.

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  3. Yes, but since they weren't published until 1962 they at least post-date my original remit (i.e., stuff from before Screwtape). Still, a noteworthy example.

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