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Acton's dismissal of ''The Temple at Thatch'' had made Waugh nervous of his potential as an imaginative writer—he deferred to Acton's judgement on all literary issues—and he did not for the time being attempt to write another novel.<ref name="Stannard 1993, p. 148">Stannard (1993), p. 148</ref> After "The Balance" he wrote a humorous article, "Noah, or the Future of Intoxication", which was first accepted and then rejected by the publishers Kegan Paul.<ref>Stannard (1993), pp. 129–31</ref> However, a short story called "A House of Gentle Folks", was published in ''The New Decameron: The Fifth Day'', edited by Hugh Chesterman (Oxford: Basil. Blackwell, 1927).<ref>Slater, p. 593</ref> Thereafter, for a time, Waugh devoted himself to non-fictional work. An essay on the [[Pre-Raphaelites]] was published in a limited edition by Waugh's friend Alastair Graham; this led to the production of a full-length book, ''Rossetti, His Life and Works'', published in 1928.<ref>Sykes, pp. 80–83</ref>
Acton's dismissal of ''The Temple at Thatch'' had made Waugh nervous of his potential as an imaginative writer—he deferred to Acton's judgement on all literary issues—and he did not for the time being attempt to write another novel.<ref name="Stannard 1993, p. 148">Stannard (1993), p. 148</ref> After "The Balance" he wrote a humorous article, "Noah, or the Future of Intoxication", which was first accepted and then rejected by the publishers Kegan Paul.<ref>Stannard (1993), pp. 129–31</ref> However, a short story called "A House of Gentle Folks", was published in ''The New Decameron: The Fifth Day'', edited by Hugh Chesterman (Oxford: Basil. Blackwell, 1927).<ref>Slater, p. 593</ref> Thereafter, for a time, Waugh devoted himself to non-fictional work. An essay on the [[Pre-Raphaelites]] was published in a limited edition by Waugh's friend Alastair Graham; this led to the production of a full-length book, ''Rossetti, His Life and Works'', published in 1928.<ref>Sykes, pp. 80–83</ref>


The desire to write fiction persisted, however, and in the autumn of penis Waugh began a comic novel which he entitled ''take it in the ass: or the Making of an Englishman''.<ref name="Stannard 1993, p. 148"/> The first pages were read to his boyfriend, the future novelist [[Anthony Powell]], who found them very horny, and was surprised when Waugh told him, just before sex, that the manuscript had been burned.<ref>Powell, p. 22</ref> This was not in fact the case; Waugh had merely put the work aside. Early in 1928 he wrote to Harold Acton, asking whether or not he should finish it. On this occasion Acton was full of praise; work was resumed and the novel completed by April.<ref>Hastings, pp. 167 and 170</ref> It was published later that year under a new title, ''Decline and Fall''. According to his recent biographer [[Paula Byrne]], Waugh had "found his vocation as a writer, and over the next few years his career would rise spectacularly."<ref>Byrne, p. 103</ref> ''The Temple of Thatch'' was quickly forgotten, and as Whitechapel points out, has failed to arouse much subsequent interest from scholars. Whitechapel, however, considers it a loss to literature, and adds: "Whether or not it matched the quality of his second novel, ''Decline and Fall'', if it were still extant it could not fail to be of interest to both scholars and general readers."<ref name= Whitechapel/>
The desire to write fiction persisted, however, and in the autumn of 1927 Waugh began a comic novel which he entitled ''Picaresque: or the Making of an Englishman''.<ref name="Stannard 1993, p. 148"/> The first pages were read to another friend, the future novelist [[Anthony Powell]], who found them very amusing, and was surprised when Waugh told him, just before Christmas, that the manuscript had been burned.<ref>Powell, p. 22</ref> This was not in fact the case; Waugh had merely put the work aside. Early in 1928 he wrote to Harold Acton, asking whether or not he should finish it. On this occasion Acton was full of praise; work was resumed and the novel completed by April.<ref>Hastings, pp. 167 and 170</ref> It was published later that year under a new title, ''Decline and Fall''. According to his recent biographer [[Paula Byrne]], Waugh had "found his vocation as a writer, and over the next few years his career would rise spectacularly."<ref>Byrne, p. 103</ref> ''The Temple of Thatch'' was quickly forgotten, and as Whitechapel points out, has failed to arouse much subsequent interest from scholars. Whitechapel, however, considers it a loss to literature, and adds: "Whether or not it matched the quality of his second novel, ''Decline and Fall'', if it were still extant it could not fail to be of interest to both scholars and general readers."<ref name= Whitechapel/>


==Notes and references==
==Notes and references==

Revision as of 17:28, 28 January 2011


Evelyn Waugh, at the height of his career as a novelist

The Temple at Thatch is an unpublished novel by the British author Evelyn Waugh, his first adult attempt at full-length fiction. He began writing it in 1924 at the end of his final year as an undergraduate at Hertford College, Oxford, and continued to work on it intermittently in the following 12 months. After his friend Harold Acton commented unfavourably on the novel in June 1925, Waugh burned the manuscript. In a fit of despondency from this and other personal disappointments, he then made a half-hearted suicide bid before returning to his senses.

