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Denton Welch

Maurice Denton Welch (29 March 1915 – 30 December 1948)[1] was a British writer and painter, admired for his vivid prose and precise descriptions.

Denton Welch
Self-Portrait (c.1940–42; National Portrait Gallery, London)
Born
Maurice Denton Welch

29 March 1915
Died30 December 1948(1948-12-30) (aged 33)
Middle Orchard, Crouch, near Sevenoaks, Kent, England
NationalityEnglish
Occupation(s)Writer, painter
PartnerEric Oliver (6 October 1914 – 1 April 1995)

Life

Welch was born in Shanghai, China, to Arthur Joseph Welch, a wealthy British rubber merchant,[1] and his American wife of Christian Science faith,[2] Rosalind Bassett[1] from New Bedford, Massachusetts.[3] The youngest of four sons, Welch, was sent to a boarding school at the age of 11,[4] after his mother died from wasting kidney disease.[2]

After a brief time at prep school in London, Welch was sent to Repton, where he was a contemporary of the writer Roald Dahl and actor Geoffrey Lumsden.[5] By his and others' accounts, his time there was miserable, and he ran away prior to his last term. After leaving Repton, he studied art at Goldsmiths' in London with the intention of becoming a painter.[6]

Welch spent part of his pre-school childhood in China, and returned for a longer spell after he left Repton. He recorded this episode in his fictionalised autobiography, Maiden Voyage (1943). With the help and patronage of Edith Sitwell and John Lehmann this became a small but lasting success and made for him a distinct and individual reputation.[4] It was followed by the novel In Youth is Pleasure (1944), a study of adolescence published in a limited edition by Herbert Read at the publishers Faber and Faber and then more widely by Routledge. Read said he was happy to publish the book, and enjoyed it himself, but he warned Welch that many people would find its hero perverse and unpleasant.[7] A collection of short stories, entitled Brave and Cruel followed (1948).[8] The bulk of Welch's output was to see posthumous publication: an unfinished autobiographical novel A Voice Through a Cloud in 1950;[9] a further short story collection, A Last Sheaf, in 1951; The Denton Welch Journals in 1952; an unfinished travelogue, I Left My Grandfather's House in 1958; and a poetry collection, Dumb Instrument, in 1976.

Accident and literary work

At the age of 20,[1] Welch was hit by a car while cycling in Surrey and suffered a fractured spine. He was temporarily paralysed, and suffered severe pain and bladder complications, including pyelonephritis,[2] and spinal tuberculosis that ultimately led to his early death.[10]

After the accident, Welch spent time at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery and then was relocated to Southcourt Nursing Home in Broadstairs, Kent. In July 1936, Welch rented an apartment with his friend and housekeeper Evelyn Sinclair in Tonbridge so that he could be close to his doctor, John Easton. Sinclair travelled with him to various residences until May 1946, when he settled in one of the Noël and Bernard Adeney residences in Middle Orchard, Borough Green with his partner, Eric Oliver. Two years later, Sinclair moved in as well, and remained with him until his death on 30 December 1948.[3]

Despite his injuries, he continued to paint, and perhaps because of them,[1] he started to write. In 1940, he began to write poems, the first one appearing in print in 1941. In August 1942, he wrote an essay on the painter Walter Sickert which, published originally in Horizon, brought him to the notice of Edith Sitwell, in no small part down to his own cultivation of her attentions.[3] Scores of short stories followed, around a dozen being published in various magazines. Many more were left unfinished at the time of his death.

Welch's literary work, intense and introverted, has been described as Proustian[11] in its attention to the minutiae of life, in particular that of the English countryside during World War II. A close attention to aesthetics, be it in human behaviour, physical appearance, clothing, art, architecture, jewellery, or antiques, is also a recurring concern in his writings.

