I
don’t remember where I picked up my copy of Angela Brazil’s The New Girl At St Chad’s. It’s a shabby
1920s reprint, falling to bits now. To
Winifred from Mother it says in careful cursive on the flyleaf. I don’t
know who Winifred was. I wonder if the book bore only her mother’s name because
her father had died in the Great War – given the book’s age, this is not
unlikely. Or did her father disapprove of school stories, and refuse to join his
wife in gifting something so frivolous to their child? Perhaps he thought
Winifred was too old for school stories. Perhaps Winifred longed to go to
boarding school and he resented being unable to afford it. Because – yes! He
was disabled after his war service and couldn’t earn much…
You
can see why I am a novelist rather than a historian.
My
house is full of ratty old school stories. My excuse is that they were my PhD
subject. But really, I just like them. Nowadays I seldom reread them – only The
Chalet School, the Abbey series and occasionally Dimsie. Oh, and Josephine
Elder, of course. But the books themselves are so pretty. Even this cheap 1920s
reprint of The New Girl At St Chad’s
is reassuringly fat and solid, with clear, if tiny print, and illustrations of
no small charm.
In
case you are unfamiliar with the story, let me tell you that the eponymous New
Girl is one Honor Fitzgerald, from County Kerry, sent to be tamed at an English
boarding school after one too many Wild Irish Girl exploits – involving buying
a horse without permission. (Horses are never far away from Wild Irish Girls.) An
ardent Home Ruler, she objects to wearing the orange hat band that St Chad’s
demands. She is Wild and Rebellious and full of Passion. But she is made of
sterling stuff deep down, and Makes Good. And so on.
cherchez le cheval! |
In my 2015 novel Name Upon Name, set in 1916 Belfast, I desperately wanted my
heroine, Helen, to read The New Girl At
St Chad’s. Belfast-born Helen is, like me, from a dual Nationalist/Unionist
heritage, which leads her to question her identity and sense of belonging, as I
had always done growing up: ‘I don’t know if I feel British or Irish – I
think I’m both, but I don’t suppose that’s even allowed.’ (It would be many
years before the Good Friday Agreement would enshrine Helen’s (and my) right to
identify as both British and Irish. You can see why I wanted it: Helen wondered why all Irish girls in
English school stories had to be wild and rebellious. She wasn’t wild at all –
but perhaps that was because she wasn’t a proper Irish girl. Having only
ever seen Winifred’s old 1920s copy, I had no idea when the book was published.
I hoped it was before 1916. Luckily it
was first published in 1912, so there was no problem with Helen reading it,
though she would have read an earlier edition than Winifred’s.
When I go to schools to talk about writing books
set a hundred years ago, I often bring old Angela Brazil books with me and tell
the children that these were the Harry Potters of their time. I don’t know if
they quite believe me. They are so decorative, so old-fashioned, so unchildish.
But I do hope, as I pass them round, that they give someone the same little
thrill they give me, and Helen, and Winifred. Someone a bit geeky, and
history-loving, and odd. Someone like me. Someone who might weave stories and grow up to be a History Girl.
The books we love and 'live' as children really do influence our lives, don't they! Those covers show wonderful artwork. Thank you, Sheena.
ReplyDeleteI used to read school stories as a child, along with the pony stories, the Enid Blyton and the Greek myths...(I read Robert Graves' book on the subject before I was out of primary school). I loved all the midnight feasts and the mystery-solving. Thinking about it now, I doubt I would want to attend boarding school where you couldn't escape the bullies for the weekend or even the evening, and where, from what I hear from a friend who did go to boarding school, the food was awful, unlike at Hogwarts! But the books were fun.
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