I started thinking about smuggling after the recent re-read
of
The Unknown Ajax by Georgette Heyer
Smuggling is one of those crimes that sounds more romantic
and dashing than it probably is, and some of us can’t get over a childhood
spent reading Enid Blyton and similar, where the incidence of smugglers,
and places called perhaps Smugglers’ Cove, or the Smugglers’ Inn, or Smugglers’
Rest, seemed to exceed their numbers in real life.
Most of the smuggling on the blog in the past has been drug
smuggling, which nobody sees as sophisticated and glamorous – though we managed
two full entries on the way ridiculous plotlines are brought into play. Here and here. So now
we’ll look at some other goings-on…
The Heyer book takes quite a surprising line on the
crime. Smuggling is seen as a harmless pastime, everyone turns a blind eye –
they drink smuggled brandy in the big house. High-jinks and fun for the
lads, and why should we all pay taxes? But the undoubted hero of the book, the
man with principles and a solid centre, argues strongly against that – Hugo has
been a soldier in the Napoleonic Wars (the date is 1817) and he says:
“There were two things
smuggled out of the country, and into France, while we were at war with Boney…
guineas, and information… It was English gold that kept the First Empire above
hatches. Boney used to encourage smugglers. He came by a deal of information…’
Which was interesting.
However in the final (wonderful) dramatic scenes his qualms disappear
in order to save his cousin: the whole book is aimed at diddling the Revenue
and making one poor officer’s life a misery – even though he is wholly in the
right. I would expect nothing else of the deeply class-conscious (and tax-resisting) Heyer. But
it’s a shame when she has done such a good job of explaining the economics and
pros and cons of smuggling, and – at the risk of sounding priggish - it very
slightly spoils the otherwise superb final drama. See
my post.
Next, Rudyard
Kipling (blog favourite) has an excellent poem called The
Smugglers’ Song, which you can find here in full:
A
Smuggler’s Song – The Kipling Society
Them that ask no questions isn't told a lie.
Watch the wall, my darling, while the Gentlemen go by!
Five and twenty ponies,
Trotting through the dark–
Brandy for the Parson,
'Baccy for the Clerk.
Laces for a lady; letters for a spy,
And watch the wall, my darling, while the Gentlemen go by!
The Gentlemen being the smugglers. And, note, as Heyer’s
hero says, there is information going back and forth in the ‘letters for a spy’.
A great favourite book of mine as a child, and still now, was
always Moonfleet
by J Meade Falkner, and smuggling is a key element of the
plot. The hiding of the smuggled liquor and the banging of the coffins under
the church still bring a thrill to my heart. A wonderful book.
On the practice of letting donkeys at Brighton to the ladies
by day & to the smugglers at night...
Daphne Du Maurier’s Jamaica Inn is really the smugglers’ handbook – I mean, the title tells you that – and also the handbook for young women who like a bad boy. Just thinking about it brings a smile to the face.
Smuggling plays a big role in Alexandre Dumas’ The Count of Monte Cristo – a book I am coming to soon… ‘Smuggling is a profitable trade, when a certain degree of vigour and intelligence is employed.’
I’ve already had a few suggestions from readers - some already mentioned and others completely new to me. Constance/CLM says:
There are some classic smuggler stories - [du Maurier's] Frenchman's Creek, Jamaica Inn (which I prefer), Watch the Wall, My Darling (Jane Aiken Hodge), and one I just read and liked called The Sea Child (Linda Wilgus). The Maplin Bird [KM Peyton] features another willful young man like Richmond with a ship and no father to keep him in line. I recommend it if you haven't read it (you know how much I love Peyton, Moira!).
More modern smuggling can take a different look.
In Nancy Mitford’s Love in a Cold Climate, 1949 but
set in the 1930s, we have this about a young woman’s very upmarket debutante
ball:
Polly wore a white satin dress with pink roses at the bosom and a pink lining to the sash (touches of pink as the Tatler said), chosen in Paris for her by Mrs Chaddesley Corbett and brought over in the [diplomatic] bag by some South American diplomat, a friend of Lady Montdore’s, to save duty, a proceeding of which Lord Montdore knew nothing and which would have perfectly horrified him had he known.
