John Middleton Murry

For his son, who was also a writer, see John Middleton Murry, Jr.. For other people with similar names, see John Murry (musician) and John Murray (disambiguation).
Grave of John Middleton Murry at Thelnetham Church in Suffolk

John Middleton Murry (6 August 1889 12 March 1957) was an English writer. He was prolific, producing more than 60 books and thousands of essays and reviews on literature, social issues, politics, and religion during his lifetime. A prominent critic, Murry is best remembered for his association with Katherine Mansfield, whom he married in 1918 as her second husband, for his friendship with D. H. Lawrence and T. S. Eliot, and for his friendship (and brief affair) with Frieda Lawrence. Following Mansfield's death, Murry edited her work.

Early life

John Middleton Murry was born in Peckham, London, the son of a civil servant. He was educated at Christ's Hospital and Brasenose College, Oxford.[1] There he met the writer Joyce Cary, a lifelong friend.

He met Katherine Mansfield at the end of 1911, through W. L. George.[2] His intense relationship with her, her early death, and his subsequent allusions to it, shaped both his later life and the attitudes (often hostile) of others to him. Leonard Woolf in his memoirs called Murry "Pecksniffian".[3] By 1933 his reputation "had touched bottom", and Rayner Heppenstall's short book of 1934, John Middleton Murry: A Study in Excellent Normality, could note that he was "the best-hated man of letters in the country".[4]

Editor

From 1911 to 1913, Murry was editor of the literary magazine Rhythm,[5] which was later renamed The Blue Review.[6] In 1913 an associate, the publisher Charles Granville of Stephen Swift Ltd, was found guilty of embezzlement and bigamy and imprisoned. As some debts had been put in Murry’s name their finances were seriously affected for the next six years.[7] In 1914 he met D. H. Lawrence, and became an important supporter. The next year they started a short-lived magazine together, The Signature.[8] In 1931, after a complex evolution of the relationship, Murry wrote in Son of Woman one of the first and most influential posthumous assessments of Lawrence as a man.[9] Medically certified as unfit for military service, with pleurisy and possible tuberculosis,[10] during the war years he was part of the Garsington circle of Ottoline Morrell.

In 1919, Murry became the editor of the Athenaeum, recently purchased by Arthur Rowntree.[11] Under his editorship it was a literary review that featured work by T. S. Eliot, Virginia Woolf, Lytton Strachey, Clive Bell, and other members of the Bloomsbury Group. It lasted until 1921. It had enthusiastic support from E. M. Forster,[12] who later wrote that "Here at last was a paper that was a pleasure to read and an honour to write for, and which linked up literature and life".[13] Its fate was to be merged into The Nation, which became The Nation and Athenaeum, in the period 1923 to 1930 edited by H. D. Henderson.[14][15] In 1923 he became the founding editor of The Adelphi (The New Adelphi, 1927–30), in association with Jack Common and Max Plowman. The magazine continued in various forms until 1948. It reflected his successive interests in Lawrence, an unorthodox Marxism, pacifism, and a return to the land.[16] According to David Goldie, Murry and the Adelphi, and Eliot and the Criterion, were in an important rivalry by the mid-1920s, with competing definitions of literature, based respectively on romanticism allied to liberalism and a subjective approach, and a form of classicism allied to traditionalism and a religious attitude. In this contest, Goldie says, Eliot emerged a clear victor, in the sense that in the 1930s London Eliot had taken the centre of the critical stage.[17][18]

Critic

He reviewed for the Westminster Gazette and then the Times Literary Supplement, from 1912.[19] Initially he was much influenced by the philosophy of Henri Bergson, which he disavowed in 1913.[20] He was one of an identified group of post-World War I critics that included Richard Aldington, Robert Graves, Aldous Huxley, Herbert Read, and Edgell Rickword.[21] Murry gave Huxley an editorial job at The Athenaeum.[22] Murry also helped encourage British interest in the work of Fyodor Dostoyevsky: his 1916 work, Fyodor Dostoevsky: A Critical Study argued Dostoyevsky was an important novelist and philosophical thinker.[23]

