1 Daphne Patai, The Orwell Mystique: A Study in Male Ideology (Amherst, MA, 1984), p. 91. The ‘sandal-wearers’ diatribe is from The Road to Wigan Pier, and is much quoted.
2 Schiller’s need for rotten apples was confided by Goethe to his scribe, Johann Eckermann. Goethe added that he, himself, preferred fresh air. Everyone to their taste.
3 Adrian Stokes, ‘Strong Smells and Polite Society’, Encounter (September 1961), pp. 50–56, www.unz.org.
4 Alain Corbin is authoritative on this subject in The Foul and the Fragrant: Odor and the French Imagination (Cambridge, MA, 1986).
5 George Orwell, ‘Inside the Whale’ (1940).
6 See Gilbert’s post ‘The Biochemistry of BO’, on his olfactory blog, www.firstnerve.com, 30 April 2009.
7 George Orwell, ‘Why I Write’ (1946).
8 I’m grateful to my colleague Neil Rennie for pointing out Milton’s nasal sensitivity. Once pointed out, Paradise Lost is read differently, I suspect.
9 The medical term osphresiolagnia rolls off the tongue less easily.
10 By Richard Ellmann, ed., Selected Letters of James Joyce (New York, 2003).
11 Simon Chu and John J. Downes, ‘Odour-evoked Autobiographical Memories: Psychological Investigations of Proustian Phenomena’, http://chemse.oxfordjournals.org, 30 September 1999.
12 George Orwell, The Road to Wigan Pier, as is the following quotation with its curdled disgust for innocent Welwyn Garden City and his warm reference to the persuasive power of ‘one sniff of English air’.
13 Robert Butler, ‘Orwell’s World’, Intelligent Life (January–February 2015).
14 The first Penguin edition of Nineteen Eighty-Four was published in 1955. I got hold of a Secker hardback from the public library.
15 The most robust explanation and defence of this ‘snitching’ – the source of much controversy – is given by Christopher Hitchens in Orwell’s Victory (New York, 2002).
16 For some reason, the plaque is regularly defaced. By fast-food lovers, presumably.
17 The surviving Westrope literary remains are held by Hull University History Centre, and a biography is given on the Centre website.
18 One wonders whether the pathologically frigid wife of Winston, Katharine, is a bitter, possibly unfair depiction of Eileen. Something went wrong, sexually, with the marriage.
19 Published in 2002, Spurling’s biography is a spirited defence of her friend Sonia, much maligned in her years as the Widow Orwell.
20 An authoritative account of the founding and running of Horizon – and Sonia’s role in its spectacular success – is given in Jeremy Lewis, Cyril Connolly: A Life (London, 1998).
21 Frank Kermode, ‘The Essential Orwell’, London Review of Books, III/I (22 January 1981).
22 Orwell, ‘Why I Write’.
23 Paul Foot, ‘By George, They’ve Got It’, The Observer (I June 2003).
24 Notably The Unexamined Orwell (Austin, TX, 2011).
1 Orwell recorded this memory of his mother’s conversation in his journal, in the last year of his life. Bernard Crick was the first to draw attention to it in his biography George Orwell: A Life (1980).
2 Bowker was the first to draw attention to this fact, in George Orwell (London, 2003).
3 George Orwell, ‘Why I Write’ (1946).
4 See the London tramping section of Down and Out in Paris and London.
5 George Orwell, ‘Such, Such Were the Joys’ (1952).
6 In what Orwell ironically calls the ‘unhappy’ (actually ‘happy’) ending, chronicled in ancient ballads, the dying Robin, having been treacherously bled to death by the nuns, forbids his outlaws from taking revenge on the priory.
7 The quotation is from Orwell’s review of Arturo Borea’s The Forge, Horizon (September 1941). The would-be flogger was many years later (the fact clearly stuck in Orwell’s mind) identified as a Mr Simmons, a friend of Ida’s.
8 The family moved into a larger house, in nearby Shiplake, when Richard retired in 1912, and downsized, moving again, in wartime 1915.
9 Cyril Connolly, Enemies of Promise (London, 1938).
10 The admirable life achievement of the young Wilkeses is recorded on the anti-Orwell website www.st-cyprians-school.org.uk.
11 This and subsequent quotations below from St Cyprianites, along with photographs and plentiful reminiscence – all favourable – about the Wilkeses, is recorded on www.st-cyprians-school.org.uk.
12 Connolly, Enemies of Promise. Published when it was, 1938, it would be interesting to know what Orwell made of this unflattering pen portrait. The men nonetheless remained friends and colleagues on Horizon.