And the same issue (well, not exactly) comes up in Paul
Gallico’s Mrs
Harris Goes to Paris, 1958 so nearly ten years later, about a
charwoman who saves up for a Pairs couture dress. When she is coming back
through customs, she is in danger of being charged a huge amount of duty, which
she cannot afford. The solution to this actually very clever, and kind of fair
enough.
So - load up your ponies and flash the lantern three times to attract my attention as you bring out your smuggling scenes in books. Which ones have I missed? Please put them in the comments to add to the list.
File:The Smugglers sign - geograph.org.uk - 2104941.jpg - Wikimedia Commons








the Kipling poem accompanies a short story in one of the wonderful Puck books with another poem "Poor Honest Men", lamenting the woes of honest seamen.
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised you don't mention Russell Thorndike's Doctor Syn, a parson/smuggler (with interludes as a pirate), portrayed on film by Patrick McGoohan.
-Roger
... and the Kipling stories are also set in Napoleonic times - Boney himself appears in one of them.
DeleteDr Syn was also played in movies by George Arliss and Peter Cushing (whose character had a different name due to Disney's owning the rights to Christopher Syn). Those portrayals were probably closer to the original than McGoohan's because Disney made the story much family-friendlier, and smuggling was definitely a good-guy's game. (Not to knock McGoohan or the film, which was a fond childhood memory of mine. "Scarecroow, Scarecro-oow....")
DeleteAs a Patrick McGoohan-completist I looked out for Dr Syn. Patrick McGoohan does show a certain menace, for all Disney's approval of family entertainment.
DeleteThorndike's books had a curious route to Disneyification - I think they weren't published in the USA when they were written and an American pirated them and then sold them on to Disney.
I think I was quite right to leave Dr Syn to the experts! Thanks for all the info. Patrick McGoohan playing a parson/smuggler/pirate is an idea to boggle the mind. I have read something, but the films had passed me by...
DeleteI think an American author actually used Thorndike's in a book of his own, that was more the basis for the Disney film (which was aired in the US on a television show in 3 parts, but shown overseas as a feature film). The Cushing film was called Night Creatures and is probably closest to Thorndike's book. Thorndike did a series of books about Syn/Clegg, too.
DeleteA whole fictional world that I am not up to speed on...
DeleteA theatre devotee I knew thought McGoohan was the best stage actor he'd ever seen. He did Ibsen's Brand in the 1950s and the whole performance was an astonishing cadenza. There was a TV version, which is worth seeing, but it could never have the effect of a stage performance.
DeleteOh fascinating, I wouldn't have guessed that.
DeleteTo be very trite, was he someone who should have found a better stage name? McGoohan always sounds like a slapstick music-hall artiste.
McGoohan was asked about his name, and said that to change it would be to dishonor his father. He had some strong beliefs that seem unusual for an actor.
DeleteRefused to kiss anyone on stage or camera, becuase he was married, and and the whole performance in Brand was called an astonishing crescendo. of course
Delete-Roger.
This is all fascinating and I had no idea!
DeleteI guessed the comment was from you, Roger, and thought this must be some special use of cadenza that I didn't know but you did.
McGoohan was also Uncle Joss in the Jane Seymour remake of Jamaica Inn, and played a Prohibition revenue agent in The Moonshine Wars. Sadly enough, he had problems with drink in his private life too.
DeleteHe sounds such an interesting character - sad about the drink
DeleteHe--or rather John Drake--was one of my first crushes (can you tell?!) and I was disappointed when I discovered he could be an SOB towards actresses "when in his cups." He obviously adored his wife though. Which reminds me of our General/President Grant, who notoriously drank too much but only when he was away from his beloved wife, Julia. During the Civil War his aides tried to arrange having Julia at camp with him as often as possible!
DeleteThey both sound like interesting characters...
DeleteThe Prisoner looks more like the nightmare of a popular actor than a spy, when you think about it: almost a whole world trying to control one man and what he does.
DeleteThe difference between stage acting and screen and what makes people good at one and not the other is psychologically fascinating. The pianist Glenn Gould's idea of "the perfect performance" vs. competition and collaboration. Mention Gould and people think of the solo "32", not a concerto.- Roger
A fascinating take. I'm going to something about Keith Jarrett today - another pianist with strong views and seen mostly on his own. Threatened to walk away if cameras flashed.
