I once imagined that Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch (rhymes with Gooch), who signed himself Q and edited Horace Rumpole's beloved Oxford Book of English Verse, was an austere and distant figure.
Not a bit of it. When he was knighted by Asquith's government in 1910, it was for literary, educational and political services. He was a good Cornish Liberal and a Radical with it.
In 1899 he chaired a Liskeard meeting against the Boer War. The speakers were David Lloyd George and the remarkable Emily Hobhouse, sister of L.T.
As so often at these meetings, there were ugly scenes and Lloyd George had to be smuggled out of the building.
And in the academic world Quiller-Couch defended Liberalism against the Modernist High Toryism of T.S. Eliot.
He also wrote fiction, including at least one book for children, True Tilda.
This is a sort of feminist reworking of Oliver Twist, in which Tilda, a resourceful female Artful Dodger on the side of good, helps a traumatised younger boy find his fortune.
In hospital after an accident in the circus ring, Tilda hears a tale of injustice from a woman dying in the next bed. As soon as she is discharged she springs the boy, Arthur, from the evil Dr Glasson's orphanage and, travelling by canal boat and other means, the two of them evade his pursuit.
Eventually they arrive at Holmness in the Bristol Channel where Arthur finds his fortune. He turns out, inevitably, to be the lost son of an aristocratic family.
True Tilda was adapted by the BBC in the 1990s, an era when I didn't own a television. The other day - and this is my reason for writing all this - a fragment of the series turned up on YouTube.
I'd normally skip to the start of the episode, but the trailers here are of period interest - Chesterfield in an FA Cup semi-final and the great Stephen Lewis.
1 comment:
Alistair Cooke affected to remember Q personally advising him to "murder your darlings".
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