I
first came across this book (and many others) through a brief reference in Elizabeth
Maslen's article "Women Writers in World War II," published in Literature Compass. (But don't ask me how I first came across
that article, as I have no recollection at all…)
Since
I love tales of English village life, and love reading about day-to-day life
during World War II even more, I checked around and discovered that a small British
publisher, Folly Books, had recently
reprinted it, along with some other war-related titles. I also found almost no information about its
author, which—with my perversely obsessive nature—made it even more intriguing
for me. How could I resist?
Salute to the Village is a memoir (though undoubtedly
a bit fictionalized in an idealizing sort of way) of Inchfawn's experiences, along
with her husband, daughter, neighbors and friends, in the early years of the
war in an unnamed village near both the "City of the West" and the
"Roman City." (The
introduction to the Folly Books edition helpfully identifies these locales as
the village of Freshford ,
the town of Bristol , and the city of Bath , respectively.) The back cover of the Folly Books edition
adds that Inchfawn wrote more than 30 books which sold a staggering 650,000
copies, so it's even more surprising that she has such a slight web presence
today. Ah, the sands of time…
Inchfawn's
first published book, The Verse-Book of a
Homely Woman (1920), was followed by many other works of light, sometimes sentimental
poetry, several of which also incorporate the "homely woman" theme in
their titles. In addition, she wrote
several other memoirs, including Journal
of a Tent-Dweller (1931), Living in a
Village (1937), As I Lay Thinking
(1950), and Those Remembered Days
(1964). The chapters of these were apparently
often (as in the present case) interspersed with poems. It seems that Inchfawn wrote one novel as
well, called Sweet Water and Bitter (1927),
but I haven't yet found any detailed information about it.
Salute to the Village is a light and cheerful book
overall, and is informed throughout by Inchfawn's religious beliefs (though
this is never heavy-handed). She writes
with a gentle humor, and focuses on the overall kindliness and diligence of the
village folk in the face of war. (No
gritty descriptions of bomb casualties, à la Frances Faviell, here!) It opens with mother and daughter
"having the time of our lives. We were managing without a maid." Inchfawn nevertheless fantasizes about having
time to write a new book when their housekeeper has recovered from her present
illness:
Then, as often before, I spent a few minutes dreaming over the
fabric of this volume. Sometimes it takes the form of a story—sometimes it is
partly in verse. In any case this book is to be a rest-encouraging, and not an
embarrassing book. It must contain the sort of reading one could safely indulge
in during wakeful nights, and never become excited nor frightened thereby.
Of course, there must be a love interest in it, for what is
any book worth which makes no mention of this, the most thrilling of earthly
experiences? John Milton, when writing of his own aims in putting pen to paper,
said he wished "to justify the ways of God to men". In my own humble
sphere I have always wanted to do that. In this book which has never been
written, I told myself hopefully "perhaps I shall".
This
is actually quite a good description of the kind of book Salute to the Village is—albeit without the love interest, which
might be just as well.
When
war breaks out, there are the usual concerns about the blackout ("All the
rooms were looking sombre and Machiavellian with black paper swathed round
lights, and brown paper pasted at the tops and sides of windows."),
planning for evacuees, and trying to find household help. I found myself really liking Inchfawn, in
large part because of passages like this one, about her willingness to host
evacuees:
Quite sincerely, and truly, I wanted to help my country—yet, as
I went round the house and peeped into the nice clean bedroom and the sunny,
comfortable sitting-room prepared for our guests, I found myself praying that
they might be refined, grateful and agreeable (but not presuming) people. In
short, it was the old wish in a slightly different dress. I would like to feel
I was being useful—if that usefulness did not put me out too much.
Here,
what starts out sounding a bit condescending becomes funny and genuine (and
perhaps more or less what most of us would feel in the same situation) with her
concluding self-awareness and self-deprecation.
Although
Inchfawn's style is lightly humorous rather than outright hilarious, I did
laugh out loud at the following passage, which takes place just after war has
begun, and which captures the general unease and jumpiness that must have been
prevalent:
One morning my helper and I were busy with the bedrooms when
Mrs. Sands came to us with horror written in capital letters upon her face.