13 St Cyprian’s website, www.st-cyprians-school.org.uk.
14 This, and Orwell’s subsequent recollections of wretchedness at St Cyprian’s, are recorded in ‘Such, Such Were the Joys’.
15 Connolly, Enemies of Promise.
16 Crick in his biography, from interviews with aged survivors of Orwell’s teaching (largely approved of by his pupils) at Hayes. See below for fuller account.
17 See www.st-cyprians-school.org.uk.
18 A scholarly summary of the evidence against Orwell can be found in Robert Pearce, ‘Truth and Falsehood: Orwell’s Prep School Woes’, The Review of English Studies, New Series, XLIII/171 (August 1992).
19 There was mutual admiration between Mackenzie and Orwell in later life. And the other novelist, plausibly, inspired Orwell’s late-life love of Scottish islands. Mackenzie was fanatic about the joys of living on them.
20 George Orwell, ‘Good Bad Books’, Tribune (November 1945); George Orwell, ‘Raffles and Miss Blandish’, Horizon (October 1944).
21 George Orwell, ‘The Lion and the Unicorn’ (1941).
22 George Orwell, ‘Politics and the English Language’ (1946).
23 The following account of Orwell’s (Eric Blair’s, as he was then) Eton career is largely taken from Crick’s biography.
24 Bowker, who is the most diligent of the biographers on Orwell’s sex life, gives a full account.
25 See Orwell’s honorific essay, ‘The Art of Donald McGill’ (1941).
26 Spender delivered the lofty pronouncement in a memorial essay in The World (June 1950).
27 See Richard Lance Keeble, ‘Orwell, Astor, and Me’, www.orwellsociety.com, February 2012.
28 The clearest demonstration is the article Orwell wrote in April 1945, ‘Antisemitism in Britain’, in Contemporary Jewish Record. Bernard Crick notes that by this point he was ‘fully purged of the mild and conventional but more or less clear anti-Semitism which appeared early in Down and Out in Paris and London and his wartime diaries’. The mischievous Muggeridge, surveying the many Jewish mourners at Orwell’s funeral, maintained that he was ‘strongly anti-Semite at heart’, which seems contradictory.
29 A comprehensive survey of the BYT phenomenon is given by D. J. Taylor in Bright Young People (London, 2007). Eton is prominent but the book does not include George Orwell.
30 See Kathryn Hughes, who had a childhood connection with the Buddicoms, ‘Such Were the Joys’, The Guardian (17 February 2007). The above account is largely taken from her.
31 See, for example, D. J. Taylor, ‘Orwell and the Rats’, pp. 143–7.
32 Orwell, The Road to Wigan Pier, in the well-known passage excoriating himself as ‘an odious little snob’ in his schooldays.
33 For Orwell big-game shooting on a motorbike, with his pal ‘Robbie’ (Captain H. R. Robinson), see Gerry Abbot, ‘Robbie and the Poet’, SBBR, IV/I (Spring 2006), www.soas.ac.uk.
34 Crick has the most useful summary of Orwell’s trial plans for this novel, which was very long in the writing and publication.
35 The conversation is recorded in John Haffenden’s William Empson, vol. II: ‘Against the Christians’ (Oxford, 2011). For more on this period in Orwell’s life, and his relationship with Empson, and his wife, see below.
36 This anecdote was first turned up by Stansky and Abrahams. It has been made much of by subsequent biographers.
37 Caldwell was the bestselling author of such 25-cent shockers as God’s Little Acre (1933) and Tobacco Road (1932).
38 So described in Burmese Days.
39 The memorable comment was first turned up in an interview by Crick. Arthur Koestler also likened Orwell to a ‘Burmese sergeant’.
40 See J. J. Ross, ‘Tuberculosis, Bronchiectasis, and Infertility: What Ailed George Orwell?’, http://cid.oxfordjournals.org, June 2005.
41 In Shakespeare’s Tremor and Orwell’s Cough (London, 2012). Ross writes with a trained physician’s authority.
42 Conor Cruise O’Brien, ‘Orwell Looks at the World’, in George Orwell: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. Raymond Williams (Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1974). O’Brien’s charge is refuted vigorously by Christopher Hitchens in Why Orwell Matters (New York, 2003).
43 Lord Curzon of Kedleston was the vigorously reforming viceroy and governor general of India, 1899–1905. His influence was still palpable in Orwell’s day.
44 Information taken from Michael Silvestri, ‘The Thrill of Simply Dressing Up’, Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History, II/2 (Fall 2001).
