The Penguin Book of First World War Stories (2 page)

Principles of the Present Selection

This anthology aims to restore the short story to the map of the war's literature. It sets out to illustrate the wide thematic and stylistic range of stories of lasting quality or fascination that writers in Britain have produced from the days of the war until the end of the twentieth century.
20
The volume comprises work by authors famed for the art of their short story (such as Kipling, Conrad, Lawrence, Mansfield and, more recently, Muriel Spark), but also by writers well known during their lifetime but later forgotten, such as Stacy Aumonier and Winifred Holtby. It also includes a number of stories by writers specifically associated with the literature of the First World War, such as Aldington, Graves and Mary Borden. The selection acknowledges the many facets of the war's cultural production and deliberately represents some successful stories in more popular modes: the spy thriller, the ‘whodunnit' and the supernatural tale.
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The variety of outlooks on the war in the stories assembled here is determined by genre and style, but also other variables: whether a writer is a man or a woman, experienced the war him- or herself or belongs to a later generation, whether and where he or she actively served in the war and, of course, whether a story was written during the war or from a temporal distance. Since there was at no time a unified perception of the war, the stories have been grouped into thematic sections rather than chronologically: ‘Front', ‘Spies and Intelligence', ‘At Home' and ‘In Retrospect'. This arrangement brings differences in experience and attitude to the foreground. It juxtaposes, for example, male and female impressions of the front and represents the latter not only with a nurse's story, Mary Borden's ‘Blind' (1929), but also with Katherine Mansfield's ‘An Indiscreet Journey' (1915), which gives a more unusual and entirely selfish reason for a woman's presence in the ‘forbidden' militarized zone of France. The ‘Front' section, as with all others, also mixes periods, including Anne Perry's prize-winning mystery story ‘Heroes' (2000). It investigates notions of heroism and cowardice from the perspective of the late twentieth
century, but it also illustrates how strongly the memory of the First World War has now crystallized into an archetypical Western Front. Other stories in this section remind us of other theatres of war: Conrad's ‘The Tale' (1917) is about the war at sea, while Arthur Wells's ‘Chanson Triste' (1924), an apt illustration of the ‘literary' war, is set in Bulgaria and hence on a front that has almost completely disappeared from the British cultural imagination.

Even though various impressions and interpretations of the war have always existed side by side, we must distinguish the three major phases of origin for stories about the war: 1914–18; the inter-war years; and, finally, the resurgence of interest since the 1960s. The stories collected here date from all these phases, but with a strong emphasis on the early decades when production of stories was abundant and interpretation of the war highly contested.

Positive views of the war as a necessary and patriotic event appear more frequently before rather than after 1918. This is reflected in this anthology, which starts with one of the first stories of the war to become famous, Arthur Machen's ‘The Bowmen', published as early as September 1914. A story of the supernatural, it associates the British soldiers who had bravely fought heavy German forces before their retreat from Mons on 23 August 1914 with the small victorious army of the battle of Agincourt in 1415, which has become famous as the patriotic centrepiece of Shakespeare's
Henry V
. Not only does Machen's story mask a British defeat, it also suggests that the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) was guarded by celestial powers. Conan Doyle's story about the war effort of Sherlock Holmes, ‘His Last Bow', was written and published in 1917, after even more military disasters, and revived a view that had welcomed the war as a cleansing force: the bitter ‘east wind' that Holmes evokes in his final remark will leave England a cleaner, better and stronger land. Like Conan Doyle, Rudyard Kipling worked for the War Office.
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His story, ‘Mary Postgate' (1915), shows the enemy, a fatally wounded German airman whose plane has crashed in England, from the perspective of an elderly spinster who seeks revenge for the death of the young man she
helped to bring up. But even stories written during the war sometimes presented a more friendly view of the enemy. In Stacy Aumonier's ‘Them Others' (1917), a woman is concerned about the fate of the German family she knew before the war. Wartime stories also vary significantly in their portrayal of the men who fought. ‘Private Meyrick – Company Idiot' (1916), written by the once-popular ‘Sapper', portrays an incompetent who, in his own tragicomic manner, dies a hero. Conrad's ‘The Tale' describes an officer's dilemma after he has sent the crew of a ship to certain death.