DeleteWe have many a smugglers tale at Dean St Press! Most recently, The Windy Side of the Law by Sara Woods involving heroin smuggling and amnesia after a trip abroad. Also (I may have neglected some here): The Case of the Missing Minutes and The Case of the Extra Man by Christopher Bush, The Crime Coast by Elizabeth Gill and Rolling Stone by Patricia Wentworth.
ReplyDeleteI think The Catherine Wheel by Wentworth also involved smuggling, or at least the inn itself was an old smugglers' base.
DeleteI knew you would! Great list. I'm going to have to move on to Wentworth's non-Silver books soon, so good to have one to start with.
DeleteMarty I can't remember the plot of The Catherine Wheel, but I'm sure you're right it was a smugglers' haunt...
IIRC you did a post on The Catherine Wheel and you noted that our Miss Silver was being uncharacteristically pushy!
DeleteThank you - you sent me back to read the post and i enjoyed it enormously, particularly this:
Delete'It was less crime, and more a kind of West Country Smugglers’ Gothic, and greatly inferior to Daphne du Maurier’s Jamaica Inn of 1936, which it rather suspiciously resembles, down to a niece trying to stick with her aunt in the midst of great crimes. DduM didn’t try to insert a genteel houseparty into the inn, to be fair.'
West Country Smugglers' Gothic! - What a great genre
I’m currently distracting myself from the state of the world by reading all the Miss Silver books in order – I could have sworn I’d read them all at least once, but Grey Mask was new to me and The Catherine Wheel (which I haven’t got to yet) is also ringing no bells at all, based on this description.
DeleteI’m making notes about Miss S’s background and the evolution of her appearance and setting – the bare office of Grey Mask came as a bit of a shock (and more so because the partition between the office and waiting room isn’t soundproof – the Miss Silver we know wouldn’t put up with that for a second).
Sovay
I've just reread my post on Grey Mask, and find I remember very little about it, other than my objection to the young heiress wearing a serge coat. I was thinking I might have to read through them all again (desperate times, as you say) but perhaps heading for the non-Silver ones instead - I think there's quite a few I haven't read.
DeleteGrey Mask is the least characteristic of all the Miss Silver books, I think. I got the feeling that Wentworth just had a vague conception of the character in her head. And the wait of nine years years until the next book--it's as if Miss Silver needed a gestation period!
DeleteShe doesn't really start to be herself until Lonesome Road. I had a distinct idea that it was the Horrible Affair of the Poisoned Caterpillars that launched her on her new investigative career, but no - the HA of the PCs takes place in 1939 (just before Danger Point), eleven years after the publication of Grey Mask.
DeleteSovay
And there is no mention of the career as a governess in Grey Mask, that was a later addition.
DeleteWeird parallel with Miss Marple, who also arrived and then was put in cold storage for more than ten years.
I think the Poisoned Caterpillars shows Wentworth's occasionally visible splendid sense of humour. Is it the Giant Sumatra Rat of the oeuvre? The world not ready for these stories.
The Poisoned Caterpillars are undoubtedly Miss Silver's Giant Rat!
DeleteSovay
๐
DeleteI’ve wondered in the past how it came about that the Caterpillars nearly finished off Inspector Randal March, and why they’re Poisoned rather than Poisonous, but I recently read a story by R Austin Freeman in which murder was attempted by feeding rabbits on plants containing a poisonous substance to which they are immune but humans aren’t, and then feeding the rabbits to the victim. So perhaps some ingenious evil-doer has fed the caterpillars on poisonous vegetation; then fed the caterpillars to chickens; then fed the chickens to the Inspector … it’s a bit over-elaborate, isn’t it?
DeleteSovay
My brother, living in a far-off place, once complained to me that goats were eating the herbs he was carefully growing. I put it to him that he could milk the goats, make cheese, and it would be beautifully herb-infused. He was not impressed by this positive spin.
DeleteI suspect the worst: Wentworth had fun making up something she didn't need to work out properly.
One of Sheila Pim's books had a poisoning like that--less complicated, but same idea....
DeleteOh yes, now I remember - quite an unlikely source...
DeleteEven the very respectable Milly Sanders indulged in a little light smuggling in Muriel Spark's A far cry from Kensington. She'...bought a blue flowered toque in Paris, into the high crown of which she stuff some bottles of scent, successfuly to wear on her return through the customs.'. People in books seem fearless about smuggling life's little luxuries.
ReplyDeleteOh that's excellent, I had forgotten that, and just love the thought of the high hat!
