This brilliant long essay by the noted literary critic John Middleton Murry, considers Henry Williamson’s novels up to 1954. Murry's essay remains essential reading for those who want to understand better Williamson’s writings. It is written in a clear, elegant style, while the literary analyses of the novels are its greatest distinction. Murry thought very highly of the early books making up A Chronicle of Ancient Sunlight.
By John Middleton Murry. Introduction by Dr J. Wheatley Blench, 78 print pages, paperback, Henry Williamson Society, 1986; e-book 2013
Although Henry Williamson (1895–1977), nature writer and novelist, remains best known for his nature stories set in North Devon and the much-loved classics Tarka the Otter and Salar the Salmon, he wrote many other highly regarded novels. There has been a tendency for critics of his work to attempt to analyse the man rather than the writing that he produced in a career lasting over fifty years. The exception was John Middleton Murry (1889–1957), and this brilliant, long essay considering Williamson’s novels first appeared in The Adelphi, the literary magazine of which Murry was editor, and subsequently in his posthumous collection Katherine Mansfield and other Literary Studies (1959). Murry had a distinguished career as a literary critic, and his essay remains essential reading for those who want to understand better Williamson’s writings. It is written in a clear, elegant style, while the literary analyses of the works give to the essay its greatest distinction.
The novels that Murry considers include the four that make up the tetralogy The Flax of Dream (The Beautiful Years; Dandelion Days; The Dream of Fair Women; The Pathway); The Star-born; The Gold Falcon; The Phasian Bird; and the first four volumes of Williamson’s magnum opus, the fifteen-volume A Chronicle of Ancient Sunlight (The Dark Lantern; Donkey Boy; Young Phillip Maddison; and How Dear is Life – the fifth in the series, A Fox under my Cloak, was published too late to be included by Murry). He thought very highly of the books making up the Chronicle, recognising them as major novels in the great and central tradition of English fiction. Of How Dear is Life he wrote, ‘I do not know of any picture of the 1914–1918 war which can be compared with it for sheer power of enduring in the reader’s memory. In a queer way it is not terrible; it does not haunt so much as satisfy the imagination. It is human, it is humorous, it is pathetic, it is noble – and, above all else, it is beautiful. It is the work of a truly gifted artist, come at last, after much inward travail, to a mastery of his own self-disturbing powers, and working on the grand scale.’
The essay was the very first publication of the Henry Williamson Society, and the paperback has long been out of print.
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