- Main
Page
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- Bibliography
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- Ringstones
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- The Sound of His
Horn
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- The Doll
Maker
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- The Sacrifice and Other
Stories
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- References to
Sarban
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- Biography
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- 1910-1922:
Youth
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- 1922-1947: Education and
Employment
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- 1947-1989:
"Sarban"
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- 1966-1989:
Retirement
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- Overview
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- 1910-1922:
Youth
- Sarban was the pen-name
of John William Wall, who was born on the 6th November
1910 at 30 Lorna Road, Mexborough, near Rotherham in
South Yorkshire. His father was George William Wall, a
passenger guard on the Great Central Railway, and his
mother was Maria Ellen (née Moffatt). John was the
youngest of five surviving children, the others being
Doris Catherine, Ann, Alfred and Jane Adelaide.
Mexborough was then a small town, and Wall was able in
his early and teenage years to get out on foot into the
surrounding farmland, waste marshland and woods.
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- However, his love for
the countryside, birds and animals struck its earliest
roots during visits to Moorlands Farm at Beltoft, near
Bolton, his father’s boyhood home. He and his brother
Alfred, four years his senior, visited their farming
relations together. It is not unusual that among lovers
of animals and the countryside there is also a passion
for hunting, and at various times in his life Wall owned
an extensive armoury of more or less legal guns,
augmented by very powerful home-made crossbows. It is
therefore all the more astonishing that The Sound of His
Horn, whilst
informed by this background, can be read as an extremely
effective anti-hunting novel. The very first line of the
book, “It’s the terror that’s unspeakable”, refers to
that experienced by the hunted. The story may seek to
give the reader an intentional thrill in its descriptions
of humans being hunted for pleasure, and, some may feel,
delights in the details, but the implication is that
hunting for sport is morally repugnant. If there was
anything at all subversive about Wall’s avowed attitude
in favour of hunting, it was that he had more time for
the poacher than the gamekeeper, (indeed, his favourite
song was “The Lincolnshire Poacher”.) The theme is
further explored in an unpublished, unfinished novel
written in the 1970s, in which he has his protagonist
recalling that as a child he sabotaged his father’s
snares. It is perhaps only in his writing, published
under a pseudonym or unpublished, that Wall expresses
sympathies which would have surprised those who knew
him.
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- John Wall drawn
by Voysey, Cambridge, 1932
- 1922-1947: Education and
Employment
- Although John Wall’s
roots were decidedly amongst the respectable working
class, he was a clever boy and began to work his way
upwards. From the local Elementary School he gained, in
September 1922, a scholarship to Mexborough School. From
there, in October 1930, he won a scholarship to Jesus
College, Cambridge to read English. He obtained the
cheapest rooms that he could find, on a staircase in the
oldest part of the buildings. (The set opposite was the
Ghost Room, reputedly haunted by a member of the
Everlasting Club—see Arthur Gray’s Tedious Brief Tales of Granta and
Gramarye.
Although obviously a gifted youth, his origins would not
have been an advantage at that time. In a biographical
chronology written for his daughter towards the end of
his life, Wall notes that “As a job I had already got the
idea that I might get into the Colonial Service. I
already had an ambition to go to the Middle East
(influenced by Flecker’s poetry, I think.) And reading
George Borrow had awakened a desire to master a difficult
Oriental language.”
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- He decided to take the
First Part of the Modern Languages Tripos as his Third
Year Course, and the Consular Service Exam immediately
after taking his finals. (He gained first class honours.)
This latter was influenced to some extent by the fact
that Flecker (The
Golden Journey to Samarkand) had been in the Levant Consular Service.
In his spare time Wall was also studying Arabic. Money
was tight, and when in September 1933 he heard that he
had a place in the Consular Service, he had just £1
remaining to his name. He was soon appointed to the
Levant, and the outfit allowance of £130 was a great
relief.
- His first Diplomatic
Service post was as Probationer Vice-Consul at Beirut. In
succeeding years he was stationed at Jedda, Tabriz,
Isfahan and Casablanca. He was then Counsellor at the
British Middle East Office in Cairo until 1952. His
daughter does not believe that Wall ever achieved the
position that he thought was his due, although his career
was steady and obviously well-regarded. Once again he
would have been conscious that his background was not
that of most Foreign Office officials.
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- Sarban in
Cairo, 1953
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- 1947-1989:
"Sarban"
- In the last couple of
months of 1947 he wrote two short stories, “Ringstones”
and “A Christmas Story”, and early in 1948 he showed the
typescripts to Eleanor Alexander (née Riesle), who
was later to become his wife. They had first met in 1946,
and married on January 20th 1950. She suggested an
alteration to the ending of “Ringstones”, which he duly
made, and she also said she knew a publisher who might be
interested in his work. According to his chronology,
Eleanor later admitted that: “What she did was to look up
the names and addresses of a few publishers and—on just
what grounds, I’ve forgotten—picked out Peter Davies...
It was solely due to Eleanor’s enterprise that the
stories eventually got published.”