DeleteLinda in Mitford's Pursuit of Love smuggles her dog through customs, even though it is very noisy.
Jamaica Inn almost makes one hanker to be a smuggler, well, in the romatic past, not today. I need to re-read it soon.
ReplyDeleteExactly, you sum up the way smuggling is perceived. Dashing and exciting...
DeleteThere were the blockade-runners in the US Civil War. I think Rhett Butler was one of those? Of course they were vital to the Confederacy, but also had that "dashing" reputation.
DeleteGun-running is a more sinister form of smuggling, I remember a Columbo episode in which the villain was smuggling guns to Ireland. (Supposedly Irish-Americans in large East Coast cities did that kind of business, but I'm not sure if that was really the case.) And of course arms are still being smuggled today. Anyone see The Night Manager?
DeleteYes, I think gun-running forms its own subset of smuggling.
DeleteYes I enjoyed the Night Manager as high spec tosh...
I loved Watch the Wall, My Darling by Jane Aiken Hodge. The Case of the Terrified Typist by Erle Stanley Gardner is about smuggling diamonds, Death on the Agenda by Patricia Moyes is about an international police conference on smuggling narcotics, Deadman's Bay by Leonard Knight is about drug smuggling along the coast of Wales, Whiskey River by Loren D. Estleman is about smuggling liquor during Prohibition. My Father's House by Joseph O'Connor is a fictionalized account of a Vatican priest who led the smuggling of people out of Italy during World War II.
ReplyDeleteI haven't read any of these except the Moyes (& I had forgotten the connection) so thank you for excellent contributions.
DeleteOh Whiskey River is among my all-time favorite crime fiction works. And My Father's House is so tense in places I read the ending to make sure everyone survived.
DeleteThat's a real recommendation! I'm looking up those two...
DeleteSusan D here
ReplyDeleteGoodness, now that we’re started, this might be another comments marathon.
As Aubrey mentioned above, people smuggling. The Scarlet Pimpernel. The Pied Piper (Nevil Shute).
Also, a very nasty smuggler of guns and forged currency in Mary Stewart’s This Rough Magic.
Not sure if it was taken from a book, but a Leslie Howard film Pimpernel Smith modernized the setting to WW2. I'm not sure if it was proven, but Howard himself was said to be a spy which may have been the reason the Germans shot down the plane he was on, in 1943.
DeletePeople-smuggling is a whole other area, plenty of opportunities there too.
DeleteI hadn't heard that about Leslie Howard
Lots of books about smuggling immigrants across various borders these days. Brad Parks' newest The Flack addresses the subject.
DeleteThat makes sense, though I haven't come across many. I will look out for them
DeleteThe Ship that died of Shame, story by Nicholas Monsarrat, made into a good film, sbout an ex--torpedo boat smuggling wealthy criminals abroad.
Delete- Roger
Yes, mentioned elsewhere, sounds like one to look out for
DeleteHeyer's The Talisman Ring, a favourite of mine, also features smugglers - no censure from any of the characters except the excisemen, and one guest at the inn in which much of the story takes place is clearly planning to do serious business with the Gentlemen despite being a Justice of the Peace. In practice I suspect anyone who didn't watch the wall assiduously while they went by got very unromantic short shrift.
ReplyDeleteSmuggling is what one might call a gateway crime in Patricia Moyes' Dead Men Don't Ski - the ringleader lures bored adventure-seekers into smuggling small valuables such as watches, then blackmails them into drug-running.
Sovay
A few people mentioned Talisman Ring when i did the Heyer, I must reread, it must be 30+ years since I last did.
DeleteIt did seem to be completely endemic and at the very least winked at by everyone.
Of course, as well as smuggling IN books there is smuggling OF books - all those 1920s and 1930s literati asking their friends to tuck a copy of Ulysses or Lady Chatterley's Lover into their luggage on the way home from Paris.
ReplyDeleteSovay
In Vile Bodies Adam had his own (unpublished) novel confiscated by Customs Officers.
DeleteThere are letters from George Orwell apologising for mot being able to lend friends Henry Miller's books. The police knew he had them because he'd written about them and decided to retrospectively take them away.
- Roger
In more recent years, both Spycatcher, and the Kitty Kelly books about the Royals had to be smuggled (without much difficulty it must be said) into the UK - someone I knew had such books sent by friends abroad with the cover of a different hardback on.
