| Newsletter No.5 | 3 January 2001 |
| The Feast Day of St Genevieve |
A warm welcome to the twenty-first century! Since our last
Newsletter in July, the Society has gained five new members, including our first
husband and wife team. Interestingly, all five have found out about the Society
through the Internet.
Page and Allan Life have joined from
the USA. Page has been Romance Languages cataloguer since 1981 and Allan a
teacher of Victorian literature since 1974 - both at the University of North
Carolina.
Ray Russell runs a successful small publishing firm in
North Yorkshire - Tartarus Press - and is publishing JMF's The Lost
Stradivarius, A Midsummer Night's Marriage and Charalampia in
single book form.
Mark Valentine, has written a new Introduction to
the volume, and is also the joint author, with Richard Dalby, of the article on
JMF in the December 1995 Book and Magazine
Collector.
Michael Morello, from Connecticut, is currently a
Masters of Education student at Columbia University. Whilst at New College,
Oxford, he completed a critical piece on The Lost Stradivarius.
Anastasia Noble
Under the heading "Laird's daughter of decided
character who spent her life breeding deerhounds on the shore of Loch Fyne",
The Daily Telegraph recently had a fulsome obituary to Anastasia Noble
- daughter of Sir John Noble, JMF's one-time pupil and closest friend. Born on
Christmas Day 1911, Anastasia Mary Elizabeth Noble led a fascinating life. Sent
to a succession of boarding schools (being expelled from one for telling the
girls about the facts of life), she became a superb horsewoman, breeder of
hackney horses and deerhounds and renowned as a judge at shows of the latter. At
her 80th birthday party the villagers of Cairndow, near her home at Ardkinglas,
danced to a new composition The Miss Noble of Ardkinglas Waltz. I only
wish I had met her, when I visited Ardkinglas with Christopher Hawtree in April
1992.
Fleet Old Church
One of the founding aims of this Society
is "to support buildings associated with Meade Falkner". Possibly the
most famous, as far as the general reader is concerned, is the one that has a
central part to play in Moonfleet. Although the tiny church bears
little resemblance to that described in the novel, there is a vault and the
immediate hinterland does indeed convey something of the atmosphere so well
conjured up by JNE particularly in bad weather.
I have been in correspondence
since the early autumn with various individuals who have responsibilities for
the present parish and the old church: Mr John Coombe, Churchwarden of Holy
Trinity, Fleet, who told me that the village had taken on the task of
maintaining the building, and Mrs Del Whitfield, Secretary of Holy
Trinity.
![]() Fleet Old Church |
They feel that the present plaque to JW is part of the church's history and do not want it replaced, even though it is in a poor state - the brass is discoloured and corroded. However, they are very amenable to a small green slate plaque being placed underneath with a suitable inscription. Grassby & Sons Ltd., Stonemasons and Memorial Sculptors since 1861 (did JMF know of them?), of Dorchester have given an estimate for the following: |
![]() JMF Plaque |
Supplying a Green Slate Plaque 6" x 5" xl", face and four edges fine rubbed finish. Inscription cut and dowelled in Gold Leaf. Fixed and dowelled to wall directly beneath existing brass plaque. Total (including VAT) Pounds 189.72 This allows for the following inscription:
|
I would like to add, in smaller letters below:The John Meade
Falkner Society This will mean, of course, it will be a bit more expensive -
say Pounds 200 - 210.
Thanks to a most generous donation by a member, of
Pounds 1OO, we are already half way there. This is our first appeal - to both
members and anyone else reading this Newsletter on the Internet. Any cheques to
be made payable to The John Meade Falkner Society. They will all
be formally acknowledged. PLEASE give generously.
Photographs
When I visited Fleet, Dorchester, Buckland Ripers and Manningford Bruce in
August, I took several photographs of the various JMF sites. Kathleen Falkner
also kindly sent prints of both churches in Fleet. If members are visiting
places such as Burford, Durham, Weymouth and other related JMF sites - and have
cameras with them - I would be grateful for copies of any photographs they take.
I am building up quite a Society archive as it is and would like to add to it
where possible.