Murry led the charge against Georgian poetry. A leader in the 16 May 1919 edition of The Athenaeum was an early example of a reasoned attack against the Georgian style of verse; and Murry coupled this with an adversarial attitude to the London Mercury edited by J. C. Squire.[24] He reviewed quite harshly Siegfried Sassoon's Counter-Attack in 1918, despite having helped him in 1917 to draft an anti-war piece for H. W. Massingham's The Nation.[25] In-house, however, he was not master enough to award an essay competition prize to the then-unknown Herbert Read, over the wishes of George Saintsbury and Robert Bridges, who preferred the poet William Orton.[26]

F. R. Leavis admired and was influenced by Murry's early criticism;[27] later he criticised Murry in the pages of Scrutiny.[28]

On Romanticism

Murry gave his philosophy its fullest expression in his writings on Keats and Shakespeare and in an ambitiously titled volume, God: An Introduction to the Science of Metabiology. There, picking up certain concepts from his acquaintance George Santayana, Murry describes the project of Romanticism as one of inner exploration:

"To discover that within myself which I *must obey, to gain some awareness of the law which operates in the organic world of the internal world, to feel this internal world as an organic whole working out its own destiny according to some secret vital principle, to know which acts and utterances are a liberation from obstacles and an accession of strength, to acknowledge secret loyalties which one cannot deny without impoverishment and starvation -- this is to possess one's soul indeed, and it is not easy either to do or to explain."[29]

The upshot of this discovery results in the highest degree of ethical awareness, "an immediate knowledge of what I am and may not do."[30] The awareness of one being "really alone" in the universe,[31] as he put it, marks the final point of discovery which is followed by the upward ascent to spiritual life.

Murry vividly narrates this exploration as a spiritual conversion—what he describes as a "desolation" followed by "illumination"—after the death of Katherine Mansfield (who had moved to Gurdjieff's Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man where she died).

The Adelphi

In 1930 Max Plowman joined Murry and Sir Richard Rees in developing The Adelphi as a socialist, and later pacifist, monthly; Murry had founded it in 1923 as a literary journal (The New Adelphi, 1927–30); Rees edited it from 1930; Plowman took on the role in 1938.[32] The Adelphi was closely aligned with the Independent Labour Party;[33] Jack Common worked for it as circulation promoter and assistant editor[34] in the 1930s.

Plowman co-founded in 1934 and ran the Adelphi Centre.[35] It was an early commune, based on a farm in Langham, Essex bought by Murry.[36] Short-lived in its original conception, it ran a Summer School in August 1936 that was stellar: George Orwell spoke on "An Outsider Sees the Distressed Areas" on 4 August, with Rayner Heppenstall in the chair. Other speakers were Steve Shaw, Herbert Read, Grace Rogers, J. Hampden Jackson, N. A. Holdaway (a Marxist theorist and schoolmaster, and a Director of the Centre), Geoffrey Sainsbury, Reinhold Niebuhr, Karl Polanyi, John Strachey, Plowman and Common.[37]

By 1937 the commune had collapsed, and the house, 'The Oaks', was turned over to some 60 Basque refugee children under the auspices of the Peace Pledge Union; they remained until 1939.[38]

Lodge Farm, Thelnetham

In October 1942 Murry set up a new commune at Lodge Farm in the Suffolk village of Thelnetham. Murry purchased the farm and recruited fellow conscientious objectors to run the enterprise. The commune had mixed fortunes and it gradually reverted to a more conventional arrangement with Murry running the farm as a commercial enterprise. He wrote an account of his time at Lodge Farm in the book "Community Farm" which was published in 1953 and was illustrated by his brother, the artist Richard Murry.[39]

Political views

Marxist

Murry had a Marxist phase in the early 1930s. With his third marriage in 1931, he moved within Norfolk, from South Acre to the Old Rectory, Larling, and wrote in two weeks his The Necessity of Communism.[40] It was this identification as "mystical Marxist" that led Bert Trick (1889–1968) to introduce Dylan Thomas to Murry, in 1933. The occasion went well enough for Richard Rees to publish Thomas in the Adelphi.[41]

He supported the small Independent Socialist Party (UK), a regional breakaway from the Independent Labour Party.