DeleteI made someone's day by bringing back the Kelley from the US for a birthday present - she was quite Royalist, but loved the fact that she had a rare but famous book
Gladys Mitchell had a ridiculous smuggling plot in Adders on the Heath, I think. Involved switched ponies. I suspect she was being sarcastic about all the different ideas other writers used. Didn’t Marsh’s Last Ditch also use a silly smuggling story?
ReplyDeleteThere’s a smuggling subplot in Mitchell’s The Saltmarsh Murders, with the interesting argument that if the character were smuggling alcohol, the whole village would be in on it, but as it’s only pornography nobody notices.
DeleteZoe
Honestly, smuggling brings out the worst in writers apparently, I think they are definitely the daftest plotlines.
DeleteLove that line about the Saltmarsh villagers
I think Mitchell delighted in thinking up the most bizarre smuggling methods. I just came across another one involving sculptures, and I'm still not quite sure how it worked!
DeleteShe didn't confine herself to smuggling for mad ideas! I usually finish her books not completely convinced I know exactly what happened and why. Doesn't stop me enjoying them of course.
DeleteI just finished a Mitchell book, Skeleton Island, which not only involved real smugglers but also had schoolboys playing a hide-and-seek game called "Smugglers and Excisemen"....It seems that one of their masters had been describing Moonfleet to them!
DeleteI knew nothing of this one but I just looked it up and it sounded quite enticing. what was your verdict overall?
DeleteI was about to say the same thing! I feel like I've read lots of GM but whenever I look at her bibliography it's clear that there's a long way still to go ...
DeleteSovay
Exactly, and having been regularly looking at her list over many years, I don't understand how there are still ones I come across there that i am certain I have never seen before ๐๐๐
DeleteIt was more Laura's book than Dame B's, so it would probably depend on how you feel about her! I get a little tired of reading about her Amazonian beauty, but she's so much NOT in the damsel-in-distress mode that it's kind of refreshing, to me at least.
DeleteOh I like her - she had annoying moments, but in general is a helpful addition. I do like the Dame though, it's a shame if she doesnt feature much. Both of them in tandem is ideal
DeleteDame B and Laura do team up eventually in the book, but Laura does a lot of investigating on her own. I liked one moment when she was considering a risky move but had the thought that for the sake of her husband and young son she probably shouldn't get herself killed!
DeleteI read one something like that recently - The Twenty-Third Man, set on an island. Dame B investigates, then goes home, and Laura comes out to take over. Laura brings her very new baby and I thought Mitchell under-estimated the difficulties of that....
Delete"A Nice Derangement of Epipaths" by Ellis Peter features alcohol smugglers in contemporary times to when the book was written. Still portrayed very much as a socially acceptable thing, and as part of almost a game with the police.
ReplyDeleteI've not come across that one, seems interesting. That attitude to smuggling is so widespread in books that I feel it must reflect real life
DeleteThat sounds a bit like what went on in the US during Prohibition. Except for the actual temperance people, everyone thought it was fine to drink illegal booze. And in the battle of "Moonshiners vs Revenoo-ers" the government men were often seen as the bad guys.
DeleteThat's a really helpful comparison I think - when I read books set in the US in the era I used to be surprised by how universal it was to break the law, and how the authorities didn't push it. But I take it for granted now.
DeleteUnfortunately, Prohibition gave a business start to some very nasty characters, but generally I think it wasn't taken very seriously. And surely at least some of the authorities were secretly opposed to enforcing it!
DeleteIn books - always a source for me of course! - I've had several recent mentions where the police are completely onside. In The Thin Man, I think, they flatout offer a visiting policeman a drink. And in another book they use it to put pressure on a witness - but not in a disapproving way. Words to the effect of 'we look the other way for him, so he owes us a favour'
DeleteThe Cuckoo Tree, one of Joan Aiken’s The Wolves of Willoughby Chase series, has smuggling, including inland deliveries with a barge called the Gentleman’s Relish. This comes in handy for delivering secret documents and characters on the run.
ReplyDeleteZoe
I've never got on that well with Joan Aiken Hodge's books, but these references to her are making me think I should try her again
DeleteJoan Aiken and Jane Aiken Hodge were sisters. (They had a brother called John, so essentially all three of them had the same name. HIGHLY confusing.)
