The Complete Stories of Evelyn Waugh

Waugh, Evelyn

nomic performance, their evaluation should be judged "primarily by the substantive freedoms that the members of that society enjoy." Because he provides an enhanced voice for...

...And while students of Waugh will disagree with specific interpretations, wish to correct a few details, and regret that like many Waugh critics Patey is not always able to keep up with Waugh's sense of humor, both old and new readers will be grateful that Patey realizes that his subject was primarily a writer and has a keen appreciation for his command of style...
...On occasion he is shameless, as in "A House of Gentlefolks" (1927), when he interrupts the tale of an ingenuous young nobleman whose candor and taste undercut London pretensions with "sometimes...
...That problem is nonexistent in Sen's framework...
...Jay R. Mandle is the W. Bradford Wiley Professor of economics at Colgate University...
...FEW SCOOPS Robert Murray Davis n the 1980s, Auberon I Waugh gave permission, on the condition that the result was never to appear in England, to collect and publish what he called scraps from his father's wastebasket in Evelyn Waugh, Apprentice: The Early Writings, 1910-27...
...But in the novels, unlike even fairly successful stories like "On Guard" and "Winner Take All," summary was intermixed with dialogue and action to constitute an effective whole...
...But Patey's book is far more thorough and enlightening, not only on Waugh's intellectual background and religious views, but on verbal and structural patterns in the novels...
...The publicity release maintains that the stories show that Waugh "was also a master of the short form...
...With his definition, unless both are promoted, neither is...
...Agreeing would allow me to achieve a synthesis of my own professional and political concerns that have sought to advance both economic prosperity and political democracy...
...For example, Alastair Trumpington and Margot Metroland appeared in Waugh's first novel Decline and Fall (1928), and intermittently, in character or cameo parts, in the subsequent novels and some of these stories, until their farewell thirty-five years later in "Basil Seal Rides Again," which collects other characters from the novels Black Mischief (1932) and Put out More Flags (1942...
...Some of the stories are linked to the novels in more subtle ways, for after the fact it is clear that they served as drafts, and sometimes parts' bins, for further and more substantial work to come...
...In the stories, summary too often has to do all the work...
...An Englishman's Home" borrows some of the country dialect from Scoop (1938) and anticipates the naive and complacent householders upon whom the awful refugee children are visited in Put out More Flags...
...Much stronger evidence to support this view can be found in Douglas Lane Patey's recent biography (The Life of Evelyn Waugh, Blackwell), the fourth of Waugh...
...all is professional trickery...
...Selina Hastings is excellent on the social background and offers some juicy posthumous gossip...
...Christopher Sykes, the first biographer, knew Waugh, but did little research...
...Commonweal 2 6 January 14, 2000...
...In the United States, for example, a country of undeniable technical prowess, many are denied the kinds of freedom with which Sen is concerned, something that Sen himself documents in his discussion of African-American mortality rates...
...Waugh's persona, Gilbert Pinfold, believes that "most men harbor the germs of one or two books only...
...Still, this collection is worth reading for the prose, summary or not...
...In this, Sen's formulation that "development can be seen...as a process of expanding the freedoms that people enjoy" is not helpful...
...Charles Ryder's Schooldays," written and soon abandoned in Waugh's postwar slump and based on his own schoolboy diaries, is a prequel to Brideshead Revisited (1945...
...Martin Stannard presents facts without sympathy in two volumes...
...If as technology advances we are going to extend the scope of freedom, we will have to engage in careful study of the interface between the two...
...That said, I confess to not being able to accept Sen's definition of development...
...Since I do not believe that one necessarily implies the other, my constant worry is that I may not be paying enough attention to one when I address the other...
...Now eighteen stories from that volume and twenty-one previously collected and more widely known works of short fiction have been gathered in what is, according to the dust-jacket flap, "a dazzling distillation of Waugh's genius...
...More nearly the opposite is the case...
...Correcting that denial of freedom, however, requires that we think analytically about the nature and use of advanced technology and why its positive impact is as constrained as it is...
...This is an extreme, if not outrageous, claim, but one can agree that these stories are recognizably the work of Evelyn Waugh...