The extent to which Welch's work is autobiography or fiction has been much discussed, apart from his frequent use of the first person (and in some cases is identified in the narrative as "Denton"). Fictional content aside, the point of origin of virtually all of his stories is biographical: they are often set in places he knew or had visited, and feature thinly-disguised, often deeply unflattering, depictions of friends, family and acquaintances (to the extent that over thirty years after Welch's death, his art school friend, the artist Gerald Leet, refused to contribute to Michael De-la-Noy's biography, where he is identified only as 'Gerald' in the index.[12][13]). Welch chose to depict himself a few times in fictionalised form, most notably as "Orvil Pym" in In Youth is Pleasure, and as "Mary" in "The Fire in the Wood". "Robert" was also one of his favourite personas. The philosopher Maurice Cranston, who had known him since his teens (and who featured in at least one story) observed that Welch was as unforgiving in depictions of himself as he was of others.[14]

Art

 
The Coffin House by Denton Welch (1946, Private Collection)

From an early age Welch's aptitude for art was evident, and in his journals he recalls his first still life (holly and beech leaves), completed when he was nine.[15] However his enrolment at Goldsmith's came initially out of his family's desire that he do something with his life after his return from China, any sort of activity associated with business evidently being ruled out of the question. It was through a fellow student that Welch sold his first artwork: a view of Hadlow Castle to Shell for a series of lorry posters featuring landmarks.[16] It is now on display at the National Motor Museum at Beaulieu, Hampshire. He later failed to sell a painting of Lord Berners to its subject, but the experience generated a short story.[17]

Common themes in his art include objets d'art, cats, still lifes (often incongrously juxtaposed) and assorted gothic motifs, often in a fantastical landscape, although not in one of his most famous works, The Coffin House (1946) depicting a locally-renowned dwelling, north of Hadlow, Kent. Welch exhibited his artwork at the Leicester Galleries. Other exhibitions followed, in The Redfern Gallery and the Leger Gallery.

In May 1945, Welch restored an 18th-century Georgian doll's house from 1783, which was given to him by his friend, Mildred Bosanquet. The doll's house is on display at the V&A Museum of Childhood, department of the Victoria and Albert Museum.[18]

Opinions on Welch's artworks have varied widely: amongst his biographers, Michael De-la-Noy and James Methuen-Campbell consider him to be underrated; in Robert Phillips' view his paintings are "lightweight" and his drawings "fussy and shallow".[19] For Jocelyn Brooke, had he been a painter merely, and not also a writer, "it is doubtful... whether he would be remembered at all."[20]

In a perceptive review of the reproductions in A Last Sheaf, the un-named Times art critic remarked on the "whimsically sinister" qualities of Welch's depictions. The writer noted that Welch's specific skill — that of the detached but perceptive observer — which is so evident in his writings, is lost in his art, where he inadvertently (and falsely) appears to present "himself [as] clever to like what most people would think preposterous."[21] A painting such as Now I have only my dog,

... is easy to remember and evidently the work of a man of unusual and definite character, but for all that it is painfully smart, and leaves precisely the impression of frivolity that the writings always manage to avoid.[21]

Following the reissue of the Journals, writer Alan Hollinghurst found in Welch's self-portraiture (of which there are several examples; one is in the National Portrait Gallery) a tendency to "amplify the over-riding concern of his writing to fix his youth forever while he accelerates towards death."[22]

Legacy

The playwright and diarist Alan Bennett stated that he shared many similar preoccupations when he first encountered Welch's work.[23]

William S. Burroughs cited Welch as the writer who most influenced his own work[24] and dedicated his 1983 novel The Place of Dead Roads to him.[25] In 1951 the English composer Howard Ferguson set five of Welch's poems (included in A Last Sheaf) as a song-cycle for voice and piano, entitled Discovery.[26] Others who have named Welch as an influence have included the film-maker John Waters,[27] the artist Barbara Hanrahan,[28] and the writers Beryl Bainbridge[29] and Barbara Pym.[30]

Welch appears as "Merton Hughes" in the 1956 novel No Coward Soul, written by his friend, the painter Noël Adeney,[31] and as "Kim Carsons" in William S. Burroughs' The Place of Dead Roads.[32]

Many commentators who wrote about Denton Welch after his death had their views clouded by largely non-aesthetic concerns: by their perception of his sexuality,[33] or of his treatment of them personally in his writing, or of the "hateful winsomeness"[34] of his personality. The appropriateness of Welch's alleged solipsism, at a time when the world was in turmoil, appears as a factor[35] in some reviews; the poet Randall Swingler went so far as to remark on the comparatively commonplace fact of Welch's early death, being, as it was, only one of many at the time.[36] However, Welch's friends observed that close focus on his sexuality was to miss the point of his writing. Fellow student at Goldsmith's, Helen Roeder, called him 'Ariel',[37] and Maurice Cranston highlighted the complexity of Welch's character, at least in part influenced by his health. Simply labelling him

