{"id":154907,"date":"2021-09-29T14:14:14","date_gmt":"2021-09-29T18:14:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/?p=154907"},"modified":"2021-11-22T18:47:39","modified_gmt":"2021-11-22T23:47:39","slug":"re-covered-rc-sherriff","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2021\/09\/29\/re-covered-rc-sherriff\/","title":{"rendered":"Re-Covered: <em>The Fortnight in September<\/em> by R. C. Sherriff"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_156086\" style=\"width: 1010px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/scholes-recovered.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-156086\" class=\"wp-image-156086 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/scholes-recovered.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"1000\" height=\"650\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/scholes-recovered.png 1000w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/scholes-recovered-300x195.png 300w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/09\/scholes-recovered-768x499.png 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-156086\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">In Re-Covered, Lucy Scholes exhumes the out-of-print and forgotten books that shouldn\u2019t be.<\/p><\/div>\n<p>\u201cThe man on his holidays becomes the man he might have been, the man he could have been, had things worked out a little differently,\u201d writes R. C. Sherriff in <em>The <\/em><em>Fortnight in September<\/em>, his unassuming but utterly beguiling tale of an ordinary lower-middle-class London family during the interwar years, on their annual holiday to the English seaside town of Bognor Regis. \u201cAll men are equal on their holidays: all are free to dream their castles without thought of expense, or skill of architect.\u201d <!--more--><\/p>\n<p>First published in 1931, <em>The Fortnight in September<\/em> was the British writer\u2019s first novel, though Sherriff was already known as the author of <em>Journey\u2019s End<\/em>, based on his experiences in the trenches, and is still today one of the most celebrated plays ever written about the First World War. This had been an unprecedented sell-out success in London\u2019s West End for two years in the late 1920s, after which it moved to Broadway, where it was also a huge hit. But Sherriff had followed it with <em>Badger\u2019s Green <\/em>(1930), a flop of such magnitude it had all but sent him scurrying back to his am-dram beginnings with his tail between his legs: \u201cA play that, but for the acclaim of <em>Journey\u2019s End<\/em>, would never have found a place beyond a suburban church hall,\u201d wrote Hannen Swaffer, the drama critic for the <em>Daily Express<\/em>. \u201cSo far as the theatre world was concerned,\u201d Sherriff admitted in his memoir, <em>No Leading Lady <\/em>(1968), \u201cthe <em>Badger\u2019s Green <\/em>fiasco had proved what most people had suspected: <em>Journey\u2019s End <\/em>was a fluke. By a lucky chance a small-time writer for local amateurs had hit upon an idea so perfect for the stage that it was bound to be a success whatever way it was written . . . He had tried again, without the heaven-sent material of his first venture, and put himself back where he belonged.\u201d So Sherriff was surprised, on sending out the manuscript for <em>The Fortnight in September<\/em>\u2014a story he\u2019d written for the sheer fun of it\u2014when the renowned publisher Victor Gollancz fell on it enthusiastically. \u201cThis is delightful,\u201d Gollancz wrote back. \u201cI wouldn\u2019t alter a word.\u201d Critics were also impressed. The <em>Sunday Express <\/em>deemed Sherriff\u2019s debut novel a \u201clittle masterpiece.\u201d Soon enough it was selling twenty thousand copies a month.<\/p>\n<p>The novel\u2019s premise is brilliantly simple. We accompany Mr. Stevens, an office clerk, his sweet but nervous wife Flossie, and their three children\u2014Dick, who works for an auctioneer; Mary, a dressmaker\u2019s assistant; and schoolboy Ernie\u2014as they ready themselves for their summer holiday and take the train from London to the coast. Once there, they enjoy their getaway. Nothing in the story surprises. Nevertheless, it\u2019s an absolute delight from start to finish. Sherriff\u2019s tender observations of the family dynamics, and the simple joy each of them takes in the highlight of their year, prove him to be an unrivaled master of the quotidian. For those readers already familiar with <em>Journey\u2019s End<\/em>, such an accolade might not be that surprising. The play\u2014which George Bernard Shaw famously hailed as a \u201cuseful [corrective] to the romantic conception of war\u201d\u2014is not a story about the jingoistic heroics of battle. Instead it takes the reality of life in the trenches as its subject\u2014the death and the destruction, the pain and the horror, but first and foremost, the torturous tedium of it all.