
After I’ve gotten to know an author, I like to find out whether his life matches up with my notions. So the publication of Lisa Chaney’s A Life of James Barrie a year or so ago was especially timely, since I’d been working through Barrie’s novels and plays over the last couple of years. I wish it hadn’t taken me so long to know them.
Barrie’s importance stretches far beyond Peter Pan, and Chaney gives due attention to other stages of his life and to his many other literary and dramatic successes. Chaney falls occasionally into amateur psychoanalysis, but Barrie was so eccentric that I can hardly blame her. She writes well, though her book contains a surprising number of spelling errors, mostly the sort of thing that spellcheck programs don’t pick up, like “it’s” versus “its”.
(I have fond and vivid memories of a dark, very adult-focused production of Peter Pan at the Shaw Festival a few years ago, far different from the sentimental, kid-oriented version that high schools put on. In London a couple of years ago, we were delighted to find a statute of Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens, where Barrie often strolled from his nearby home.)
I was pleased to learn from Chaney about Barrie’s friendships with Thomas Hardy and other luminaries like Arthur Conan Doyle, R. L. Stevenson, H. G. Wells, and George Meredith. But Chaney makes little effort to relate Barrie’s work to that of his contemporaries, other than to contrast Peter Pan with other significant works of children’s literature.
There was surely more to be said. Personally, I could not help linking Barrie’s early A Window in Thrums, a book of tender episodes in the lives of rustic Scots, to Hardy’s Under the Greenwood Tree, an episodic early novel containing affectionate portrayals of English rustics. And given their friendship, was it coincidence that Hardy abandoned novel-writing for poetry about the same time that Barrie abandoned novel-writing for drama? I would have liked to know what Chaney thought.
By the time of his last novel, The Little White Bird, Barrie had achieved a degree of control over language and tone that, in my view, would be surpassed only by E. M. Forster and P. G. Wodehouse in the twentieth century. He had an ear for dialect to rival Hardy’s. The half-dozen best of his ingenious and felicitous plays, gems like The Admirable Crichton, Mary Rose, and What Every Woman Knows, not to mention Peter Pan, ought to last as long as Shaw’s.
And how do the facts of Barrie’s life relate to his writings? Pretty well, I think. I had gathered from his novels and plays that Barrie had an emotional connection to pre-industrial Scotland and England, along with its language and traditions; that he half-believed that the British Isles were still subject to pagan forces and beings; that he was essentially asexual and perhaps stunted in his emotional and social development; and that he had a highly romantic view of childhood and children. All this is confirmed, more or less, in Chaney’s book. I never believed, as suggested by the recent Neverland movie, that Barrie tended toward pedophilia, and neither does Chaney. Barrie’s novels, some of which have writers as main characters, suggest that he honored the writer’s craft, and his biography bears that out.
The Quiet Man (A Music Video)
|
|
The Quiet Man Poster E 27×40 John Wayne Maureen O’Hara Barry Fitzgerald The Quiet Man reproduction poster print Pop Culture Graphics, Inc is Amazon’s largest source for movie and TV show memorabilia, poster and more: Offering tens of thousands of items to choose from. We also offer a full selection of framed posters.. Customer satisfaction is always guaranteed when you buy from Pop Culture Graphics,Inc… |
|
|
The Quiet Man – Movie Poster (Size: 27” x 40”) $10.99 This item is in new and mint condition. It has never been hung, used or displayed…. |
|
|
The Quiet Man Poster Movie H 11×17 John Wayne Maureen O’Hara Barry Fitzgerald Victor McLaglen The Quiet Man reproduction Approx. Size: 11 x 17 Inches – 28cm x 44cm Style H mini poster print Pop Culture Graphics, Inc is Amazon’s largest source for movie and TV show memorabilia, posters and more: Offering tens of thousands of items to choose from. We also offer a full selection of framed posters.. Customer satisfaction is always guaranteed when you buy from Pop Culture Graphics,Inc… |
|
|
The Quiet Man [VHS] $3.94 Blarney and bliss, mixed in equal proportions. John Wayne plays an American boxer who returns to the Emerald Isle, his native land. What he finds there is a fiery prospective spouse (Maureen O’Hara) and a country greener than any Ireland seen before or since–it’s no surprise The Quiet Man won an Oscar for cinematography. It also won an Oscar for John Ford’s direction, his fourth such award. The f… |
|
|
The Quiet Man (Collector’s Edition) $6.87 When an American prize-fighter kills a man in the ring, he returns to the Irish village where he was born to find peace and there he meets and falls i… |
|
|
John Wayne Collection, Vol. 1 (The Quiet Man / The Sands of Iwo Jima / Flying Tigers / The Wake of the Red Witch) $17.61 The John Wayn Collection Volume 1 includes Flying Tigers, Quiet Man original theatrical version, The Making of Quiet Man hosted by L… |
|
|
The Quiet Man $14.98 Blarney and bliss, mixed in equal proportions. John Wayne plays an American boxer who returns to the Emerald Isle, his native land. What he finds there is a fiery prospective spouse (Maureen O’Hara) and a country greener than any Ireland seen before or since–it’s no surprise The Quiet Man won an Oscar for cinematography. It also won an Oscar for John Ford’s direction, his fourth such award. The f… |