These For Remembrance: John Buchan and The Great War

Poppies

John Buchan writes in his autobiography, Memory-Hold-The-Door, ‘The outbreak of War in 1914 found me a sick man’. At thirty-nine, he was too old to enlist and in any case, as he ruefully observes, ‘no recruiting officer would have me’.

Although he did not see active service, he did serve in various capacities during the First World War and became its chronicler. The first part of what became Nelson’s History of the War (which Buchan wrote virtually single-handed) was published in February 1915. Shortly afterwards, in May 1915, The Times invited him to visit the Western Front as its special correspondent for the second Battle of Ypres.

John BuchanIn October 1915, he was back in France, this time for the War Office and with the rank of lieutenant in the Intelligence Corps. In February 1916, he was asked by the Foreign Office to take a Russian delegation to Scapa Flow.  He made further visits to France throughout 1916 where he assisted the British Army’s General Head Quarters with drafting official communiqués for the press.

Buchan was appointed Director of Information under Lord Beaverbrook in  June 1917.  The department he was part of was responsible for innovations such as the use of documentary film and the commissioning of paintings by official war artists.  In January 1918, Buchan became Director of Intelligence in the newly formed Ministry of Information.

Buchan lost a brother and several close friends in the First World War. ‘My youngest brother and my partner in business fell at Arras. Hugh Dawney, whom I put first among the young soldiers, died at First Ypres; Cecil Rawling, with whom, before the War, I had made plans for an attempt on Everest, fell as a brigadier at Passchendaele; my wife’s cousin, Jack Stuart-Wortley, disappeared in the German advance of March 1918; Oxford contemporaries like Raymond Asquith and Bron Lucas, and younger friends like Charles Lister and the Grenfell twins, were all dead.’

Buchan’s writing about The Great War.

Nonfiction

These For Remembrance (1987) [privately printed 1919] – Memoirs of six of Buchan’s friends killed in the First World War

A History of the First World War (1991) – Abridged edition of Nelson’s History of the War illustrated with paintings by war artists.

 

Fiction

Greenmantle [1916] – Set in November 1915, Richard Hannay is tasked with investigating rumours of an uprising in the Muslim world.  He undertakes a perilous journey through enemy territory to Constantinople and, along with his friend Sandy Arbuthnot, sets out to thwart the Germans’ plans to use religion to help them win the war.

Mr. Standfast [1919] – Set partly in World War One France, Hannay comes up against an old foe with the book’s climatic ending taking place on the battlefields of the Western Front.

 


Sources:

John Buchan, Memory-Hold-The-Door (Hodder & Stoughton, 1964 [1940])

Janet Adam Smith, John Buchan: A Biography (OUP, 1985 [1965])

Buchan of the Month/Book Review: Witch Wood by John Buchan

Buchan of the Month

WitchWoodAbout the Book

Set against the religious struggles and civil wars of seventeenth century Scotland, John Buchan’s Witch Wood is a gripping atmospheric tale in the spirit of Robert Louis Stevenson.  As a moderate Presbyterian minister, young David Sempill disputes with the extremists of his faith, as all around, the defeated remnants of Montrose’s men are being harried and slaughtered.

There are still older conflicts to be faced however, symbolised by the presence of the Melanudrigall Wood, a last remnant of the ancient Caledonian forest. Here there is black magic to be uncovered, but also the more positive pre-Christian intimations of nature worship.  In such setting, and faced with the onset of the plague, David Sempill’s struggle and eventual disappearance take on a strange and timeless aspect.

Format: Hardcover Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
Published: July 1941 [1927]  Genre: Historical Fiction

Purchase Links*
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Find Witch Wood  on Goodreads


My Review

Witch Wood is the tenth book in my Buchan of the Month reading project.  (I did read it in October – honestly! – but have only now got round to writing my review.) You can find out more about the project plus my reading list for 2018 here.  You can also read a spoiler-free introduction to the book here.   Witch Wood is also one of the books on my Classics Club list.

Witch Wood was reputedly John Buchan‘s own favourite of his many novels and is dedicated to his brother, Walter Buchan.  Shortly before writing the novel, Buchan had been carrying out research for his biography of Montrose, who does make a brief appearance in Witch Wood.  The backdrop to the events in the book is the religious and civil strife in Scotland between 1644 and 1646 when Scottish Royalists under Montrose fought the Covenanters who were allied with the English Parliament.

The central story of David Sempill and his fight against the superstitious practices that he finds still hold sway among some of the inhabitants of Woodilee is the most engaging and accessible element of the book.  In his honest attempts to root out evil and save the souls of his parishioners, David encounters opposition from religious extremists who seem to set more store by the Old Testament than the teachings of the New Testament.  Their response is to search out evidence of witchcraft and demonic possession, showing no mercy.  David’s calling is of a different nature: ‘The work for which he longed was to save and comfort human souls.’

I’ll admit to getting a little bogged down in the debates about religious doctrine and the role of Church and State in Scotland in this period of history.  Despite reading the relevant sections from Buchan’s scholarly The Kirk in Scotland, I’m still not sure I really understand the distinction between episcopacy and prelacy (if indeed there is one).  Another factor which may prove problematic for some readers is that Buchan presents much of the dialogue, especially of characters like David’s housekeeper, Isobel Veitch, in broad Scots, rendering it rather impenetrable at times.

Throughout the novel there is a great sense of the brooding presence of the ancient forest which abuts Woodilee.  Even David is not immune to it. ‘It must be an eerie life under the shadow of that ancient formless thing.’  An ideal spot for devilish practices, as it turns out. ‘The Black Wood could tell some tales if the trees could talk.’  Conversely, the forest becomes the scene of a much more life-changing and life-affirming encounter for David.

Witch Wood combines history and romance in the manner of Robert Louis Stevenson’s  Catriona or Sir Walter Scott’s Ivanhoe, with plenty of references to actual events and figures of the time as well as a touching and engaging love story.   And it wouldn’t be a Buchan novel if it didn’t  feature the themes of courage and self-sacrifice.

MemoryHoldTheDoorNext month’s Buchan of the Month is Memory-Hold-the-Door, Buchan’s autobiography

Look out for my introduction to the book in the next few days and my review towards the end of the month.

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In three words: Adventure, romance, superstition

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John BuchanAbout the Author

John Buchan (1875 – 1940) was an author, poet, lawyer, publisher, journalist, war correspondent, Member of Parliament, University Chancellor, keen angler and family man.  He was ennobled and, as Lord Tweedsmuir, became Governor-General of Canada.  In this role, he signed Canada’s entry into the Second World War.   Nowadays he is probably best known – maybe only known – as the author of The Thirty-Nine Steps.  However, in his lifetime he published over 100 books: fiction, poetry, short stories, biographies, memoirs and history.

You can find out more about John Buchan, his life and literary output by visiting The John Buchan Society website.