Betjeman
A N Wilson
Hutchinson, 2006, £20, Hardback, 384p. ISBN 0091797020
After Bevis Hillier's volumes, letters, TV programmes and a celebration
to overwhelm Radios Three and Four one might assume there was little
new about Sir John.
Wilson eventually comes to his poetry from unexpected angles while exposing
his emotional life with painful clarity. Fellow-feeling lurked and found
resonance in the ease with which he made money out of journalism. His
Oxford career came from self-projection. The bandwagon gathered pace
in the 1930s. Sent down from Oxford, kept afloat by school-mastering
and getting a job at the Archi[tectural] Rev[iew], he was kept by young
fops, led by Brian Guinness and his wife Diana, who found sponsors.
His father was a cabinet-maker. Despite his son's social disadvantages
and preferences for macs and unbrushed teeth he was a good operator.
Middle-class he showed promise as a jester to the upper-class. Wilson
debunks legends. His father was not domineering but read to his son from
Goldsmith's Deserted Village. For C.S. Lewis to keep him at University
was charitable.
Lord Chetwoode, whose daughter he married in 1933, was sympathetic but
exasperated by imitations of their family. Penelope had troubles with
him and his women. A victim of snobbery he sometimes practised it. Some
better-known poems showed how he worked – mockery being yearning
beyond judgement. A trend towards Anglo-Catholicism offered him a plan.
With a temperament for commitment to wife and mistress no one could be
free. Eventually Penelope became a Roman Catholic.
A bit short on detail and slightly error prone: Marlborough's friend
was John Bowle, Anthony Powell got an Oxford third, Aldershot is in Hampshire
and Ashby-de-la-Zouch in Leicestershire. These were vast constituencies
reached and areas covered. Much acclaim was non-literary in origin, but
many literary figures were esteemed for their personalities.
This review owes much to an earlier review by D.J. Taylor, published
in The Independent.
Contributed by: John S Andrews, MA, PhD, MCLIP, Life Vice-President
of the Librarians' Christian Fellowship and Sub-Librarian of the University
of Lancaster
until his retirement.