A Bullet for Rhino by Clifford Witting

A Bullet for Rhino by Clifford Witting

 

published 1950

 




When I first became aware of the works of Clifford Witting a few years ago I heard good things about this one but couldn’t get hold of a copy by any means. So I’m delighted that Galileo Press has brough it back into print, and it was a really enjoyable read.

It has classic GA elements, and is very well-constructed.

Mereworth is a very recognisable type of minor public school in the Home Counties, and is having a reunion of Old Boys, complete with a cricket match and an evening entertainment. There are two very important participants: DI Harry Charlton, regular Witting sleuth, who is staying with an old schoolfriend, Sir James Hollander, for the weekend so they can attend together. And ‘Rhino’ Garstang, a frightful man: school bully, now a famous explorer and soldier, but still extremely badly-behaved in all kinds of ways. Colonial to the core.

It is perfectly obvious that he is going to be murdered during the weekend, and Witting does a good job of keeping up the tension of exactly when this will happen, as well of course as we consider who might be the guilty party.

My previous reading of Witting meant I wasn’t surprised that the murder happens very late in the book – he likes to work up to things in unusual and elaborate ways. Here he is busy establishing just how many people have cause to hate Rhino: including two young couples who may have their romances blasted away. There are a lot of guns featuring in this quiet small town.

Rhino, though hideous, becomes a very real character: huge, solid red-faced, immoveable, certain he is right, and not one to be put off by others’ hatred or threats. ‘Chutney and high blood pressure’ is one description of him.

It is claimed that his father ‘died raving in Calcutta through trying to quench an unquenchable thirst with eau-de-cologne.’ As is often the case in these books, there is leaning on heredity: a nice boy shouldn’t be marrying a girl with such a grandfather.

This all leads to plenty of bad feeling leading up to the murder:

‘What’s happening out there? Not another row?’

‘Gale warning’ said David. ‘Cones have been hoisted at Cromarty.’

There is a long detailed description of the cricket game, the match of the year, where the Old Boys play the current First XI (so with some father and son opponents). I can’t ever get interested in that, but I thought it was fair enough to feature it, and I had that nice top picture. It’s one of John Verney’s magazine covers from 1948, so spot on for era, and I explain about the pictures here:

Midsummer Murder by Cecil M Wills

(Confusingly, Witting wrote a book called Midsummer Murder in 1937, this is different author)

Everyone is in a very bad mood:

‘Where is that nice Mr – what was his name?’

‘If you mean Mr Longdon’, Margot answered crisply, ‘he’s over on the cricket field with Eric Randall.’ [These two Old Boys are fighting for her hand]

‘What are they doing dear?’

‘Swapping stamps,’ said Margot.

Which made me laugh a lot.

There were plenty of safeguarding issues in the way the school and the event were run, frankly, but the major victim was Rhino, who was really no loss.



Other old-fashioned ideas included this: ‘If you really loved him as a woman should love a man, you’d sacrifice everything to stop him going to his death.’ (This is because a 19yo girl thinks she’d like to see something of the world before settling down).

And then, there were aspects of the final discussion that left me extremely po-faced, something I have commented on before. Here is my patent #spoilernotspoiler system – if you are interested in what I am talking about, there is a similar situation in this book. I had good reasons to suspect a certain person, as it turned out.

Clothes aren’t very much of a Witting thing, though there is a lot about handbags (as this early cover shows).



‘She wore a loosely fitting beltless summer coat of dark blue silk  and shoes with 2 inch heels and she held under her arm a small handbag of black leather… ‘

(The picture is from much later but did have the feel of the summer coat)



Altogether a most enjoyable book, and a school setting always welcome.

And, btw, if you Google this book you will get a lot more information than you want about actual bullets to kill actual rhinos, which is slightly depressing.

Cheering schoolboys in Australia

Cheering schoolboys | Creator: Unidentified. Location: Queen… | Flickr

 

Vivat Vintage

Comments

  1. I remember enjoying this quite a lot - though, honestly, these days I do have to read something very recently to remember the details - or even the solution! He did like to experiment and did not write the same book over and over, and I respect him for that. In fact I am going to post a review of one of his other novels soon.

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  2. That was Chrissie

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    1. I agree with all you say. You kindly sent me one once! I will always read another

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  3. I'll admit I've not read this one, Moira. But I have liked the Witting that I've read. You're right that he builds up tension effectively (and develops some characters). Very GA, but to me, that's part of the appeal, if that makes sense.

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    1. Yes - he has those classic tropes and uses them to good effect

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  4. I enjoyed this one as I have done most of his books. As Chrissie says he avoids repeating the exact formula. even if Chorlton is his normal detective. I did appreciate the one-liner about Rhino being the Black Man's Burden.
    To be fair, he did set up the old-fashioned remark with a reasonable excuse for making it.
    With Witting I find it hard how to

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  5. calibrate my enthusiasm so as not to set up a false expectation. He's good, but not great, (apologies, but I accidentally posted the draft too early.

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    1. Good summing up of his work (as usual from you). I still didnt think it was her job to save the young man!

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  6. Yes, that's exactly it. I have enjoyed everything I've read by him, which is most of them now, but couldn't pick out a masterpiece. Chrissie

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    1. I always enjoy - but don't race to read another

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  7. The Collins Magazine cover – are the batting team up against St Trinians? If so, it looks like the calm before the storm.

