Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Out-of-Print Book of the Month

Sadly out-of-print, but still available used, are the satirical, mostly fictional diaries of Auberon Waugh, the irascible, somewhat resentful son of novelist Evelyn Waugh, who was once described in the Guardian as “effete, drunken, snobbish, sneering, racist and sexist.” Fine compliments indeed. As a young man serving in the army, Waugh famously managed to shoot himself six times in the chest with a machine gun after losing his temper with the seemingly-jammed gun, and shaking it in anger. In his autobiography, Waugh recalled that as he lay on the ground waiting for an ambulance, he jokingly said to his platoon sergeant: “Kiss me, Chudleigh.” But “Chudleigh did not recognize the allusion and from then on treated me with extreme caution.” Waugh also achieved a certain notoriety for his wine columns in The Spectator magazine, in which he memorably likened the bouquet of a disfavored wine to that of “a bunch of dead chrysanthemums strewn on the grave of a still-born West Indian baby.”

Probably some knowledge of / interest in British politics would aid in getting some of the jokes running throughout the diaries, but not so for most of the entries, written in the genial, absurd, gluttonous persona of a mad country squire, purportedly intimate with the Queen and other luminaries (“My tea-party with the Emperor Hirohito gets off to a sticky start”), and obsessed with food:

[M]y eye is caught by a man at a neighbouring table eating pigs’ trotters, so I order a couple. This gives rise to a Great Debate about the propriety of eating pigs’ trotters at such a time in the world’s history. I reply with the traditional Thomist argument that it is the consummation of a pig’s existence to have its feet eaten in this way: if the good Lord did not intend us to eat pigs’ trotters, He would scarcely have equipped pigs with feet in the first place, since they would fatten more easily in an immobile or sausage-like posture.

3 comments:

Dave said...

Fantastic! I hadn't heard of Waugh's son before. I love the absurdist angle. One of my favorite writers was a Czech called Hasek who wrote 'The Good Soldier Svjek', an absurdist account of the first World War. As great as the book is, the real life antics of Hasek were even funnier. Something about the 'trotters' quote reminded me of him.

Jay said...

Dammit Andy, you've already got me Googling, but I laughed out loud at Waugh's wine review.

Elizabeth Chudleigh, The Scandalous Duchess of Kingston

'Miss Chudleigh' (as she continued to be known after her 'private' marriage to Augustus Hervey, later 3rd Earl of Bristol) is the sort of historical personage who makes an amusing footnote in The Complete Peerage. Indeed she is featured there as the notorious 'Duchess of Kingston', who subsequently 'went through a form of marriage' with Evelyn Pierrepont, 2nd Duke of Kingston, and was eventually tried for bigamy before the House of Lords. Horace Walpole is duly wheeled on to observe that 'Miss Chudleigh had a most beautiful face, her person was ill made, clumsy and ungraceful'. The sniffy footnote ends with the assertion that 'she concentrated her rhetoric into swearing, and dressed in a style next door to nakedness'.

Mike said...

God, that's a howl! I'm finding a copy of that. Thanks, Andy.

I read a nice chunk of Svjek on vacation this summer, now I'm curious about Hasek.