"Listen! "
Through the open window we heard a metallic dong—dong—dong—dong—
"The church bell!" said Mrs. Sands. "That means
invasion!"
So it had come! Come most probably as John had always said it
would—by parachute on the Downs . The Germans
would pour along our Wiltshire roads, past the White Horse—or what had been the
White Horse—through the old town with the gables and over Woodwick Hill.
All this went through my mind in the space of a second.
"They will probably use gas," said Mrs. Sands.
"And I've left my gas-mask at home!" Mrs. Nonesuch's
eyes dilated.
My thoughts flew to my two bread-winners—gone, I knew, without
the protection which Mr. Bond said everyone ought always to carry with them.
Dong—dong—dong—then
the sound suddenly ceased.
I looked at the clock. The hands stood at ten precisely.
"Oh, it was only the church clock!"
The
climax of the book—only heard about from its victims who pour into the
village's Rest Centre—is the Nazis' "Baedeker" raid on nearby Bath (the "Roman
city" of the book). The Inchfawn home
is overrun with the homeless—such that they cede not only all of their bedrooms
but their dining-room floor as well to provide sleeping space—and they hear of
the terror from some of their bombed-out guests.
The
descriptions of the bombings are sad, of course, but none too detailed or harrowing,
and I imagine that this is in part due to Inchfawn's desire to make the book
wartime "comfort reading," but I wonder if it is also partly due to
censorship concerns? (By the way, I noticed that Folly
Books also publishes an interesting-looking book specifically about the bombing
of Bath .)
The
following passage, for example, part of the tale told by one of the Inchfawns'
guests, sounds a bit too upbeat by comparison with Faviell's later
recollections:
No one was hysterical; she was not even sure whether they actually
prayed; they just stuck it, all through those three deadly attacks, and when at
last the raid was over, by great good fortune Mr. Wood got a taxi, and they
went to some special friends whose house had not suffered and who gladly took
them in.
Good
fortune indeed to be able to blithely hop in a taxi after an air-raid!
But
when I was already nearly finished reading Salute,
it struck me that I could think of very few other memoirs relating to the war that were actually published during the war. There were dozens (hundreds?) in the decades
after its end, and there were many novels published during the war that make
use—in fictionalized, and therefore perhaps less disturbing, form—of wartime
conditions. But very few memoirs that I
know of. Margery Allingham's The Oaken Heart (1941), about the very
beginning of the war, is one example, and it, too, is an upbeat and rather
idealized view of villagers facing the war.
The introduction to Salute makes
reference to a few specific details that were
censored from Inchfawn's book, and I wonder to what extent the overall tone—its
upbeat, inspiring, and sometimes sentimental perspective—may have been governed
by the necessities and limitations of wartime writing. No doubt Frances Faviell could never have published her gutwrenching account of the Blitz while the war was still raging! [By the way, if I am forgetting other wartime memoirs,
please do remind me.]
Innisfree, Fay Inchfawn's home during World War II |
Although
Salute to the Village may not stand
as one of my very favorite World War II books, it's a quite enjoyable book, and
Inchfawn herself comes across as a very likeable figure—a sort of ideal
neighbor for my unrealistic fantasy of idyllic British village life!
By the
way, poking around for more information about Inchfawn, whose real name was Elizabeth
Rebecca Ward (née Daniels), I discovered there is a Yahoo Group dedicated to
her, and although the group seems to be rather inactive, there were some
fascinating posts from two of the members, one who personally knew Inchfawn and
the other the son of Inchfawn's housemaid from the 1930s (who, if I recall
correctly, also works for Folly Books and wrote the introduction to the book). There were also some wonderful photos of
Inchfawn, her daughter, and of Freshford, as well as a mouthwatering array of bookcovers.
I love coming across these kinds of details about writers who have so long
been largely forgotten, and if any of you read and enjoy Salute, be sure to check out this Yahoo Group.