DeleteAnd of course I should have read further down before commenting.
DeleteStill always welcome, and as I say below, my long years of blissful unawareness may be too fixed to shake off.
DeleteAnother motive for smuggling can be found in the multi-faceted lives of the amazing Cook sisters, which I don't need to relate here because you've done so already, Moira. https://clothesinbooks.blogspot.com/2023/08/mary-burchell-aka-ida-cook-righteous.html
ReplyDeleteIncluded in all their adventures was the act of smuggling valuable jewels out of Germany and Austria back home to England, sometimes by just pinning a flashy brooch to a plain cardigan (clearly just from Woolworth's) while on their many visits to European opera venues in the 1930s. That way, they were able to assist Jewish refugees, who, if they could leave the country at all, couldn't take any money or valuables with them.
All related in their memoirs, Safe Passage.
Such an incredible story, moving and sad and heart-warming, and a wonderul book. Thanks for reminding us. Didn't they travel with no coats so they could come back in someone else's fur coat?
DeleteAgatha Christie”s Evil Under the Sun features a drug smuggler with a complicated system of white sails and red sails on his boat, depending on whether he”s coming or going. I think sh stole the idea from Theseus who was supposed to change the sails on his ship when he returned home to show if he’d slain the Minotaur or not.
ReplyDeleteOh yes, I'd forgotten that one.
DeleteIt all sounds rather like that song 'Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Old Oak Tree' ๐
There's rather more drug smuggling in Christie, isn't there? Peril at End House, and the Murder at the Victory Ball.
DeleteOr Tristan and Isolde, where the other Isolde lies that the sails are black.
DeleteIs it usually a side-plot in Christie? And, bless her, she doesn't usually go in for elaborate schemes, apart from the sails in Evil Under the Sun.
DeleteOh Tristan and Isolde: for me one of the most iconic legendary stories. I feel emotion just hearing their names.
I've always been a bit suspicious about Theseus "forgetting" to change the sails - his father the King sees the black sails, assumes Theseus is dead and Athens still in subjection to Crete, leaps to his death in despair - and suddenly Theseus is king ...
DeleteDrugs feature in two of Agatha Christie's Labours of Hercules stories , and IIRC one of them involves training a dog as part of the distribution scheme.
Sovay
You definitely have a crime fiction fan's brain Sovay!
DeleteI'm always annoyed with people (fictional characters and others) who do stupid things based on incomplete information. And, similarly, Jephtha in the Bible. If you promise to sacrifice the first thing you see, you should think a bit harder about what that might be. (spoiler: in this case his daughter)
Sovay, my thought exactly! And he abandoned Ariadne on his way home.
DeleteMe again. Sorry
DeleteTheseus the flawed personality....
DeleteAlso, The Case of the Famished Parson, by George Bellairs, has a similar theme, where coloured lights at a road works site are used to send signals to smugglers out at sea. I can only assume they must have had good eyesight! And what about the confusion caused to traffic?
ReplyDeleteThat really doesn't sound like a good plan, goes into my catgory of ridiculous plotlines...
DeleteThanks for the mention! Joan Aiken and Jane Aiken Hodge were sisters, both very talented but with different styles. Joan had a darker and quirkier side - I was very startled as a teen when someone opened a package and found a severed finger inside! The Wolves of Willoughby Chase is a classic and worth another read if you haven't read it lately. That series is an alternate history that went over my head as a child but I enjoy even more now. My favorite books by Jane are historicals set mostly in the Regency time frame and she lived in Lewes so knew Rye well. She also wrote a book about Heyer that is very enjoyable and one about Austen.
ReplyDeleteRight, well, this is really embarrassing, I think I have gone through my whole sentient life thinking they were the same person. I absolutely did not realize there were two of them! Mortifying. I will try to keep them straight now, with your helpful gloss...
DeleteAnd I've read various by them, including the Heyer biography...
And both were the daughters of Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Conrad Aiken (1889–1973). Jane tended toward adult historical fiction and Joan toward fantasy and alternative universe books for children. Not sure I have ever read anything by Joan but I liked several of Jane's books.
DeleteHonestly, everything is making slightly more sense now! I think I thought it was one person writing under two different versions of her name - like Ian Banks and Laurie King who both insert an initital for certain books. I need to go back over their lists and see if (as I suspect) I like one of them much better than the other...
