The current number of the New York Review of Books* has an important article about the English novelist Penelope Fitzgerald. A major contemporary writer who started publishing her fiction at the age of sixty would be an object of interest under any circumstances, all the more so with the recent appearance of an engaging biography by a major literary scholar, Hermione Lee of Oxford. We know a little bit about this. In a recent post I mentioned some of the excellent lectures we heard at the Oxford “Meeting Minds” conference in September. One I didn’t mention was Hermione Lee’s account of the subject of her book—an account sufficiently engaging to induce Joan to buy a signed copy afterwards. Explaining the further dimensions of her interest will require digression.
One day in 1975 I was in the office
of my late friend and colleague Carlos Baker. As we chatted, he was “going through his mail,” meaning
setting a few things aside for later attention and throwing rather more things
directly into the wastebasket after the briefest of glances. One of the pieces that fluttered unheeded
toward the circular file caught my printer’s eye. It was a piece of two-color work on high quality paper,
obviously letterpress. I dived for
it and retrieved it.
It was an announcement by the
William Morris Society of Great Britain of their intention to appoint a
Resident Fellow of the Center in Kelmscott House, Morris’s old “town” residence
in Hammersmith, London. The duties
of the Fellow would be vaguely to “supervise work” and to give a series of
several seminars on some aspect of William Morris’s life and work. The emoluments would be (1) free
housing for fellow and fellow’s family in elegant Georgian mansion on the
Thames, and (2) an honorarium of £1000.
The deadline for receipt of applications was, as I remember, about a
week away.
The life we knew at Kelmscott House
would supply the matter for a dozen blog essays and probably a substantial
comic novel. The house was indeed
an elegant Georgian mansion, but it was in a semi-ruinous state. Its maintenance requirements far
outstripped the resources of the underfunded William Morris Society, which may
explain why its trustees not too much later sold it to Faye Dunaway! The William Morris Society itself was a
barely stable compound of William Morris enthusiasts, including Communists,
book arts people, fantasy literature fans, and little old ladies who loved
“Willow Leaf” wallpaper. There
were several other Morrisian and pseudo-Morrisian students living in various parts
of the house, and an odd couple of ancient family retainers of “the
Stevensons”, the previous freeholders, squatted unseen but not unsensed in the
bowels of the cellar. But my
subject today is Penelope Fitzgerald.
Morris had set up the Kelmscott
Press in the large cellar floor of the house, and it was there that the
immortal edition of Chaucer was produced.
Morris’s friend, the great book-binder T. J. Cobden-Sanderson, lived next door. Sir Emery Walker
the typographer was right around the corner. But that was then. Now there was practically nothing left
of the press except for one of the original Albions and a few banks of
commercial foundry type. This was
enough, however, for me to be able to offer to the public a short course in
elementary techniques of letterpress—thus satisfying the “supervise work”
clause of my fellowship.
I think there is still extant
somewhere in my vast but sadly undisciplined “archives” one copy of my handsome little brochure
entitled Morris & Mediaevalism, a
Bibliography, printed by me and Penelope Fitzgerald at Kelmscott
House. Supposing I could ever locate
this item, and supposing that people might credit my account of its
origins—both probably suppositions “contrary to fact” in legal lingo—it might
be worth a little money. It would
be worth far more, though, as a souvenir of our brief friendship with the
bright, odd, self-effacing lady who would before too long command a major
literary biography by one of England’s most distinguished literary scholars.
*Alan Hollinghurst, “The Victory of
Penelope Fitzgerald”
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