45 See George Woodcock’s The Crystal Spirit (London, 1966).
46 Orwell took the word ‘prole’, a central term in Nineteen Eighty-Four, from Jack London’s dystopian science-fiction work The Iron Heel (New York, 1908). A direct influence on Nineteen Eighty-Four, the title of London’s work inspired one of the famous lines in the novel, when O’Brien tells Winston, ‘If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face – forever.’
47 John Rodden, The Unexamined Orwell (Austin, TX, 2011), p. 300. Rodden is informative on this and other aspects of Orwell’s life recently thrown up.
48 ‘Orwell’s Fear and Loathing in Southwold’, East Anglian Daily Times (26 April 2003).
49 This letter, and others of a similar intimate kind, were first made generally available in A Kind of Compulsion: 1903–1936, ed. Peter Davison and Ian Angus (London, 1999). Some of the Orwell–Salkeld correspondence is still, apparently, withheld.
50 Bowker gives the fullest account of this unsettled period of Orwell’s life and his tangled relationships with women.
51 No book has been written about Collings, although he deserves one. The best account of his life is given in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
52 For background on Collings see ‘Hubert Dennis Collings’, www.zoominfo.com/p/Hubert-Collings/1337240949.
53 See my introduction to the Everyman Classics edition of Brave New World (London, 2014).
54 Pritchett made the much-quoted witticism in his obituary of Orwell, published in the New Statesman (28 January 1950).
55 For the florescence of expatriate literature in between-wars Paris, see Hugh D. Ford, Published in Paris (New York, 1975).
56 He confided the fact to his Hampstead friend, Mabel Fierz. See below for the friendship, which proved very useful to Orwell.
57 It was eventually published in Peter Davison and Ian Angus’s A Kind of Compulsion.
58 As usual, Bowker is authoritative on this episode.
59 The authoritative life of Orwell’s first publisher is Ruth Dudley Edwards, Victor Gollancz: A Biography (London, 1987).
60 For a concise account of Britain’s idiosyncratic vagrancy laws, see ‘A Short History of English Vagrancy Laws’, www.southernafrica-litigationcentre.org/i/wp-content/uploads/2013/o7/o4_SALC-NoJustice-Report_A-Short-History-of-English-Vagrancy-Laws.pdf.
61 Malcolm Muggeridge, ‘A Knight of the Woeful Countenance’, in The World of George Orwell, ed. Miriam Gross (London, 1972). It was Crick’s essay in this volume that induced Sonia to replace the tactically non-productive ‘authorized’ biographer, Muggeridge, with the very productive Crick.
62 See, for this and the following account of Orwell in Hayes, Crick’s biography; and Mike Paterson, ‘“One of the Most God-forsaken Places I Have Ever Struck”: George Orwell in Hayes’, on the London Historians’ Blog, https://londonhistorians.wordpress.com, 16 November 2011.
63 A useful collection of reviews of Orwell’s published works is compiled by Jeffrey Meyers, ed., in George Orwell: The Critical Heritage (London, 1997).
64 A concise history of the ILP is given by Mordecai Ryan in www.workersliberty.org/node/5391.
65 See C. Wright Mills, The Power Elite (Oxford, 1956).
66 Orwell reviewed Connolly’s novel, The Rock Pool, a study of rich bohemianism, a few months later. ‘Mr Connolly rather admires the disgusting beasts he depicts,’ he observed tartly.
67 Valerie Allen offers a fascinating account of the venerable history of social flatulence, acceptable and unacceptable, in On Farting: Language and Laughter in the Middle Ages (New York, 2010).
68 Alain Corbin, The Foul and the Fragrant: Odour and the French Social Imagination, trans. Miriam Kochan (Cambridge, MA, 1986).
69 See George Orwell, ‘Antisemitism in Britain’, http://orwell.ru, April 1945.
70 The authoritative biography of Burt, a highly controversial figure in his field, is L. S. Hearnshaw, Cyril Burt: Psychologist (Ithaca, NY, 1979).
71 In the preface to the Ukrainian translation of Animal Farm (1947).
72 The anecdote was turned up by the early-bird biographers Stansky and Abrahams, who were able to interview many still-living witnesses.
73 See, for example, www.orwelltoday.com/reader1984poemeileen2.shtml.
74 Geoffrey and Kathleen Tillotson, and Humphry House: three critics who went on to revolutionize Victorian studies.
75 Iona and Peter Opie, The Lore and Language of Schoolchildren (New York, 1959).
76 I am gratefully following here, and above, D. J. Taylor’s analysis, quotation and interpretations of the letters, which he discussed in ‘George Orwell: Another Piece of the Puzzle’, The Guardian, on 10 December 2005, two years after his prizewinning Orwell biography was published. The letters have not yet, I believe, been published in full.