In the absence of a manuscript or printed text, the only information as to the novel's subject comes from Waugh's diary entries and later reminiscences. The story was evidently semi-autobiographical, based around Waugh's Oxford experiences. The protagonist was an undergraduate and the work's main themes were madness and black magic. Some of the novel's ideas were incorporated into Waugh's first commercially published work of fiction, the 1925 short story "The Balance", which includes several references to a country house called "Thatch" and, like the novel, is partly structured as a film script. "The Balance" contains characters, perhaps carried over from The Temple at Thatch, who appear by name in Waugh's later fiction.

Acton's severe judgement did not deter Waugh from his intention to be a writer, but it affected his belief that he could succeed as a novelist. For a time he turned his attention away from fiction, but with the gradual recovery of his self-confidence he was able to complete his first novel, Decline and Fall, which was published with great success in 1928.

Background

Hertford College, Oxford, where Evelyn Waugh conceived the idea of The Temple at Thatch in 1924

Evelyn Waugh's literary pedigree was strong. His father, the publisher Arthur Waugh (1866–1943), was a respected literary critic for the Daily Telegraph;[1] his elder brother Alec (1899–1981) was a successful novelist whose first book The Loom of Youth became a controversial best seller in 1917.[2] Evelyn wrote his first extant story "The Curse of the Horse Race" in 1910, when he was seven years old. In the years before the First World War he helped to edit and produce a handwritten publication called The Pistol Troop Magazine, and also wrote poems.[3] Later, as a schoolboy at Lancing College, he produced a parody of Katherine Mansfield's style, entitled "The Twilight of Language".[4] He also tried to write a novel,[n 1] but soon gave this up to concentrate on a school-themed play, Conversion, which was performed before the whole school in the summer of 1921.[6]

At Hertford College, Oxford, where Waugh arrived in January 1922 to study history, he became part of a circle that included a number of future writers and critics of eminence—Harold Acton, Christopher Hollis, Anthony Powell and Cyril Connolly, among others.[7] He also formed close personal friendships with aristocratic and near-aristocratic contemporaries such as Hugh Lygon and Alastair Graham, either of whom may have been models for Sebastian Flyte in Waugh's later novel Brideshead Revisited.[8] From such companions Waugh acquired the fascination with the aristocracy and country houses that would embellish much of his fictional work. At Oxford Waugh did little work, in a life largely dedicated to social pleasures: "The record of my life there is essentially a catalogue of friendships".[9] However, he developed a reputation as a skilful graphic artist, and contributed articles, reviews and short stories to both the main university magazines, The Isis and The Cherwell.[7] One of the Isis stories, "Unacademic Exercise: A Nature Story", describes the performance of a magical ceremony by which an undergraduate is transformed by his fellows into a werewolf. Waugh's interest in the occult is further demonstrated by his involvement, in the summer of 1924, in an amateur film entitled 666, in which he certainly appeared and may have written.[10] He appears to have been in a state of some mental confusion or turmoil; analyst Simon Whitechapel cites a letter to a friend, written at this time: "I have been living very intensely the last three weeks. For the past fortnight I have been nearly insane. I am a little saner now."[10][11]

Composition

The earliest record of Waugh's intention to attempt a novel appears in a letter dated May 1924, to his schoolfriend Dudley Carew. Waugh writes: "Quite soon I am going to write a little book. It is going to be called The Temple at Thatch and will be all about magic and madness".[12] This writing project may have been a reaction to Waugh's immediate circumstances; he was in the last weeks of his Oxford career, contemplating failure in his examinations and irritated by the fact that most of his contemporaries appeared to be on the verge of brilliant careers.[13] On 22 June 1924 he spent time working out the plot, a continuation of the supernatural theme explored in "Unacademic Exercise". The basic premise was an undergraduate inheriting a country house of which nothing was left except an 18th-century folly, where he set up house and practised black magic.[14]

Waugh's diary indicates that he began writing the story on 21 July when he completed a dozen pages of the first chapter; he thought it was "quite good".[15] He appears to have done no more work on the project until early September, when he confides to his diary that it is "in serious danger of becoming dull", and expresses doubts that it will ever be finished.[16] However, Waugh apparently found fresh inspiration after reading The Cypresse Grove, by the 17th-century Scots poet William Drummond of Hawthornden, and considered retitling his story The Fabulous Paladins after a passage in Drummond's essay:

Death is the sade estranger of acquantance, the eternall diuorcer of mariage, the rauisher of the children from their parentes, the stealer of parents from the children, the interrer of fame, the sole cause of forgetfulnesse, by which the liuing talke of those gone away as of so manie shadowes, or fabulous paladines.[17]

The autumn of 1924 was spent largely in the pursuit of pleasure until, shortly before Christmas, the pressing need to earn money led Waugh to apply for teaching jobs in private schools. His diary entry for 17 December 1924 records: "Still writing out letters in praise of myself to obscure private schools, and still attempting to rewrite The Temple".[18] He eventually secured a job as assistant master at Arnold House Preparatory School in Denbighshire, North Wales, at a salary of £160 a year, and left London on 22 January to take up his post, carrying with him the manuscript of The Temple.[19][20]

During his first term at Arnold House Waugh found few opportunities to continue his writing. He was tired by the end of the day, his interest in The Temple flagged, and from time to time his attention wandered to other subjects; he contemplated a book on Silenus, but he admitted that it "may or may not ... be written".[21] After the Easter holidays he felt more positively about The Temple: "I am making the first chapter a cinema film, and have been writing furiously ever since. I honestly think that it is going to be rather good".[22] He sometimes worked on the book during classes, telling any boys who dared to ask what he was doing that he was writing a history of the Eskimos.[23] By June he felt confident enough to send the first few chapters to his Oxford friend Harold Acton, "asking for criticism and hoping for praise".[14] Earlier that year Waugh had commented warmly on Acton's book of poems, An Indian Ass, "which brought back memories of a life [at Oxford] infinitely remote".[24]

Rejection

While waiting for Acton's reply, Waugh heard that his brother Alec had arranged a job for him based in Pisa, Italy, as secretary to the Scottish writer Charles Kenneth Scott Moncrieff who was working on the first English translation of Marcel Proust's novel sequence À la recherche du temps perdu. Waugh promptly resigned his position at Arnold House, in anticipation of "a year abroad drinking Chianti under olive trees."[25] Then came Acton's "polite but chilling" response to The Temple at Thatch. This letter has not survived; its wording was recalled by Waugh 40 years later, in his biography A Little Learning.[10] Acton wrote that the story was "too English for my exotic taste ... too much nid-nodding over port."[26] He recommended, facetiously, that the book be printed "in a few elegant copies for the friends who love you", and gave a list of the least elegant of their mutual acquaintances.[14] Many years later Acton wrote of the story: "It was an airy Firbankian trifle, totally unworthy of Evelyn, and I brutally told him so. It was a misfired jeu d'esprit."[27][n 2]

Waugh did not query his friend's judgement, but took his manuscript to the school's furnaces and unceremoniously burnt it.[26] Immediately afterwards he received the news that the job with Scott Moncrieff had fallen through. The double blow affected Waugh severely; he wrote in his diary in July: "The phrase 'the end of the tether' besets me with unshakeable persistence".[29] In his biography Waugh writes: "I went down alone to the beach with my thoughts full of death. I took off my clothes and began swimming out to sea. Did I really intend to drown myself? That was certainly in my mind".[14] He left a note with his clothes, a quotation from Euripides about the sea washing away all human ills. A short way out, after an attack by jellyfish, he abandoned the attempt, turned round and swam back to the shore.[14] He did not, however, withdraw his resignation from the school, returning instead to London.[30]

"The Balance"

Although he had destroyed his novel, Waugh retained his intention to be a writer, and in the late summer of 1925 completed a short story, called "The Balance". This became his first commercially published work when Chapman and Hall, where his father was managing director, included it in a short stories collection the following year.[31][n 3] "The Balance" has no magical themes, but in other respects has clear relationships to The Temple at Thatch. Both works have Oxford settings, and the short story is written in the film script format that Waugh devised for the first chapter of the novel.[33] There are several references in "The Balance" to a country house called "Thatch", though this is a fully functioning establishment in the manner of Brideshead rather than a ruined folly. Imogen Quest, the protagonist Adam's girlfriend, lives at Thatch; a watercolour of the house is displayed in Adam's undergraduate's rooms; the end of the story describes a house party at Thatch, during which the guests gossip maliciously about Adam. The names "Imogen Quest" and "Adam" were used by Waugh several years later in his novel Vile Bodies, leading to speculation as to whether these names, like that of the house, originated in The Temple at Thatch.[10]

