Seven books from a box in the attic. How many
must be retained? Well, here is a duplicate of Patrick Leigh-Fermor’s Between
the Woods and the Water (1986), about the middle part of his youthful journey from the Hook of
Holland towards Istanbul. It is a Book Club Edition and I already have an
earlier copy. That can go.
Now, what's this? The Albatross by
David Langstone Bolt (1954) in a slightly battered Biro dustjacket. This was
Bolt’s first book: he was 26. It has an epigraph from Baudelaire. The publisher,
Peter Davies, was discerning: it was just before this that he had issued three books
by Sarban.
‘To the artist,’ loftily remarks the flap, ‘nothing
ultimately matters except his art’. Aesthete alert! Christopher Howard (a writer),
is, we are assured, ‘an entirely convincing figure’ who is ‘profoundly studied’.
He does look rather studied, it is true, sporting a floppy white collar and cravat
at his typewriter. Advice to Aspiring Authors: Always Look Dapper At Your
Tapper. Flaunt Chic Clothes to Compose Your Prose. A Floppy Collar Suggests a Scholar.
The pencilled sigil on the front free endpaper
encircling a price of £2.50 tells me that this book came from the Old
Dispensation at Richard Booth’s, Hay-on-Wye. At that price I would have scooped
it up on the off-chance. Mr Howard proves to be a somewhat louche individual
who mingles with post-war Forties bohemians but is not quite unusual enough. The book is
betrayed by a brusque, melodramatic ending.
Even so, I like the look of his second book,
also from Peter Davies, A Cry Ascending (1955), because its dustjacket
features a young woman in a churchyard beneath a looming tower, clutching at
the curtilage fence and gazing beyond. Looks atmospheric, might there be a hint
of the eerie? Worth a try.
The next item from the box is a
mimeographed pamphlet, Holt Junction (1966), produced locally to
commemorate the closure of the railway station, with anecdotes from villagers. Mr
Earl, for example, remembers the bitter winter of 1940, with the icy rain so
hard that it tore his umbrella to shreds before he reached the yard gates. It
took him three-quarters of an hour to struggle to his nearby home, protected,
as he said, only by the spokes. There are several such vivid vignettes.
I got it because I thought it was about Holt, Norfolk, a
town I like, where I once found a rare book of mystical essays by G R S Mead (the
author of Fragments of a Faith Forgotten, about the Gnostics). This, unfortunately,
is one of those Books I Have Moved On That I Ought Not to Have Done. They will
keep haunting one. However, the Junction in question is in Wiltshire. This village
was (incidentally) the home of Esme Wynne-Tyson and J D Beresford, co -authors
of half a dozen mystical novels. There is no copy of Holt Junction in
the British Library: so, of course, it must be preserved.
Here now is a slim volume issued by the Golden Head Press of
Cambridge, who sound like they must have some connection with alchemy or possess
a gilded talking skull. It is A Railway Rubaiyyat by Henry Maxwell
(1968), an elegy in rhyming quatrains to the days of steam trains. The verses
are highly atmospheric.
In one scene our narrator comes unexpectedly at dusk to a
lonely level crossing in the West Country. There are distant lights glowing up
and down the line, and he hears the faint thrum of the rails. But no train
passes, and he feels as if he is caught in an enchantment. Crossing-places
(fords, footbridges, toll-bridges) are often mysterious in folklore: why not
level crossings too? For this scene alone the book must be kept.
The next book from the box is Liars and Fakers by
Philip W Sergeant (1925). ‘Who are you going to leave out?’ asked his rather
jaundiced publisher. But only four such are discussed because the author found
they all needed ample room. Sergeant was a friend and neighbour of Arthur
Machen in St John’s Wood: Machen later introduced his Witches and Warlocks
(1936). And to my delight Machen proved to have some hand in Liars and
Fakers too, because it was he, Sergeant explains, who suggested one of the
four subjects: Psalmanazar, the faux Formosan prince befriended by Dr Johnson. This
minor Machen link must be treated with respect.
Now, the next to hand, a stout red Routledge volume entitled
A Legal Practitioner, by Christian Tearle (1907), I picked up because I
wondered if it had any early crime fiction interest. It does, in a
mild-mannered sort of way. The five short stories about a London solicitor’s
clients also involve liars and fakers, but this is light comedy and they are
picturesque impostors. Tearle was the pseudonym of Edward Tyrell Jacques. He
had a minor success with his series of travel sketches Rambles With An
American (1910) and sequels.
But probably his most interesting book now, under
his own name, is Charles Dickens in Chancery, being an account of his
proceedings in respect of the “Christmas Carol” with some gossip in relation to
the old Law Courts of Westminster (1914) which sounds worth it for the
title alone. He tells of Dickens’ case against several pirates of his
celebrated Christmas story, one of whom put up a lively defence. That had
better be looked into.
The seventh from the box is A Soldier’s Tale (1976),
a war romance. I got it because it is by the New Zealand author M K Joseph, who wrote an SF novel, The Hole in the Zero (1967), which starts like a
typical space opera but soon becomes highly speculative. However, this is not
SF: could it be Moved On? Hmmm. I now see that Joseph also wrote a time travel
novel called The Time of Achamoth (1977) about a plot to thwart the apocalyptic
power of a Gnostic demiurge. That ought to be investigated, but all copies seem
to be in NZ. In the meantime, better not be Too Rash.
Well, one book out of seven isn’t too bad. What’s that? But I’ve also bought another one?
And I also seem to have added two more to my Wants list? Ah, well, yes, but, you see . . .
(Mark Valentine)