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p><em>The Fortnight in September<\/em> opens on the evening before the family departs, at their house in the South London suburb of Dulwich, where Mrs. Stevens, who has lived there all twenty years of her married life, awaits the return of her husband and two eldest children for supper. To begin the story here, on this night of family celebration\u2014second only, in their eyes, to the excited anticipation of Christmas Eve\u2014is a small stroke of genius. For the Stevenses, this evening, pregnant with expectation, sometimes feels like \u201cthe best of all the holiday, although it was spent at home and the sea was still sixty miles away.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s a testament to Sherriff\u2019s acute attention to the rhythms of the family\u2019s existence that he devotes a full third of the book simply to getting them to their destination, and the journey itself\u2014on which the family embarks early the next morning\u2014provides plenty of opportunity for excitement. Mr. Stevens is haunted, as they make their way to the local station, by the \u201cunreasoning and ridiculous fear . . . of a passing lady fainting, or accidentally falling down,\u201d for then he would be forced to offer his assistance, a gallantry that could cause them to miss their train. Not that making it onto the first train without any mishap allows him to relax. Instead, he\u2019s newly preoccupied by the question of whether he left the window of the WC open. Clapham Junction, the busy London interchange where they switch trains, provides further opportunity for a page-turning drama of the everyday. Will their trunk make it onto the right train? Have they got the correct platform? Will they find seats for all five of them in the same compartment? Only once everyone is comfortably ensconced on the Bognor train, all children accounted for and the trunk safely stowed in the luggage van, is the reader able to breathe a sigh of relief. Sherriff\u2019s ability to register each and every key change of the day, however minor, transforms the commonplace into something meaningful. Even the family\u2019s modest packed lunch takes on an air of special import: \u201cThere was a touch of solemnity in the way that each took their tiny relic of home . . . cut upon a kitchen table that now lies deserted and alone: each little mouthful seems to contain a whisper of familiar sounds.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Although the novel is narrated in the third person, Sherriff weaves in and out of the minds of his four main characters, while also regularly stepping back to enjoy the family tableau. Once they reach the sea, not a lot happens\u2014at least, nothing more than the small accidents and strokes of fate that make up the texture of ordinary life. They all delight in their decision to rent a bathing hut. Mary strikes up a passing friendship with another girl she meets on the beach, which in turn leads to a short-lived, rather tame romance with a dashing young actor. And Mr. Stevens runs into one of his firm\u2019s most valued clients, a puffed-up bore, who invites the family to tea at his flashy holiday home. They accept with a mixture of annoyance\u2014that they must don their smartest clothes and be on their best behaviour\u2014and elation, because he promises to send his chauffeur to pick them up in his car. The novel exerts a spell, one that leaves us hanging on these characters\u2019 every word, every shift, however subtle, in their own sense of equilibrium and enjoyment. In attuning us so meticulously to the Stevenses\u2019 world, Sherriff invites our utter absorption in it.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p>Sherriff had the idea for <em>The Fortnight in September<\/em> while on his own holiday in Bognor, watching the crowds go by down on the seafront, picking out families \u201cat random and imagin[ing] what their lives were like at home.\u201d He was captivated, he explains in <em>No Leading Lady<\/em>, by this \u201cendless drift of faces\u201d passing in front of him. \u201c[B]ut for a moment, as they passed your seat,\u201d he writes, \u201cyou saw them vividly as individuals, and now and then there would be one who struck a spark of interest that smouldered in your memory after they had gone.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>When <em>Journey\u2019s End <\/em>made its West End debut, he was employed as an \u201coutdoor man\u201d for an insurance office, responsible for traveling up and down a section of the Thames Valley between Putney and Windsor, meeting with clients to renew their policies or investigate their claims. Once the play opened, he would spend the day working, return to the suburban Surrey home he shared with his mother, then take the train into London\u2019s Waterloo station, from which it was a quick walk across the river to the theater. He would arrive shortly before curtain up, and leave again after the interval so as to not return home too late: he had to be up bright and early for work again the following day.