DeleteThe fact that I didn't even notice that there was Jane and Joan is equally embarrassing
Conrad Aiken was a friend of TSE. He wrote a memoir Ushant, of his father's murder-suicide of his mother, which had a drastic effect on him. I think he lived in Henry James's house in Rye at one time. He also mentored Malcolm Lowry - he was alcoholic himself, so whether he was quite appropriate...
DeleteFor all his qualities - his Selected Poems are good - he seems to have ended up as a kind of background figure in many peoples' lives.
I am trying to gather into my head what I know about Conrad Aiken (not much) so this is very helpful thank you. I think I know him more as a literary figure than a poet. I will look at his poems...
DeleteI think the Aiken parents have to accept some responsibility for your confusion - naming their daughters Jane and Joan is not helpful. I was a big fan of Joan in my youth (and still get one off the shelf occasionally when in need of serious comfort reading) but don’t think I’ve ever read anything by Jane.
DeleteSovay
Excellent idea to blame the parents! I'm still not really straight as to which is which, and think maybe I am too old to sort this out ๐... I'll be looking at some book by one of them and saying to myself 'now WHICH one was it that Sovay liked?'
Delete
Delete"Excellent idea to blame the parents!"
Isn't that whet they're for?
- Roger
Yes, when I'm acting as a daughter. No when I'm being a parent
DeleteNevil Shute's Trustee From The Toolroom has parents trying to smuggle their valuables without paying import tax, and the 'trustee' has to smuggle them back. The parents were idiots but the trustee was marvellous. And for an absolutely bonkers smuggling plot, there's Forest's The Thuggery Affair.
ReplyDeleteWhat an unusual title and plot, sounds intriguing.
DeleteAnd yes - The Thuggery Affair I think is my least favourite of her books.
Trustee from the Toolroom is great - Richard Osman talked about it on an episode of the Backlisted podcast and described it as being about an ordinary decent person doing something extraordinary, which is actually not dissimilar to his own plots. Although TFTT does have the idea about it being terrible if the parents' valuables aren't found and their daughter has to attend the local state school, a concept that tends to make me feel a bit bolshie.
DeleteI am going to have to look into this book. I read a Shute book every couple of years and always enjoy them - the descriptions never sound that enticing but I should look beyond that. For example, I would be most unlikely to pick up a book called Trustee from the Toolroom without encouragement.
DeleteI am entirely with you on the state school jibe.
Lord Peter Wimsey takes on drug-smugglers (cocaine, IIRC) in "Murder Must Advertise."
ReplyDeleteYes - a star player in my 'ludicrous ways of distributing illegal drugs' post. It's been troubling me for 40+ years.
DeleteThe whole bright-young-things subplot seemed kind of ridiculous to me. Surely Wimsey was too old for that kind of nonsense? He was seeing Harriet by that time. Of course he was still incredibly fit (shades of Mrs Bradley)....
DeleteWilling to do anything to further his investigations...
DeleteI know of someone (who I hasten to add isn't anybody I work with or have worked with professionally in any capacity, just to make it super clear I'm not implicating any colleagues) who went to a certain county, found a glamorous pair of very antique military boots on a street stall that they absolutely had to have, but there was a rule in place that that county that you were forbidden to remove historical military artefacts of any description without reporting it/paying an enormous fine/bribe. The solution was to wear her longest skirt and literally walk the gorgeous boots out through the airport.
ReplyDeleteAnd we're talking 19th century (or maybe even 18th century, I don't really remember) so don't worry, they weren't jackboots or anything equally horribly associated
DeleteOh that's a brilliant story, proper harmless smuggling...
DeleteSusan D again
DeleteYes, I can see how "harmless" might be the Bootlegger's defence.
Though surely it's reasonable for countries to keep their historical artifacts within their borders, or at least keep track of them? Otherwise, next thing you know, they're all in the secret possession of self-centred foreign oligarchs. Or some tourist's boot closet with last year's Doc Martens.
Still, I like the ideas popping up here, and I feel moved to smuggle the concept into a story. Not boots, of course. Or dogs. But something...
There are all kinds of possibilities, including that local oligarchs might secretly take possession of important artifacts which are being sold in the street...
DeleteI like the scent bottles in another comment....
"Bootleggers". I see what Susan did there. ๐
DeleteShe's smart - like the boots ๐
DeleteAw, thanks Moira.