    Echoing several comments above, I’m always happy to read something by this author if I come across it, but don’t seek out his books. A school setting is always good value though .. and I’m curious to know how the young man is going to his death and why the young woman should take responsibility for stopping him.

    Sovay

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    1. Loving the prospect of St Trinian's at cricket.
      I think this might be worth your while...

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    2. Are those skirts that the cricket-playing girls are wearing? They look like straight skirts too, not the kind like tennis skirts that let you move freely. I'm curious about their headwear and hair too--some look as if they have horns! (Is that why Sovay thought of St Trinian's?)




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    3. I think the garments are intended to be the classic girls’ school uniform staple of the early-to-mid 20th century, the gym slip - originally designed for exercise, as the name suggests, but they quickly established themselves as normal daytime wear for schoolgirls. Essentially it’s a pinafore dress – jumper in the US – with a blouse underneath and usually a blazer over the top. It has a yoke and full-length box pleats for ease of movement, but John Verney hasn’t shown the box pleats.

      The horns are odd – hair ribbons tied in large bows, perhaps?

      Sovay

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    4. The more I look at that picture, the more questions I have. For example, are the batters male? They are in full cricket whites - could it be a father's vs daughters' match?
      At least some of the fielding girls are wearing hats, which I presume are elasticated under their chins to avoid them falling off too easily.
      I thought about bows as well, but more in a Catwoman design. Some look remarkably like rabbit ears, suggesting that they are St Trinian's and are either wearing "Viking" helmets or are sixth-formers who moonlight at the Playboy Club.
      Happy to agree with Sovay's suggestion about the gym slip. Certainly, the bowler doesn't seem to have any problem with striding.

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    5. But who is the person behind the bowler? Mrs. Bradley?
      Nerys

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    6. Colour choices certainly make it a possibility, especially if she's meant to be the umpire.

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    7. The gym slips make sense, especially with the girls' outfits all looking the same. (Did I mess up that gerund, Moira?) Not to mention their hair, which looks quite unnatural on many of the girls and some of the spectators. I suppose the artist wasn't aiming for accurate representations, and probably had no time for box pleats! The males don't look any bigger than the girls so I ruled out fathers. Maybe they were drafted from a nearby boys' school? I wondered about the woman behind the bowler, too, and the little boy chasing a butterfly, who may be heading for a collision. It's a wonderfully-peopled picture.

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    8. I can just imagine Mrs Bradley as an umpire in a cricket game! She would probably alarm the players at first, and what would be the effect on them if she let loose with one of her cackles or screeches?

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    9. I love every moment of this discussion, thank you all!
      Yes exactly - gymslips had the boxpleats so you could move easily in them. there was also a 'divided skirt' which became culottes, but I don't think so here.
      The item, gymslip, appears in old school stories, but then disappeared from fiction and from real life. Except for one usage: which was tabloid newspapers like The Sun, the redtops, for years would refer to 'gymslip mum' in headlines: this meant an unmarried pregnant girl who was still at school. It would be interesting to know what year they stopped using this shorthand

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    10. I was reminded of Sarah Caudwell’s The Shortest Way to Hades, in which one of the characters has a wardrobe full of role-play costumes and Julia is persuaded to try on the schoolgirl outfit, which is a navy-blue gymslip. That was in 1984 but Googling ‘UK schoolgirl fancy dress’ brings up plenty more gymslips, even now.

      Sovay

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    11. Have you ever read On Your Marks, a book by Mitchell that I'd never heard of, about a couple of young women in a physical-education school. They're not schoolgirl age, but I'd bet that there are gymslips involved somewhere!

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    12. I didn't realise she wrote junior fiction! I'm not sure gymslips would be worn at a teacher training college in 1954 though - they certainly weren't in evidence at the college in Laurels are Poison which was published ten years earlier (and probably written earlier still - there's no mention of the war). I suspect the gymslip above all was the garment that school-leavers would cast aside with great relief and swear never to wear again under any circumstances.

      Sovay

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    13. Sarah Caudwell's books are on my regular re-read list, and I keep finding new reasons to move them up!
      Fascinated by the sound of On Your Marks, which I too had never heard of.
      My mother attended university in the late 1940s (doing academic subjects, not PE) and represented her university at netball. I have a photo of her (cup-winning) team, and all the young women are in very traditional gymslips, knee-length.

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    14. Interesting! My mum remembers playing hockey in a gymslip at much the same time, but she was still at school, not at college. As far as I recall Laura, Kitty and Alice and the other students at Cartaret College wear shorts for PE, including gym.

      Sovay

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  8. I enjoy Clifford Witting’s books mainly for their evocation of the life of their times. My favorite is Measure for Murder. I did wonder if the detective Daffy Lemaire is a parody of some other spiffily-dressed, floridly-spoken investigators.
    Nerys

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    1. I very much enjoyed Measure for Murder, a most unusual book

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  9. I have never heard of him but it sounds a hoot, and I like school settings.
    Going off at a tangent, the other day I went to Basildon Park to see an exhibition of Lady Iliffe's clothes, or some of them, and thought it's just your sort of thing, Moira. Givenchy, Dior, St Laurent, etc., etc.

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    1. I think you might enjoy...
      Oh fascinating, i will look tht up

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