...'a homosexual' is to use a bright, pat word which will make foolish people think they have learned the secret of something they have not begun to understand.[38]

Cranston also offered what might be considered a more balanced assessment[39] of Welch's shortcomings and gifts:

He had no trust. This in turn connects with his greatest limitation as an artist. He built too many barricades and enclosed the range of his understanding. If he could have seen the wider human comedy with his miraculously penetrating eye, and described the world as he described his own, he would surely have been among the greater writers in our language. As it is he will survive as a minor genius, one of very few from an uncreative age.[14]

Works

  • Maiden Voyage (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1943), ISBN 0-241-02376-9. (Exact Change, 1999), ISBN 1-878972-28-6.
  • In Youth is Pleasure (London: Routledge, 1945), (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1985), ISBN 0-525-48161-3.
  • Brave and Cruel and Other Stories (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1948). Comprising:
    • "The Coffin on the Hill"
    • "The Barn"
    • "Narcissus Bay"
    • "At Sea"
    • "When I Was Thirteen"
    • "The Judas Tree"
    • "The Trout Stream"
    • "Leaves from a Young Person's Notebook"
    • "Brave and Cruel"
    • "The Fire in the Wood"
  • A Voice Through a Cloud (London: J. Lehmann, 1950). (London: Enitharmon Press, 2004), ISBN 1-904634-06-0.
  • A Last Sheaf, edited by Eric Oliver (London: John Lehmann, 1951). Comprising:
    • "Sickert at St. Peter's"
    • "The Earth's Crust"
    • "Memories of a Vanished Period"
    • "A Fragment of a Life Story"
    • "A Party"
    • "Evergreen Seaton-Leverett"
    • "A Picture in the Snow"
    • "Ghosts"
    • "The Hateful Word"
    • "The Diamond Badge"
    • Poems
  • The Denton Welch Journals, edited by Jocelyn Brooke (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1952, revised 1973). As The Journals of Denton Welch, edited by Michael De-la-Noy (London: Allison & Busby, 1984).
  • Dumb Instrument (London: Enitharmon Press, 1976).
  • I Left My Grandfather's House (Allison & Busby, 1984; London: Enitharmon Press, 2006), ISBN 1-904634-28-1.
  • Fragments Of A Life Story: The Collected Short Writings Of Denton Welch, edited by Michael De-la-Noy (London: Penguin Books, 1987), ISBN 978-0140076202.
    • Collects Brave and Cruel, A Last Sheaf and previously unpublished shorter works.
  • A Lunch Appointment (Elysium Press, 1993)
  • When I was an Art Student (Elysium Press, 1998)
  • Where Nothing Sleeps: The Complete Short Stories and Other Related Works, edited by James Methuen-Campbell (North Yorkshire: Tartarus Press, 2005), ISBN 978-1-872621-94-4.
    • Includes all the material from the above plus some further unpublished pieces and selected extracts from the journals.