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, <em>No Leading Lady <\/em>reads very much like one of his novels. He devotes just as much attention to the small pleasures he takes in his employment as an insurance man as to his struggles as an aspiring playwright. And he\u2019s just as interested in the people he encounters through his day job as he is in the celebrities brought into his orbit by literary fame. Two of the most memorable portraits in the book belong in the former category; not only are they well observed and obviously written with genuine feeling but it comes as something of a surprise that, of all the famous people in Sherriff\u2019s life, he chooses to write about those ordinary men and women whom less discerning writers might overlook. There\u2019s the sweet-shop owner who\u2019s let her insurance policy lapse, in whose sitting room he waits while she serves the schoolboys who mob her shop after they\u2019ve been released from the classroom\u2014\u201cholding up her hands in comic resignation\u201d she interrupts her discussion with Sherriff to attend to the boys\u2019 clamors for \u201cAuntie.\u201d\u00a0Then there are the two elderly and fragile spinster sisters to whom Sherriff always tries to offer advice and assistance, whatever they might need, who send him a sweet, lavender-scented note of admiration (\u201cbeautifully written, like a page from a Victorian schoolgirl\u2019s copybook\u2014a little shaky here and there, but guided by faint pencilled lines across the paper that had not been entirely rubbed out\u201d) to the theater when <em>Journey\u2019s End <\/em>opens. Success, it seems, did little to change Sherriff. Even after the unexpected triumph of <em>Journey\u2019s End<\/em> meant that he had to give up his insurance work\u2014he would have preferred to keep his job, but the theater was keeping him too busy\u2014he took the time to go round and say a personal and heartfelt goodbye to all his long-term customers.<\/p>\n<p>Eventually, Hollywood came knocking, and Sherriff was able to continue earning a more than comfortable living from his pen alone. His screenplay for <em>Goodbye, Mr. Chips <\/em>(1939) won him an Academy Award nomination, while those for <em>The Dam Busters <\/em>(1955) and <em>The Night My Number Came Up <\/em>(1955) were nominated for BAFTAs. He also continued to write novels, later experimenting with stories with a fantastical bent that nevertheless retain the charming familiarity of setting and character for which his earlier works were adored. There\u2019s <em>The Wells of St Mary\u2019s <\/em>(1962), a comedy in which a small English village finds first fame and fortune and then murder and scandal when the water of a local well is discovered to have healing properties. And <em>The Hopkins Manuscript <\/em>(1939), an H. G. Wells-inspired sci-fi tale narrated by a retired schoolmaster who breeds prize-winning poultry. Like Mr. Stevens\u2014and Mr Baldwin, the retired insurance clerk who is the quiet hero of <em>Greengates <\/em>(1936), Sherriff\u2019s second novel\u2014Edgar Hopkins is a middle-aged, middle-class everyman. Sherriff is not concerned with men who rise to the occasion, becoming heroes in the process, but those whose perseverance is discreet, and whose pretensions are few. The moon may crash into the earth, resulting in the collapse of civilization, but the extraordinary events which befall him do little to change Mr. Hopkins.<\/p>\n<p>No matter their circumstances, Sherriff\u2019s characters remain steadfastly familiar, common or garden heroes (and villains). And it\u2019s this that makes his novels so strangely enthralling. He writes without fanfare or affectation, but most importantly, with sympathy and compassion. However inconsequential, unambitious or even downright foolish they might appear to be, he treats his characters\u2019 lives\u2014their hopes and dreams, their fears and disgruntlements\u2014with the greatest of respect.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/bookshop.org\/books\/the-fortnight-in-september\/9781982184780\">The Fortnight in September<\/a> <em>was republished this month by Scribner.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Lucy Scholes is a critic who lives in London. She writes for the\u00a0<\/em>NYR Daily<em>,<\/em>\u00a0<em>the<\/em>\u00a0Financial Times<em>,<\/em>\u00a0The New York Times Book Review<em>,\u00a0and\u00a0<\/em>Literary Hub<em>, among other publications. Read earlier installments of\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/columns\/re-covered\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Re-Covered<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u201cThere was a touch of solemnity in the way that each took their tiny relic of home . . . cut upon a kitchen table that now lies deserted and alone.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1670,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[46439],"tags":[4459,67827,31210,68291,68292,68293],"class_list":["post-154907","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-re-covered","tag-british-literature","tag-featured","tag-lucy-scholes","tag-r-c-sherriff","tag-re-covered","tag-the-fortnight-in-september"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.4 (Yoast SEO v25.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Re-Covered: The Fortnight in September by R. 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