Pacifist

He was an outspoken radical Christian and pacifist,[42] writing The Necessity of Pacifism (1937). He was a Sponsor of the Peace Pledge Union, and editor of its weekly newspaper, Peace News, from 1940 to 1946.

Murry's opinions during this period often provoked controversy. He angered many left-wingers (including George Orwell and Vera Brittain) by arguing Nazi Germany should be allowed retain control of mainland Europe. Murry believed even though Nazi rule was tyrannical, it was preferable to the horrors of total war.[43][44] Murry later "renounced his pacifism in 1948 and...urged a preventative war against the Soviet Union, ending his life as a Conservative voter".[45][46] Finally Murry's opposition to the Soviet Union was attacked by pro-Soviet elements in the peace movement.[43]

Murry's anti-feminism also drew criticism from feminist pacifists such as Brittain and Sybil Morrison.[47]

Christianity

During this period Murry was widely known as a Christian intellectual. He had in fact considered ordination as an Anglican priest, but gave up on it after a diagnosis in 1938 of Buerger's disease, coupled with doubts about his marriages (his third was then breaking up messily).[48]

Elitism

His views converged with those of Eliot; he supported a type of elitism foreshadowed by Samuel Taylor Coleridge's clerisy, and argued for by Matthew Arnold.[49][50] In Christianity and Culture, Eliot partially supported Murry's reasoning from The Price of Leadership (1939), though stopping short of the endorsement of Arnold.[51]

Family

Murry was married four times: to Katherine Mansfield in 1918, to Violet Le Maistre in 1924, to Elizabeth Cockbayne in 1932[52] and to Mary Gamble in 1954.[53] With his second wife, Violet Le Maistre, he had two children: a daughter, Katherine Violet Middleton Murry who became a writer and published "Beloved Quixote: The Unknown Life of John Middleton Murry" in 1986, and a son, John Middleton Murry, Jr., who became a writer under the names of Colin Murry and Richard Cowper. There were also two children of the third marriage.[54]

Depictions

In fiction

Aldous Huxley portrayed him as "Denis Burlap" in Point Counter Point (1928).[55] He was the model for Philip Surrogate in Graham Greene's 1934 novel It's a Battlefield; Greene did not know him personally.[56] David Holbrook wrote that Gudrun and Gerald in Lawrence's Women in Love were based on Mansfield and Murry.[57]

Dramatic portrayals

Murry appears as a character in Amy Rosenthal's D.H. Lawrence biodrama On The Rocks. In the 2008 Hampstead Theatre production Murry was played by Nick Caldecott with Ed Stoppard as Lawrence and Charlotte Emmerson as Mansfield.[58][59]

In Leave All Fair (1985) he is portrayed by John Gielgud as a sanctimonious exploiter of Mansfield's memory who ill-treated her during their association.

In Priest of Love (1981) he is portrayed by Mike Gwilym.