Stories of the inter-war years are likewise diverse in approach and sentiment. ‘Trench stories' of that period, by such authors as C. E. Montague (‘A Trade Report Only', 1923) and Richard Aldington (‘Victory', 1930), tend to be war-critical and emphasize the horror and human tragedy of the war. But by that time, remembrance and healing had also become a major theme. Katherine Mansfield's ‘The Fly' (1922) explores a father's grief six years after his son was killed. Published in the same year but in a completely different spirit, Harold Brighouse's ‘Once a Hero' casts a satirical light on a hypocritical cult of public commemoration that serves the living more than it does the ‘glorious' dead.

A decade later, the pain of remembering had abated, as Winifred Holtby's ‘The Casualty List' (1932) suggests: to the old woman in this story, the daily obituary of natural deaths has become more real and affecting than the lists of casualties she recalls from the war. The necessity for 1920s Britain to recuperate even underlies a story that looks back to the hidden war of intelligence: in John Buchan's ‘The Loathly Opposite' (1928), two men from a former decoding unit suffer ailments that may result from their exhausting efforts during the war. That they find a cure in the former enemy's country reflects late-1920s pacifism and the desire to achieve reconciliation with Germany.

Other stories of the time raised more controversial issues: that British soldiers had been shot for desertion, for example, like the underage volunteer in John Galsworthy's ‘Told by the Schoolmaster' (1927). The difficulties returned soldiers experienced in readjusting to post-war Britain are the subject
of Hugh Walpole's ‘Nobody' (1921); his protagonist only regains a purpose in life when he forms a new affiliation with the working classes and thus stands for the reorientation with which his society as a whole was confronted. The war's impact on conceptions of gender is another prominent theme of the post-war years.
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While D. H. Lawrence's ‘Tickets, Please' (1919) sketches a war caused by women's entry into ‘male' working domains, Radclyffe Hall's ‘Miss Ogilvy Finds Herself' (written 1926) depicts an ageing lesbian who longs for the active role, freedom and temporary acceptance that work as an ambulance driver had afforded her during the war and which she lost with the Armistice.

Although their number decreased dramatically after the caesura of the Second World War, stories about the First World War continued to be written after 1945. Not unexpectedly, their main concern is how the war is remembered across the gap of time and how this memory is passed on to future generations. Robert Graves's early 1960s story about the ‘Christmas Truce' of 1914 explicitly includes a man who wishes his war veteran grandfather to march with the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. By the end of the twentieth century, few First World War soldiers were left, and the character in Julian Barnes's ‘Evermore' (1995) anticipates that the war's collective memory will fade. But this story itself helps to perpetuate its memory, as do the others in the anthology's final section. Muriel Spark's ‘The First Year of My Life' (1975) and Robert Grossmith's ‘Company' (1989) indicate in their own original ways how the war continues to haunt later generations, figuratively and, as Grossmith's ghost story suggests, even literally.

Barbara Korte

NOTES

1
. See for example H. G. Wells,
The War That Will End War
(London: Palmer, 1914).

2
. On the ‘great Casualty Myth' see John Terraine,
The Smoke and
the Fire: Myths and Anti-myths of War 1861–1945
(London: Leo Cooper, 1992), p. 35.

3
. The war's culture of mourning is discussed in Jay Winter's influential study
Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning: The Great War in European Cultural History
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).

4
. See Fussell's seminal
The Great War and Modern Memory
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1975), pp. 155f.

5
. On this ‘great boom of war literature' see, among others, Rosa Maria Bracco,
Merchants of Hope: British Middlebrow Writers and the First World War, 1919–1939
(Providence, Rhode Island: Berg, 1993), p. 14.

6
.
Disenchantment
(London: Chatto & Windus, 1922) is the programmatic and frequently quoted title of C. E. Montague's recollections of his war experience.