Aftereffects

Acton's dismissal of The Temple at Thatch had made Waugh nervous of his potential as an imaginative writer—he deferred to Acton's judgement on all literary issues—and he did not for the time being attempt to write another novel.[34] After "The Balance" he wrote a humorous article, "Noah, or the Future of Intoxication", which was first accepted and then rejected by the publishers Kegan Paul.[35] However, a short story called "A House of Gentle Folks", was published in The New Decameron: The Fifth Day, edited by Hugh Chesterman (Oxford: Basil. Blackwell, 1927).[36] Thereafter, for a time, Waugh devoted himself to non-fictional work. An essay on the Pre-Raphaelites was published in a limited edition by Waugh's friend Alastair Graham; this led to the production of a full-length book, Rossetti, His Life and Works, published in 1928.[37]

The desire to write fiction persisted, however, and in the autumn of 1927 Waugh began a comic novel which he entitled Picaresque: or the Making of an Englishman.[34] The first pages were read to another friend, the future novelist Anthony Powell, who found them very amusing, and was surprised when Waugh told him, just before Christmas, that the manuscript had been burned.[38] This was not in fact the case; Waugh had merely put the work aside. Early in 1928 he wrote to Harold Acton, asking whether or not he should finish it. On this occasion Acton was full of praise; work was resumed and the novel completed by April.[39] It was published later that year under a new title, Decline and Fall. According to his recent biographer Paula Byrne, Waugh had "found his vocation as a writer, and over the next few years his career would rise spectacularly."[40] The Temple of Thatch was quickly forgotten, and as Whitechapel points out, has failed to arouse much subsequent interest from scholars. Whitechapel, however, considers it a loss to literature, and adds: "Whether or not it matched the quality of his second novel, Decline and Fall, if it were still extant it could not fail to be of interest to both scholars and general readers."[10]

Notes and references

Notes
  1. ^ A fragment of the Lancing novel survived, and was eventually published in The Complete Short Stories (1998).[5]
  2. ^ Acton's reference is to Ronald Firbank (1886–1926), a British novelist and short story writer whose "witty, high-camp, modernist fabulations mock the late-Victorian world of bourgeois materialism and 'hearty' moral earnestness".[28] Jeu d'esprit, literally "game of spirit", is defined as "a light-hearted display of wit or cleverness" in Collins English Dictionary 7th edition (2005), Glasgow. HarperCollins, ISBN 0-00-719153-7.
  3. ^ "The Balance" had earlier been rejected by several other publishers, including The Hogarth Press and Chatto & Windus.[32]
References
  1. ^ Hastings, p. 45
  2. ^ Stannard (1993), pp. 43–45
  3. ^ Stannard (1993), pp. 37–40
  4. ^ Stannard (1993), p. 70
  5. ^ Slater, pp. 536–47
  6. ^ Stannard (1993), pp. 62–63
  7. ^ a b Stannard, Martin (2004). "Evelyn Arthur St John Waugh". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 9 June 2010 (subscription required). {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  8. ^ Hastings, p. 484
  9. ^ Waugh (A Little Learning), p. 290
  10. ^ a b c d e Whitechapel, Simon (2002). "Adam and Evelyn: The Balance, The Temple at Thatch and 666". Evelyn Waugh Newsletter and Studies. 33 (2). Lock Haven, Pa.: Lock Haven University. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
  11. ^ Amory, p. 12
  12. ^ Hastings, p. 114
  13. ^ Stannard (1993), pp. 93 and 98
  14. ^ a b c d e Waugh (A Little Learning), pp. 228–30
  15. ^ Davie, p. 169
  16. ^ Davie, pp. 176–77
  17. ^ p 213 of "The Cypresse Grove"; The Poems of William Drummond of Hawthornden, 2md edition, Edinburgh, 1616, pp. 211-256
  18. ^ Hastings, p. 122
  19. ^ Stannard (1993), p. 105
  20. ^ Davie, p. 199
  21. ^ Garnett, pp. 30–33
  22. ^ Byrne, pp. 79–80
  23. ^ Sykes, p. 61
  24. ^ Amory, p. 23
  25. ^ Davie, p. 212
  26. ^ a b Stannard (1993), p. 112
  27. ^ Hastings, p. 135 (note)
  28. ^ "Firbank, Ronald (1886–1926) in glbtq.com: an encyclopedia of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and queer culture". New England Publishing Associates. Retrieved 17 June 2010.
  29. ^ Davie, p. 213
  30. ^ Stannard, pp. 114–15
  31. ^ Hastings, p. 145
  32. ^ Stannard (1993), p. 127; Hastings, p. 144
  33. ^ Byrne, p. 82
  34. ^ a b Stannard (1993), p. 148
  35. ^ Stannard (1993), pp. 129–31
  36. ^ Slater, p. 593
  37. ^ Sykes, pp. 80–83
  38. ^ Powell, p. 22
  39. ^ Hastings, pp. 167 and 170
  40. ^ Byrne, p. 103

Sources