Internet links:
When I used the YAHOO search engine for John Meade
Falkner last August, it found 291 Web Pages with his name.
Welcome to the Falkner, J. Meade Forum Frigate. Post yer opinion,
a link to some of yer work, or yer thoughts regarding the best books
and criticisms concerning Falkner, J. Meade.
We'd also like to invite ye to sail on by the Falkner, J. Meade
Live Chat, and feel free to use the message board below to schedule
a chat session. And the brave of heart shall certainly wish to sign
their souls aboard The Jolly Roger.
Oak planks of reason, riveted with rhyme,
designed to voyage across all of time.
The Lost Stradivarius is a fine novel of the macabre, and
very much a product of the 1890s. Hugh Walpole inscribed in his own
copy of the book (previously owned by Thomas Hardy) that Falkner "was
a real abnormal romantic". Also included are two elusive Falkner items,
A Midsummer Night's Marriage and Charalampia.
Introduction by Mark Valentine.
Sewn hardback book of 233 + xvi pages. Pounds 25/$50.
Tartarus Press, Coverley House, Carlton-in-Coverdale, Leyburn, North
Yorkshire, DL8 4AY tel/fax: 01969 640399
Email: tartarus@pavilion.co.uk.
Website: http://freepages.pavilion.net/users/tartarus
Subscriptions to December 2001
Now the Society is
firmly up and running, we will have to become a little more formal with
"subscriptions." So far, I have received Pounds 5 each from eleven members. In
order to be fair to them, I have decided that these will take effect from
January 2001 and run until December 2001. I would greatly appreciate it if those
of you who have not contributed so far could send the same amount to cover this
year's sub. I am keeping a careful tally of all expenditure and will send out a
Balance Sheet to members with the May Newsletter. I have kept the donation for
the Fleet Church plaque as a separate figure. I do hope this payment will not
affect any of you adversely, as it is only levied to pay for paper, inkjet,
printing, postage/e:mail costs. If the Society gets much bigger, then we will
have a separate Treasurer, if members think this is the next stage. I am
presently putting money in a Nationwide Building Society Account denoted "The
John Meade Falkner Society".
Articles and The Journal
Accompanying this Newsletter is an article by Peter Davey - "Accident or
Foul Play?" This is the first of two studies by Peter on The Nebuly
Coat; the second of which I have already been privileged to read and which
will be one of the articles in this summer's Journal. In future, I would be glad
to print members' letters in Newsletters, particularly if they have comments on
the Society's articles. Of course, articles themselves are always very welcome.
I have hopes of others from Edward Wilson on one of JMF's poems, Michael
Morello's research on The Lost Stradivarius, Christopher Hawtree on JMF
in Reference Books and Raymond Moody on JMF and Burford Church. I am also still
tinkering with an idea of exploring JMF's links with Derbyshire. I await.
The New Year I expect we will agree to differ on when the Millennium
started, but we can all join in celebrating JMF's poem on the subject of a
change in the year. Those of you who have a copy of his Poems will already have
read what follows. I have not transcribed it in full.
New Year, 1892
TO M. D. N.
MY Lady in that midnight hour
When the year faints and dies,
Magicians spoke the word of power
And bade the curtain rise.
The curtain of the future rise
On all that unseen play,
Which each of us or vain or wise
Must act as best he may.
But we, I wot, less hopeful grown,
Might scarcely brook to see,
The unknown record open thrown
Of what our role shall be.
But rather trust that He whose pen
Our parts has written there
Will give us strength to act like men,
To plan, to do, to bear....
.... And borne upon the tremulous air
A sad soft melody swells,
The voice of valedictory prayer,
The song of muffled bells.
The muffled peal a mournful sound
That tells his race is run,
The grave is digged, the shroud is wound
For dying '91....
Keep all the hearts you love from ill,
Keep your friends staunch and true,
Health, wealth and honour bring you still
In 1892.
Best wishes for 2001 to all readers.
Kenneth Hillier
Greenmantle, Main Street, Kings Newton, Melbourne, Derbyshire DE73
1BX
Tel.: 01332 865315
E-mail: moonfleet@greenmantle63.freeserve.co.uk
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