Mayfair is that part of the West End of London bounded by Park Lane, Oxford Street, Regent Street, and Piccadilly. It was a grid of fine streets with cobbled mews behind and narrow lanes such as those of Shepherd’s Market; a village of townhouse terraces and aristocratic mansions set in their own gardens; the grandeur of Grosvenor Square as well as the sloping irregular space of Berkeley Square. Historically Mayfair was a part of London where the very rich and those of more modest means lived next to each other: an impecunious writer could inhabit a shabby room a few yards from the residence of a duke.
Some writers seem to stake out their territories and define their times. They make them their own. Such an author was Michael Arlen (1895-1956) who chronicled the lives of a set of inhabitants of his – even then – disappearing Mayfair during the Prohibition-free British version of the Jazz Age.
Arlen’s first novel, The London Venture (1920), was autobiographical, describing a young man’s ‘assault on London’. These Charming People (1923) was subtitled ‘being a tapestry of the fortunes, follies, adventures, galanteries and general activities’ of the recurring characters who connect the stories, set against the background of Mayfair. Arlen’s Mayfair seems a place somewhat apart, as if behind invisible barriers. There the ‘right’ people loved, lost, and had their being in a London of sunshine, fog, rain, moonlight and stars. Strange things can happen; the supernatural and uncanny are never far away in Arlen’s stories. There can be intrusions anywhere, and the ordered streets and fine houses of Mayfair were no exception.
These Charming People was successful, and Michael Arlen became a literary celebrity. His novel The Green Hat (1924) was a bestseller, as was May Fair, the book that followed. My copy is from the seventh impression – still from the month of original publication, which was one hundred years ago in June 1925.
May Fair was a sequel to These Charming People and boasted a similarly lengthy subtitle: ‘…purporting to reveal to Gentlefolk the Real State of Affairs…together with Suitable reflections on the last follies, misadventures, and galanteries…’. Unlike the earlier stories those in May Fair do not rely as much on recurring characters to link them. It is more Mayfair itself, as the common setting and background, that emerges as the main character. Brick and stone complement the flesh and blood.
May Fair consists of ten stories, together with a long Prologue and Arlen’s ‘au reservoir’ “Farewell, These Charming People”. The stories are written in the rather convoluted and circumlocutory style that Arlen had developed: a leisurely pleasure and indulgence after the initial challenge of settling into it. Appropriately, its Baroque quality was modern and reflected the contemporary rebuilding of the West End and its transformation from the domestic and elegant brick and stucco of the Georgian and Regency eras to the large-scale Portland stone and concrete of the new commercial ‘Georgian Imperial’ age. May Fair was as much a valediction as a celebration of London.
The titles of the stories are evocative and enticing, for example: “A Romance in Old Brandy”, “The Battle of Berkeley Square”, “The Three-Cornered Moon”, and “The Ghoul of Golders Green”. Some stories include ‘novels’ reminiscent of those in Arthur Machen’s The Three Impostors. As the older writer had, Arlen wrote of a small group who ‘cannot remain commonplace’: ‘In my life, as you know, I have not had many dealings with the grotesque. But the grotesque seems lately to be desiring the very closest connection with me (116)’. Although Arlen’s flaneurs also stroll up and down Piccadilly, they live in Mayfair and dine there, rather than maintaining their rooms in Bloomsbury and patronising the restaurants of Soho.
For all Arlen’s fame and wealth, he seems never to have been quite accepted by many – perhaps those he wished to impress most. Did his success breed envy? His persona seemed at times to be an attempt to answer un-named disparagers and critics and prove himself at least as English as the native-born. Michael Arlen was originally Dikran Kouyoumdjian, born of Armenian parents in Bulgaria. He was brought to England as a child and received an exemplary public-school education. The young man had not been allowed to fight for King and Country in World War I: the country of his birth was one of the Central Powers and so an enemy, and he had not yet changed his name and become naturalised, which Arlen did in 1922.
Following the run of successful books during the 1920s Arlen still produced work that glittered, but which also reflected the continued ambiguities of his status. The novel Hell! Said the Duchess (1934) was reminiscent of The Great God Pan by Arthur Machen, while the effective combination of supernatural horror with a darkening view of London high society was Arlen’s own. He left for Italy and France before moving to the United States, returning to England at the outbreak of World War II to take a position in the Civil Defence organisation. Yet Arlen’s loyalty came under question again; he resigned and returned to the USA, where he lived until his death.
But Arlen and Mayfair could not be separated. The novelist and man of letters Anthony Powell was a decade younger than Arlen and outlived him by over forty years. Powell’s grand sequence of twelve novels A Dance to the Music of Time (1951-75) frequently used Mayfair and West End settings for the exploits of the coterie of exotic characters from across the class spectrum he found there – and chronicled throughout in an appropriately unhurried mannered style. In the second volume of his memoirs (Messengers of Day, 1978) Powell recalled that his arrival in London in 1926 had been influenced by Arlen: ‘…I might not have admitted to everyone that the Shepherd’s Market seduction scene which opens Michael Arlen’s novel, The Green Hat, chiefly caused me to set my sights on that small village enclave so unexpectedly concealed among the then grand residences of Mayfair’. Thirty years later Powell was to give Arlen luncheon, remembering him as ‘Small, slight, neat, infinitely sure of himself, yet somehow set apart from other people…’ (2).
Michael Arlen seems to have been a humane and urbane man, thoughtful and generous, who did not wish to reject his heritage but found himself marked by it as an incomer, the eternal outsider. And yet, perhaps, it takes such a one to perceive most sharply something of the veracities of the places they have chosen to inhabit and explore, rather than just the superficialities visible to all.
(John Howard)