77 He confided this desire, and his experiment, to Harold Acton. See Gordon Bowker, ‘The Road to Morocco’, http://theorwellprize.co.uk.
78 See Taylor, ‘Another Piece of the Puzzle’.
79 For example, the ‘nancy poets’ W. H. Auden and Stephen Spender, and their patron Nancy Cunard. See The Road to Wigan Pier and ‘Political Reflections on the Crisis’, The Adelphi (December 1938).
80 Taylor, ‘Another Piece of the Puzzle’.
81 George Orwell, ‘Spilling the Spanish Beans’, New England Weekly (July and September 1937).
82 Bowker is particularly illuminating and informed on this episode in Orwell’s Spanish sojourn.
83 Colls gives an extremely well-informed account of the Spanish episode in George Orwell: English Rebel (Oxford, 2013).
84 For the enigmatic relationship of Eileen, Georges and George, see Marc Wildermeersch, George Orwell’s Commander in Spain: The Enigma of Georges Kopp (London, 2013).
85 Not, as Orwell seems to have thought, because of flies on the surface, but because the warm water there has higher oxygen levels.
86 I follow Bowker in this episode, working from Jackson’s memoirs, written as ‘Elisaveta Fen’ (specifically A Russian’s England: Reminiscences of Years 1926–1940 [London, 1976]), and her literary remains, archived at Leeds University.
87 There is obscurity about this ‘anonymous’ gift. My suspicion is that it was the ever-generous Rees (proprietor of The Adelphi) and that the Myers story was a tactful fiction.
88 Taylor, ‘Another Piece of the Puzzle’.
89 Here again I am indebted to D. J. Taylor.
90 I have written about it at length in The Boy who Loved Books (and hooks, I might add) (London, 2007).
91 See Stephen Cullen, Home Guard Socialism (Warwick, 2006).
92 One wonders whether Eileen’s Trotskyist/ILP record led to her removal from the more sensitive censorship division, where she originally worked.
93 See Bowker’s analysis in George Orwell, pp. 326–7.
94 There was a chronic shortage of stenographers and typists in the 1940s. Eileen was in this respect irreplaceable.
95 Taylor, ‘Another Piece of the Puzzle’.
96 For an account of Horizon in Blitzed London and safe Cornwall see John Sutherland, Stephen Spender: A Literary Life (London, 2004).
97 For Peter Watson’s central role as a patron and friend, see Adrian Clark and Jeremy Dronfield, Queer Saint: The Cultured Life of Peter Watson (London, 2015).
98 I had the story from Natasha Spender, who was there.
99 See Richard Lance Keeble, ‘Orwell, Astor – and Me’, http://bestof.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk, 8 December 2011.
100 See Richard Cockett, David Astor and the Observer (London, 1990).
101 The decision was later reversed, but the initial objection was symptomatic of the lingering distrust the BBC has for Orwell. John Peel, the disc jockey, they are happy to commemorate.
102 The preceding and following account of Orwell’s wartime relationship with Empson is taken from John Haffenden’s William Empson, vol. II: ‘Against the Christians’ (Oxford, 2011).
103 Empson encouraged Hetta’s promiscuity: ‘I loved you in bed with young men,/ Your arousers and foils and adorers,’ he wrote in one of his poems. Orwell, alas, was not an arouser.
104 Denis Donoghue, ‘Plain English’, London Review of Books, vi/24 (20 December 1984).
105 Raymond Williams, George Orwell (London, 1971).
106 The windowpane analogy was actually made a couple of months later, in the essay ‘Why I Write’ (Summer 1946).
107 See Bowker, George Orwell, p. 368, for Orwell’s pleasure in gutting animals he had slain.
108 Trotsky’s birth name was Bronstein.
109 Richard was later put down for Westminster. He went to neither and – something that would have delighted his father – went successfully into farming.
110 Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper?: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War (London, 2000).
111 J. J. Ross gives the complex condition of his health in his last years, Orwell’s Cough, pp. 216–17.
112 Richard Blair, ‘Remembering Jura’, http://theorwellprize.co.uk, 5 October 2012.
1 Josh Indar, ‘Bumming Smokes in Paris and London: George Orwell’s Obsession with Tobacco’, www.popmatters.com, 18 June 2009. I gratefully borrow from Indar’s witty account.