7
. See in particular Douglas Jerrold's
The Lie about the War: A Note on Some Contemporary War Writers
(London: Faber and Faber, 1930). On a ‘distorted' popular memory based on canonical literature, see also the recent historical scholarship of Gary D. Sheffield,
Forgotten Victory: The First World War. Myths and Realities
(London: Headline, 2001) and Brian Bond,
The Unquiet Western Front: Britain's Role in Literature and History
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002).

8
. See Bracco,
Merchants of Hope
; Michael Paris,
Warrior Nation: Images of War in British Popular Culture, 1950–2000
(London: Reaktion Books, 2000).

9
. Susan Hill,
Strange Meeting
(1971), Pat Barker,
Regeneration Trilogy
(1991–5) and Sebastian Faulks,
Birdsong
(1993). Other significant novels of the 1990s include Robert Edric's
In Desolate Heaven
(1997), David Hartnett's
Brother to Dragons
(1998) and Helen Dunmore's
Zennor in Darkness
(1993).

10
. Perry's series of novels set in the war was begun in 2003, with
No Graves as Yet
; Morpurgo's
Private Peaceful
came out the same year.

11
. ‘Bartimeus' was the pseudonym of Lewis Anselm da Costa Ricci (1886–1967), ‘Taffrail' that of Henry Taprell Dorling (1883–1968).

12
. Some of Phillpotts's short stories were collected in
The Human Boy and the War
(London: Methuen, 1916).

13
. On the more recent history of the short story in Britain see Clare Hanson,
Short Stories and Short Fictions, 1880–1980
(Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1985) and Dominic Head,
The Modernist
Short Story: A Study in Theory and Practice
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992). Specifically on the modern short story as an art of the ‘significant moment', see Frank O'Connor in
The Lonely Voice: A Study of the Short Story
(London: Macmillan, 1963), p. 23.

14
. See Blunden's introduction to the anthology
Great Short Stories of the War: England, France, Germany, America
, ed. ‘H.C.M' (London: Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1930), p. ii.

15
. H. E. Bates,
The Modern Short Story: A Critical Survey
(1941; Boston: The Writer, 1965), p. 203. Also compare George Walter's observation in the introduction to his
Penguin Book of First World War Poetry
(London: Penguin, 2006) that after the war, ‘the market for war poetry dried up almost as quickly as it had appeared' (p. xxiii).

16
. See Motion's introduction to his anthology of
First World War Poems
(London: Faber and Faber, 2003), p. xi, also quoted by Walter,
First World War Poetry
, p. 31.

17
. Story collections of other well-known writers associated with the war, like C. E. Montague's
Fiery Particles
(1923) and R. H. Mottram's
Armistice
(1929), were last published in the early 1970s, i.e. in the wake of the 1960s' revived interest in the First World War.

18
. See note
14
.

19
. The anthology was also published in the United States (New York: Harper, 1931), with an introduction by H. M. Tomlinson (1873–1958), who had just published his anti-war novel
All Our Yesterdays
(1930). A slightly earlier collection, James G. Dunton's
C'est la Guerre! The Best Stories of the World War
(Boston: Stratford, 1927), had a strong American focus and included only two British examples.

20
. Of the writers reprinted here, Katherine Mansfield has a New Zealand and Mary Borden an American background, but the war stories of both were written or published while their authors lived in Britain.

21
. Despite the modern technology with which it was fought, the experience of the war sometimes seemed to border on the archaic and the surreal, and for the bereaved, spiritualism became a source of consolation. It is not surprising, therefore, that the supernatural story was perceived to have an affinity to the war. On the war and the supernatural, see also Winter,
Sites of Memory
, pp. 54–77.

22
. On the involvement of British writers in the propaganda machine
see also Peter Buitenhuis,
The Great War of Words: Literature as Propaganda 1914–18 and After
(London: Batsford, 1989), pp. 79–116, and Samuel Hynes,
A War Imagined: The First World War and English Culture
(London: The Bodley Head, 1990), pp. 25–56.

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