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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Andrew Taylor, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. A thought on poets, death, and Clive James. And heroism.

By Andrew Taylor


Whatever else we think of poets, we don’t tend to see them as heroes.

Gold fountain pen on hand written letterThere are exceptions, of course – Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon famously won the Military Cross, and some three hundred years earlier, Sir Philip Sidney was praised for his dash and gallantry at the Battle of Zutphen; then there’s Keith Douglas from World War II, one of the few deserters ever to abandon his post to get into a battle, who was killed shortly after the D-Day invasion.

It’s not a long list, and those on it performed their acts of heroism in, so to speak, their time off. They were heroes who happened to be poets as well. Poetry, by and large, is a solitary craft: it’s not easy to perform acts of derring-do when you’re hunched on your own over a desk. The greatest battle most poets fight is the unequal struggle against a blank sheet of paper.

But there’s another sort of heroism that poets can achieve, in honour of their talent and their craft – the courage to stare death in the face, and to keep on writing, honestly and truthfully.

Vernon Scannell managed it. After months of illness, shuffling from room to room and from oxygen cylinder to oxygen cylinder, he gave up and took to his bed — often, in the sick and ailing, a sure sign that death is approaching. Instead, he started writing again, and produced Last Post, maybe the best volume of his life:

“There’s something valedictory in the way
My books gaze down on me from where they stand
In disciplined disorder and display
The same goodwill that wellwishers on land
Convey to troops who sail away to where
Great danger waits …”

A couple of months later, he was dead.

And now there’s Clive James. Poems like Sentenced to Life and Holding Court chart James’s progress towards what he calls “dropping off the twig” with clear-eyed courage. There’s sadness and regret, but not a shred of self-pity. Approaching death, he seems to say, brings its compensations:

“Once, I would not have noticed; nor have known

The name for Japanese anemones,

So pale, so frail. But now I catch the tone
Of leaves. No birds can touch down in the trees

Without my seeing them. I count the bees.”

The Daily Mirror, never far from the front of the pack in the race to find a crass and clumsy phrase, quotes James (inaccurately, as far as I can see) as saying that he has “lost his battle with cancer”. Not so.

We all, as one of Shakespeare’s less well known characters points out, owe God a death, and getting better from cancer can only ever put off the final reckoning. But facing it down, as Scannell did and as James is doing – sending back poems like dispatches from the last frontier any of us will ever cross – is the only battle we can win. Catching the tone of leaves as the world closes in is what a real poet does, and if it’s not heroism, then I don’t know what is.

This article originally appeared on andrewtaylor.uk.net.

Andrew Taylor is the author of ten books, including Walking Wounded: The Life and Poetry of Vernon Scanell, biographies of the Arabian traveller Charles Doughty and the 16th Century cartographer Gerard Mercator, as well as books on language, literature, poetry and, history. He studied English Literature at Oxford University and worked as a Fleet Street and BBC television journalist in London and the Middle East before returning to Britain in the 1990s to concentrate on his writing career.

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Image credit: Selective focus on gold pen over hand written letter. Focus on tip of pen nib. © AmbientIdeas via iStockphoto.

The post A thought on poets, death, and Clive James. And heroism. appeared first on OUPblog.

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2. The Anatomy of Ghosts

This review doesn’t start well, but I promise, it gets better. I received an ARC of Andrew Taylor’s The Anatomy of Ghosts, hot on American bookshelves as I type. I read the first two pages and put it down immediately. It was not because Taylor (or his editor) chose to begin with a prologue (which I’ve realized is the crutch of the modern author). More so, it was because the writing did not pull me in. I was not thrilled, in any way, despite the kudos on the cover, claiming Taylor has mastered “a high degree of literary expertise.” The prologue bored me, and it was days before I gave the book another try—and how disappointing, since the synopsis was so intriguing.

From Taylor’s website: “They say Jerusalem College is haunted by Mrs. Whichcote’s ghost. Frank Oldershaw claims he saw her in the garden, where she drowned. Now he’s under the care of a physician. Desperate to salvage her son’s reputation and restore him to health, Lady Anne Oldershaw employs her own agent—John Holdsworth, author of The Anatomy of Ghosts, a controversial attack on the existence of ghostly phenomena. But his arrival in Cambridge disrupts the uneasy status quo. He glimpses a world of privilege and abuse, where the sinister Holy Ghost Club governs life at Jerusalem more effectively than the Master, Dr. Carbury, ever could.

“But Holdsworth’s powers of reason and his knowledge of natural philosophy have other challenges. He dreams of his dead wife, Maria, who roams the borders of death. Now there’s Elinor, the very-much-alive Master’s wife, to haunt him in life. And at the heart of it all is the mystery of what really happened to Sylvia Whichcote in the claustrophobic confines of Jerusalem. Why was Sylvia found lying dead in the Long Pond just before a February dawn? And how did she die?”

Sounds interesting, right? Well Andrew Taylor’s Anatomy of Ghosts is, in fact, very interesting; it just has a bad beginning. Once I got past the prologue, the first thing that drew me in was the setting: England, 1786. I have trouble picturing this time, off the top of my head, but I didn’t need to create the space in my own imagination; Taylor did it for me. He even includes a Tolkien-esque map for reader reference. More than that, he includes vivid descriptions of not only the college but of the disgusting rabble that surrounds it. So not only is Anatomy of Ghosts a mystery, but it is beautifully conceived historical fiction.

The fictional Jerusalem College is roughly based on Cambridge's Emmanual College, pictured here.

Taylor chooses an unlikely protagonist in the dour John Holdsworth. Holdsworth lost his son to a tragic accident, and his wife—obsessed with their son’s ghost—soon takes her own life, in an effort to join him. Poverty- and grief-stricken, Holdsworth loses the house he shared with his family. He spends his days selling old books in the streets of London. Soon, as mentioned in the synopsis, he is pulled into the Jerusalem College mystery, and this is where his true character development begins. This is also where the real meat of the story begins, as well.

Andrew Taylor does a wonderful job of weaving uncertainty through his pages. Not only are we confused about how Mrs. Whichcote died, we’re unsure of why she died. More than that, we’re u

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