Further reading

References

  1. ^ a b c d e De-la-Noy, Michael. "Welch, (Maurice) Denton". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/38116. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ a b c Crain, Caleb (20 June 1999). "It's Pretty, but Is It Broken?". The New York Times.
  3. ^ a b c "Denton Welch: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Center". Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  4. ^ a b Irvine, Ian (27 November 2005). "Denton Welch: Dreams of cheap lipstick and Turkish Delight". The Independent. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  5. ^ David Atkins, Welch's contemporary at Repton (albeit in a different house) suggested in The Author Magazine (of Spring 1992) that Welch was bullied by Dahl, but there is no reference to this in Maiden Voyage. Nor is it in Dahl's own account of his Repton years, Boy. Dahl did mention Welch ("a fine writer") in his first draft, specifically his running away from Repton, but not in the published book (see Sturrock (2010) Storyteller: The Life of Roald Dahl, London: HarperPress).
  6. ^ Lewis, John (1994). Such Things Happen: the life of a typographer. Stowmarket, Suffolk: Unicorn Press. p. 34. ISBN 0-906290-06-6.
  7. ^ James King, Herbert Read: The Last Modern (London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1990) p. 220.
  8. ^ Nawrocki, Jim. "You've Never Heard of Denton Welch?". The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide. p. 32.
  9. ^ Phillips, Robert (1971). ""A Voice Through a Cloud": Denton Welch's Ultimate Voyage". The Centennial Review. Michigan State University Press. 15 (2): 218–228. JSTOR 23737757.
  10. ^ Skenazy, Paul (6 April 1986). "The Sense and Sensuality of Denton Welch". The Washington Post.
  11. ^ "The Journals of Denton Welch Critical Context - Essay - eNotes.com".
  12. ^ De-la-Noy, Michael (25 June 1998), Obituary: Gerald Leet, "The Independent"
  13. ^ James Methuen-Campbell stated that before his death in 1998, Gerald Leet (who sometimes used his middle name —Mackenzie—as a surname) was more co-operative for his own biography of Welch, published in 2002.
  14. ^ a b Cranston, Maurice (1951) "Denton Welch" in The Spectator, 1 June 1951, reprinted in Spectator Harvest (1952), ed. Wilson Harris, London: Hamish Hamilton, p.74
  15. ^ Methuen-Campbell, James (2002) Denton Welch: Writer and Artist, Carlton-in-Coverdale: Tartarus Press, ISBN 1872621600, p. 24
  16. ^ Methuen-Campbell (2002) p. 83
  17. ^ Entitled "A Morning with the Versatile Peer, Lord Berners, in the ‘Ancient Seat of Learning’", it first appeared in Time and Tide magazine, 5 July 1952
  18. ^ "The Denton Welch dolls' house". V&A Museum of Childhood. Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  19. ^ Phillips, Robert (1974) Denton Welch, New York: Twayne, p. 28
  20. ^ Brooke, Jocelyn (1964) "The Dual Role: A Study of Denton Welch as Painter and Writer", The Texas Quarterly, Autumn 1964, University of Texas at Austin, p. 120
  21. ^ a b "A Born Writer's Pictures", The Times, Thursday 10 September 1953
  22. ^ Hollinghurst, Alan (1984) "Diminished Pictures", Times Literary Supplement, 21 December 1984, p. 1479
  23. ^ Bennett, Alan (7 February 2004) "Austerity in Colour", The Guardian
  24. ^ Burroughs, W. S. (2002), The Cat Inside, Penguin Books, p. 67.
  25. ^ Burroughs, William S. (1984). The Place of Dead Roads. Calder. p. 306. ISBN 0714540307.
  26. ^ "Howard Ferguson - Discovery".
  27. ^ "John Waters's role models: part two". Vice. 23 November 2010. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  28. ^ Stewart, Annabelle (2010) Barbara Hanrahan: A Biography, Adelaide: Wakefield Press, ISBN 9781862548244, p. 92
  29. ^ "Beryl Bainbridge: 1932 – 2010". 5 July 2010.
  30. ^ Tsagaris, Ellen M. (1998) The Subversion of Romance in the Novels of Barbara Pym, Bowling Green: Bowling Green State University Popular Press, ISBN 9780879727642, p. 5
  31. ^ De-la-Noy, Michael (4 April 1995), "Obituary: Eric Oliver", The Independent.
  32. ^ In his introduction to the 1985 edition of In Youth is Pleasure, Burroughs says "My Kim Carson [sic]... is Denton Welch."
  33. ^ Phillips (1974) p. 147
  34. ^ Bailey, Paul (1984) "Sensitive Plant", The Observer, 25 November
  35. ^ O'Brien, Kate (1945) The Spectator Book Review, 2 March, p. 206
  36. ^ Swingler, Randall (1963) "Smooth Diamond", in The Times Literary Supplement, No. 3197, 7 June
  37. ^ Or rather more completely, "Ariel in the Tree Trunk", the title of Roeder's introduction to the first edition of I Left My Grandfather's House, published in 1958.
  38. ^ Cranston, Maurice (1963) "The Courage of Naiveté" in The Listener, May 30
  39. ^ Methuen-Campbell (2002) p. 85