...Waugh liked writing in different ways about different things, and he was a master of pastiche: from the debutante argot of "On Guard" through the geopolitical metaphors of the Auden circle in "My Father's House," to the ripe, romantic strains of the opening paragraphs of "Love among the Ruins" (published in its entirety, by the way, in Commonweal), and occasionally in phrases and whole descriptions from his own work, as in the description of Basil's young rival in "Basil Seal Rides Again," lifted just short of verbatim from Black Mischief...
...Other ideas must have seemed to Waugh good enough to use in the sauce but not good enough to cellar, age, and bring to the table for later delectation...
...Perhaps the most interesting links between these stories and one of Waugh's more enduring works are with A Handful of Dust...
...The couple who drift into a low-key adulterous triangle in "Love in the Slump" anticipate the more serious issues confronted in that novel...
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...Compassion" was clearly a holding action to fix in Waugh's imagination the setting and theme for the climactic scene in the last volume of his Commonweal 2 5 January 14, 2000 Celebrating 75 years of the Catholic Intellectual Tradition at its most thoughtful-and controversial...
...Waugh had the ability to craft language that seems first startling, then inevitable, as in the description of paintings like "those vague assemblages of picnic litter which used to cover the walls of the Mansard Gallery in the early twenties...
...More important to careful readers of Waugh's work, three of the stories are direct spinoffs from the novels...
...In this collection, in flashes, Waugh's mastery is evident, whether in the early, largely vernacular style or in the enriched, ornate Mandarin in which he immersed himself from the late 1930s to the late 1940s...
...By Special Request" is the ending for the serial version of A Handful of Dust (1934), written because key parts of the original ending had already been sold in story form as "The Man Who Liked Dickens...
...The real justification for publishing (or reading) this collection is that it may tempt readers, or lead them back, to Waugh's major work...
...Nature, like a lazy author, will round off abruptly into a short story what she obviously intended to be the opening of a novel" and hurries toward the end...
...Sometimes Waugh could get away with summary instead of scene because, as his novels show, he could abstract and summarize character and situation very well indeed...
...Robert Murray Davis has written and edited ten books on Waugh, the latest Mischief in the Sun: The Making and Unmaking of "The Loved One" (Whitston, 1999...
...I resist because I believe that conflating development and freedom makes it impossible to investigate precisely the problem that animates Sen: why technological change has been only partially liberating...
...One could forgive the impatience and poverty of a young writer, but Waugh did much the same thing twenty years later in "Scott-King's Modern Europe," where the omniscient author frequently and awkwardly intrudes to account for elisions and suppressions...
...The Complete Stories confirms this view...
...TttOMAS MERTON ~ , % ~ EVELYN WAUGII I N T R O D U C T I O N BY PETER STEINFELS In a collection of engaging and provocative essays culled from the magazine that has bridged the centu~'s most important ethical questions, including: 9 Race and justice, including gay rights 9 Abortion and euthanasia s issues of faith, Catholicism and Protestantism, the Church and women 9 Catholics and Hollywood 9 And much more Available final work, the war trilogy Sword of Honor, completed a dozen years later...
...The dissolute doctor who fakes a death certificate in Waugh's undergraduate story "Edward of Unique Achievement" is resuscitated for Decline and Fall, as is the charming, vacuous young woman from "On Guard" for "Lucy Simmonds...
...And those qualities ensure Waugh's place in the literature of our century and beyond...
...Those limitations are most noticeable in the recurring characters who people what an earlier anthologist called "the world of Evelyn Waugh...
...Because he provides an enhanced voice for citizens---especially poor people-in an age of globalization in which mammoth corporations seem ever more powerful, I would like nothing more than to agree with Sen that development should be defined as the expansion of human freedom...
...As this phrase shows, style is not just a command of sound and rhythm but of the temper and time of a period...
...That requires that we conceptualize the two separately, and not as Sen would have it, as "constituent components" of each other...
...Incident in Azania," though it uses the setting and some of the characters of Black Mischief, was not, from the evidence of the novel's manuscript, ever intended to be part of the longer work but is a kind of jeu d'esprit based on a story about a faked kidnapping in China...
...The Man Who Liked Dickens" is so tightly connected to the novel that carbon-copy pages of the story were used in the actual manuscript of the novel...
...If there is time to read only one biography of Waugh, this is the obvious choice...

Vol. 127 • January 2000 • No. 1


 
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