Works

Non-Fiction

Fiction

Verse

As editor

Notes

  1. Archived 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. Carswell, p. 66.
  3. Downhill All the Way (1967), p. 49.
  4. Lea, p. 213.
  5. (Joy Grant, Harold Monro & the Poetry Bookshop (1967), p.34. It was infused with defiance and optimism.[...] Poetically it leaned towards modernity, printing free verse by Katherine Mansfield [...]. (Text available online.)
  6. (Hans Ostrom, "The Blue Review," in British Literary Magazines: The Victorian and Edwardian Age, 1837-1913. Ed. Alvin Sullivan. Westport: Greenwood Press, 1984, pp. 41-43
  7. Anthony Alpers, The Life of Katherine Mansfield p151 (1980, Oxford University Press, Viking Press)
  8. Lea, p. 45.
  9. Jonathan Bate, The Oxford English Literary History (2002), p. 262.
  10. Carswell, p. 99.
  11. David Goldie, A Critical Difference: T.S. Eliot and John Middleton Murry in English Literary Criticism, 1919-1928 (1998), p. 34.
  12. Nicola Beauman, Morgan: A biography of E. M. Forster (1993), pp. 307-8.
  13. E. M. Forster, Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson (1932), Harvest edition p. 176.
  14. Edward Hyams, The New Statesman (1963), p. 119.
  15. Archived 8 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine.
  16. Peter Davison (editor), George Orwell: A Kind of Compulsion 1903-1936 (1998), p. 181.
  17. David Goldie, A Critical Difference: T.S. Eliot and John Middleton Murry in English Literary Criticism, 1919-1928 (1998), pp. 2-3.
  18. Albert Gelpi, A Coherent Splendor: The American Poetic Renaissance, 1910-1950 (1987), pp. 116-7.
  19. Mary Ann Gillies, Henri Bergson and British Modernism (1996), p. 60.
  20. Alan Young (editor), Edgell Rickword: Essays and Opinions 1921-31 (1974), pp. 1-2.
  21. Nicholas Murray, Aldous Huxley: An English Intellectual (2002), p. 111.
  22. Steven G. Marks, How Russia Shaped the Modern World . Princeton University Press, 2003 (pp. 73–5)
  23. Robert H. Ross, The Georgian Revolt (1967) pp. 202-3.
  24. Jean Moorcroft Wilson, Siegfried Sassoon 1886-1918, p. 373 and 496.
  25. Lea, p. 67.
  26. Archived 22 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  27. God, p. 47)
  28. God, p. 49
  29. God, p. 26
  30. "Magazine Data File". Philsp.com. Retrieved 2015-10-29.
  31. "Peter Sedgwick: George Orwell - International Socialist? (1969)". Marxists.org. Retrieved 2015-10-29.
  32. "Prose & Poetry - Max Plowman". First World War.com. 2009-08-22. Retrieved 2015-10-29.
  33. Dennis Hardy, Utopian England: Community Experiments, 1900-1945 (2002), p. 42.
  34. Peter Davison (editor), George Orwell: A Kind of Compulsion 1903-1936 (1998), p. 493.
  35. Archived 22 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  36. Community Farm published by The Country Book Club in 1953
  37. Lea p. 184, 193.
  38. Andrew Lycett, Dylan Thomas (2003), p. 89.
  39. "Quotation by John Middleton Murry". London: Dictionary.com. 1944.
  40. 1 2 Richard A. Rempel, "The Dilemmas of British Pacifists During World War II", The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 50, No. 4, On Demand Supplement (Dec., 1978), pp. D1213-D1229.
  41. Lea, pp. 310-12.
  42. Quoted in David Goodway,Anarchist Seeds Beneath the Snow (2006), Liverpool University Press, 2006. ,ISBN 1846310261, p. 208.
  43. According to Alan Warwick Palmer and Veronica Palmer, Murry's 1948 book The Free Society "...virtually called for a preventive war against the Soviet Union". Alan Warwick Palmer, Veronica Palmer, Who's who in Bloomsbury, Harvester Press, 1987, ISBN 0710803125, (p.122).
  44. Ruth Roach Pierson, Women and Peace: Theoretical, Historical, and Practical Perspectives,(1987) p.212.
  45. Lea, p. 256.
  46. José Harris, Civil Society in British History: Ideas, Identities, Institutions (2003), p. 233.
  47. Roger Kojecky, T. S. Eliot's Social Criticism (1971), p. 166.
  48. T. S. Eliot, Christianity and Culture, p. 62.
  49. Archived 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  50. "John Middleton Murry". Nndb.com. Retrieved 2015-10-29.
  51. Archived 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  52. Donald Watt, Aldous Huxley, the Critical Heritage (1975), p. 50.
  53. Norman Sherry, The Life of Graham Greene volume I (1989), p. 466.
  54. David Holbrook, Where D.H. Lawrence was Wrong about Woman (1992), p. 221.
  55. Billington, Michael (2008-07-02), On the Rocks Review, The Guardian, retrieved 2009-03-02
  56. Bassett, Kate (2008-07-06), On the Rocks, Hampstead Theatre, London, The Independent, retrieved 2009-03-02

References

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