External links

  • Denton Welch Website

denton, welch, maurice, march, 1915, december, 1948, british, writer, painter, admired, vivid, prose, precise, descriptions, self, portrait, 1940, national, portrait, gallery, london, bornmaurice, march, 1915shanghai, republic, chinadied30, december, 1948, 194. Maurice Denton Welch 29 March 1915 30 December 1948 1 was a British writer and painter admired for his vivid prose and precise descriptions Denton WelchSelf Portrait c 1940 42 National Portrait Gallery London BornMaurice Denton Welch29 March 1915Shanghai Republic of ChinaDied30 December 1948 1948 12 30 aged 33 Middle Orchard Crouch near Sevenoaks Kent EnglandNationalityEnglishOccupation s Writer painterPartnerEric Oliver 6 October 1914 1 April 1995 Contents 1 Life 2 Accident and literary work 3 Art 4 Legacy 5 Works 6 Further reading 7 References 8 External linksLife EditWelch was born in Shanghai China to Arthur Joseph Welch a wealthy British rubber merchant 1 and his American wife of Christian Science faith 2 Rosalind Bassett 1 from New Bedford Massachusetts 3 The youngest of four sons Welch was sent to a boarding school at the age of 11 4 after his mother died from wasting kidney disease 2 After a brief time at prep school in London Welch was sent to Repton where he was a contemporary of the writer Roald Dahl and actor Geoffrey Lumsden 5 By his and others accounts his time there was miserable and he ran away prior to his last term After leaving Repton he studied art at Goldsmiths in London with the intention of becoming a painter 6 Welch spent part of his pre school childhood in China and returned for a longer spell after he left Repton He recorded this episode in his fictionalised autobiography Maiden Voyage 1943 With the help and patronage of Edith Sitwell and John Lehmann this became a small but lasting success and made for him a distinct and individual reputation 4 It was followed by the novel In Youth is Pleasure 1944 a study of adolescence published in a limited edition by Herbert Read at the publishers Faber and Faber and then more widely by Routledge Read said he was happy to publish the book and enjoyed it himself but he warned Welch that many people would find its hero perverse and unpleasant 7 A collection of short stories entitled Brave and Cruel followed 1948 8 The bulk of Welch s output was to see posthumous publication an unfinished autobiographical novel A Voice Through a Cloud in 1950 9 a further short story collection A Last Sheaf in 1951 The Denton Welch Journals in 1952 an unfinished travelogue I Left My Grandfather s House in 1958 and a poetry collection Dumb Instrument in 1976 Accident and literary work EditAt the age of 20 1 Welch was hit by a car while cycling in Surrey and suffered a fractured spine He was temporarily paralysed and suffered severe pain and bladder complications including pyelonephritis 2 and spinal tuberculosis that ultimately led to his early death 10 After the accident Welch spent time at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery and then was relocated to Southcourt Nursing Home in Broadstairs Kent In July 1936 Welch rented an apartment with his friend and housekeeper Evelyn Sinclair in Tonbridge so that he could be close to his doctor John Easton Sinclair travelled with him to various residences until May 1946 when he settled in one of the Noel and Bernard Adeney residences in Middle Orchard Borough Green with his partner Eric Oliver Two years later Sinclair moved in as well and remained with him until his death on 30 December 1948 3 Despite his injuries he continued to paint and perhaps because of them 1 he started to write In 1940 he began to write poems the first one appearing in print in 1941 In August 1942 he wrote an essay on the painter Walter Sickert which published originally in Horizon brought him to the notice of Edith Sitwell in no small part down to his own cultivation of her attentions 3 Scores of short stories followed around a dozen being published in various magazines Many more were left unfinished at the time of his death Welch s literary work intense and introverted has been described as Proustian 11 in its attention to the minutiae of life in particular that of the English countryside during World War II A close attention to aesthetics be it in human behaviour physical appearance clothing art architecture jewellery or antiques is also a recurring concern in his writings The extent to which Welch s work is autobiography or fiction has been much discussed apart from his frequent use of the first person and in some cases is identified in the narrative as Denton Fictional content aside the point of origin of virtually all of his stories is biographical they are often set in places he knew or had visited and feature thinly disguised often deeply unflattering depictions of friends family and acquaintances to the extent that over thirty years after Welch s death his art school friend the artist Gerald Leet refused to contribute to Michael De la Noy s biography where he is identified only as Gerald in the index 12 13 Welch chose to depict himself a few times in fictionalised form most notably as Orvil Pym in In Youth is Pleasure and as Mary in The Fire in the Wood Robert was also one of his favourite personas The philosopher Maurice