- Wall’s lack of
self-confidence meant that Eleanor was the dominant force
in their marriage. Their daughter, Jocelyn, recalls her
father as sociable enough in a small circle of friends,
but reliant on his outgoing wife to play hostess at
larger social functions. Although Wall’s name is written
on the fly-leaf of the books he owned, it is inscribed in
his wife’s handwriting. It was not a happy marriage. An
unfinished novel presents us with a hero whom it is
tempting to identify with the author. It’s central
character is divorced from a wife who had loved him (the
Wall’s arranged a legal separation in 1971), and for whom
he had felt tenderness, but whom he should never have
married as he was not able to meet her expectations of
his career or social life.
- From February to June
1948 Wall wrote the three other short stories published
with “Ringstones”. Peter Davies liked these, but said
that as short stories didn’t sell well he should attempt
a novel. This was The Discovery of Heretics, completed, but rejected twice by
Davies. On turning down the novel for the first time, in
February 1950, Peter Davies agreed to publish the short
stories. The only element salvaged from the novel was the
heroine’s name, Jocelyn, which Wall gave to his only
daughter.
- In Cairo in the summer
of 1950 he wrote The Sound of His Horn and “The Doll Maker”, before
returning to England in November 1950. The family spent
January of 1951 in and around Dorset. It was while
staying at the Swan Hotel in Wootton-under-Edge that he
wrote “A House of Call”. In February 1951 Ringstones was published, and the Walls
returned to Egypt in March. The reviews were generally
very approving. The Sound of his Horn was published in 1952. Wall
himself said that the book received about a dozen mixed
notices in the press and that sales were poor. However,
the reviews seem to have been very positive, with most
noting that he had successfully carried off an original
idea which would have failed in the hands of a less
gifted writer.
- The September 1953
publication of The
Doll Maker was
less well received and reviews were this time more mixed.
Wall claimed that after 1951 he had no time for writing,
and that when he did find the time, he had lost interest.
This is now known not to have been true. Wall wrote a
long novel entitled The Gynarchs in 1965, partly revised the following year.
Another story was begun in March 1972, although left
unfinished. A further typescript exists, probably dating
from the 1940s or 50s, of an un-named novel on which he
collaborated via the Diplomatic bag with Ted Wiltshire,
an old friend.
- Wall rewrote his
manuscripts several times to make sure that they were
flawless, and he was obviously something of a pedant. He
kept a file entitled “Their English”, in which he noted
down mistakes made by newspapers, radio and television
presenters. For example, someone had said “Harps back to”
rather than “Harks back to”, and this is carefully noted
and the error explained. Language was very important to
Wall, and he was fluent in many tongues, including
various Arabic dialects. Another unpublished novel exists
written in a code of his own devizing, which is partly a
form of shorthand and partly Arabic. Entitled
Sysgol, it’s contents have yet to be rendered
readable.
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- 1966-1989:
Retirement
- Wall retired from the
position of Consular General in Egypt in 1966, but
continued to work for the Foreign Office, at first in a
teaching position in London. In 1970 he took a position
in Cheltenham and stayed there for six and a half years,
at the end of which time he retired to Monmouthshire.
John Wall died in 1989, aged 79. His ashes were scattered
under a tree in the Fellows’ Garden at Jesus College,
Cambridge.
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- Overview:
- The new manuscripts and
biographical information give us a fuller picture of John
Wall. He was a man who achieved a great deal, but who
seems to have never shaken off a feeling of inadequacy.
He did well in the Foreign Office, but not as well as he
believed he should have done. He was uncomfortable at the
endless round of cocktail parties that was the lot of the
diplomat abroad. Added to this was his unsuccessful
marriage. Wall appears to have taken refuge in his
writing, but this was itself not an unqualified
success.
- However, Wall needed to
write, and appears to have finished at least one long,
detailed novel, and made various other attempts. His
daughter Jocelyn has suggested that he had something of a
Jekyll and Hyde personality, and there does seem to be an
outer and inner man; John William Wall and “Sarban”. The
former was known by friends, family and colleagues as a
conventional diplomat who had risen from humble
beginnings. The latter is a man who can only be guessed
at by the readers of his stories.
- Sarban’s sympathy
appears to be with the “under-races” of The Sound of His
Horn, and
primarily with the gifted cripple in The King of the
Lake. Perhaps he
too felt that he was an outsider. However, the writer’s
attitude towards women has been construed as misogynist,
but a balanced reading causes one to doubt this
generalisation. There is much humanity in Sarban’s
writing, and if Wall was unhappy and frustrated in his
personal life, Sarban was not bitter. The portraits of
Clare Lydgate in “The Doll Maker” and Daphne Hazel in
“Ringstones” are fully rounded and entirely sympathetic,
a world away from the trussed-up “birds” of
The Sound of His
Horn and the
harnessed women of The King of the Lake. It is true, however, that
amongst the characteristic, sadistic eroticism of the
latter story, we are not quite sure at the denouement
whether our sympathy is being directed to the crippled
dwarf or the two unwitting heroines now within his power.
There is here more than a suggestion that there is
something noble in the dependent relationship between
captor and captive, hunter and hunted. All this serves to
illustrate the difficulty in identifying a simple,
coherent subtext within these astonishingly brave and
magical fables. But it is hoped that it will now be
possible to read Sarban’s still too small body of work
with a little more understanding of the author.
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Page updated 3rd February 2006
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