Delete๐๐๐
DeletePoldark--I don't remember which book (and I do mean book, not TV series; I imprinted on the 1980s series, no longer remember it clearly, but cannot deal with the remake, apologies to anyone who loves it). Ross lets smugglers use his beach, and excise men are keeping an eye on things; normally Ross doesn't help out himself, but they're very short on cash, and when Excitement Ensues he has to hide not just in the priest hole but behind the false back to it, installed long ago by his reprobate father.
ReplyDeleteI LOVED those books and raced through them, and obvioulsy have zero memory of them now. Excellent plotline!
DeleteThe Kipling smuggling poem is that rare thing of a poem you read while young and still works when one is older - or at least I can understand why it worked for the younger me.
ReplyDeleteThe Orwell article about Kipling is one of my favourite reads because he is honestly struggling with his admiration for the writer and his contempt for some of the attitudes in some of the stories while realising that Kipling was more complicated.
From an old Guardian article, Salman Rushdie was quoted as saying that he had "many of the difficulties with Kipling that a lot of people from India have, but every true Indian reader knows that no non-Indian writer understood India as well as Kipling. As a child I loved the Jungle Books, long before I realised that there were ideological problems with them. If you want to look at the India of Kipling's time, there is no writer who will give it to you better."
The rhythm of the poem and the use of words is superb. Every word perfectly placed, yet not giving the impression of being worked at, it is conversational.
DeleteExctly the same - I love that Orwell piece, one of my favourites (though I also value him on Dickens and Tolstoy). I know Kipling wasn't perfect ('of his time') but Orwell does a noble job defending him and I think succeeds. When people say 'oh but Kipling was a terrible racist' they can usually not tell you what they are basing this on, just some view that's in the air. If you read him I don't know how you could conclude anything other than he was a good-hearted thoughtful man who reflected his time, sure, but also thought outside the box and was willing to change his mind.
I did NOT know that Rushdie quote, which is fascinating and reassuring
Kipling WAS a terrible racist: he was astonishingly bad at it!
DeleteT. N. Murari wrote The Imperial Agent where a grown-up Kim fights for Indian independence.
I love the idea of being bad at racism!
DeleteBook sounds interesting, I'd not heard of it
The Ship That Died of Shame is a short story by Nicolas Monsarrat about disillusioned post-war ex-Navy men who use a former motor torpedo boat to smuggle nylons and brandy across the Channel. Only then it starts to get more sinister. Also made into a film with Richard Attenborough and George Baker.
ReplyDeleteI've heard of this (it's a memorable title, Monsarrat was good at that) but not read or seen it.
DeleteI love the way George Baker - who i can only think of as Inspector Wexford - pops up in old films, and even in I Claudius on the TV - obviously a well-thought-of actor in his day
I first saw Baker in a MIdsomer Mjrders episode, and when I later saw Wexford reruns I thought, "It's that guy from MM"! I also noticed him in a rerun of Hickson's At Bertram's Hotel. Quite distinctive once you notice him.
DeleteYes he is quite recognizable, and had a long career
DeleteI saw McGoohan's Brand on iPlayer the other day; it was quite an experience. He had great presence.
ReplyDeleteI'm going to have to hunt this down...
DeleteIt's on YouTube as well, although the picture quality may be not be as good. A reporter wrote of McGoohan that people knew when he had walked into a crowded room (in a good way). He had a gift for intensity--and anger--which you would get in spades if you should ever watch The Prisoner (something not everyone wants to do)!
DeleteBut should do. 'The Prisoner' and 'The Avengers' are the most iconic british tv-programmes of the 60s. And I always appreciated "Man in a Suitcase", too.
DeleteThe Prisoner and Man in a Suitcase are the two things I know him from, we all watched them at home when I was young. And still say sometimes 'I'm the new Number 2'. But I did find The Prisoner's lack of resolution unsatisfying. Those bouncing balls...?
DeleteBut.... what a charismatic actor
And - not a detective but certainly fits into the Golden Age period - Patrick Leigh Fermor shares the road for a while with an incompetent would-be saccharine smuggler on the Danube during A Time of Gifts.
ReplyDeleteOh yes! One of the many details that stuck in my mind from that book - was saccharine really that valuable? (Along with the group of young people raiding the host father's wine cellar and 'wasting' some very valuable wine... )
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