Cranston who had known him since his teens and who featured in at least one story observed that Welch was as unforgiving in depictions of himself as he was of others 14 Art Edit The Coffin House by Denton Welch 1946 Private Collection From an early age Welch s aptitude for art was evident and in his journals he recalls his first still life holly and beech leaves completed when he was nine 15 However his enrolment at Goldsmith s came initially out of his family s desire that he do something with his life after his return from China any sort of activity associated with business evidently being ruled out of the question It was through a fellow student that Welch sold his first artwork a view of Hadlow Castle to Shell for a series of lorry posters featuring landmarks 16 It is now on display at the National Motor Museum at Beaulieu Hampshire He later failed to sell a painting of Lord Berners to its subject but the experience generated a short story 17 Common themes in his art include objets d art cats still lifes often incongrously juxtaposed and assorted gothic motifs often in a fantastical landscape although not in one of his most famous works The Coffin House 1946 depicting a locally renowned dwelling north of Hadlow Kent Welch exhibited his artwork at the Leicester Galleries Other exhibitions followed in The Redfern Gallery and the Leger Gallery In May 1945 Welch restored an 18th century Georgian doll s house from 1783 which was given to him by his friend Mildred Bosanquet The doll s house is on display at the V amp A Museum of Childhood department of the Victoria and Albert Museum 18 Opinions on Welch s artworks have varied widely amongst his biographers Michael De la Noy and James Methuen Campbell consider him to be underrated in Robert Phillips view his paintings are lightweight and his drawings fussy and shallow 19 For Jocelyn Brooke had he been a painter merely and not also a writer it is doubtful whether he would be remembered at all 20 In a perceptive review of the reproductions in A Last Sheaf the un named Times art critic remarked on the whimsically sinister qualities of Welch s depictions The writer noted that Welch s specific skill that of the detached but perceptive observer which is so evident in his writings is lost in his art where he inadvertently and falsely appears to present himself as clever to like what most people would think preposterous 21 A painting such as Now I have only my dog is easy to remember and evidently the work of a man of unusual and definite character but for all that it is painfully smart and leaves precisely the impression of frivolity that the writings always manage to avoid 21 Following the reissue of the Journals writer Alan Hollinghurst found in Welch s self portraiture of which there are several examples one is in the National Portrait Gallery a tendency to amplify the over riding concern of his writing to fix his youth forever while he accelerates towards death 22 Legacy EditThe playwright and diarist Alan Bennett stated that he shared many similar preoccupations when he first encountered Welch s work 23 William S Burroughs cited Welch as the writer who most influenced his own work 24 and dedicated his 1983 novel The Place of Dead Roads to him 25 In 1951 the English composer Howard Ferguson set five of Welch s poems included in A Last Sheaf as a song cycle for voice and piano entitled Discovery 26 Others who have named Welch as an influence have included the film maker John Waters 27 the artist Barbara Hanrahan 28 and the writers Beryl Bainbridge 29 and Barbara Pym 30 Welch appears as Merton Hughes in the 1956 novel No Coward Soul written by his friend the painter Noel Adeney 31 and as Kim Carsons in William S Burroughs The Place of Dead Roads 32 Many commentators who wrote about Denton Welch after his death had their views clouded by largely non aesthetic concerns by their perception of his sexuality 33 or of his treatment of them personally in his writing or of the hateful winsomeness 34 of his personality The appropriateness of Welch s alleged solipsism at a time when the world was in turmoil appears as a factor 35 in some reviews the poet Randall Swingler went so far as to remark on the comparatively commonplace fact of Welch s early death being as it was only one of many at the time 36 However Welch s friends observed that close focus on his sexuality was to miss the point of his writing Fellow student at Goldsmith s Helen Roeder called him Ariel 37 and Maurice Cranston highlighted the complexity of Welch s character at least in part influenced by his health Simply labelling him a homosexual is to use a bright pat word which will make foolish people think they have learned the secret of something they have not begun to understand 38 Cranston also offered what might be considered a more balanced assessment 39 of Welch s shortcomings and gifts He had no trust This in turn connects with his greatest limitation as an artist He built too many barricades and enclosed the range of his understanding If he could have seen the wider human comedy with his miraculously penetrating eye and described the world as he described his own he would surely have been among the greater writers in our language As it is he will survive as a minor genius one of very few from an uncreative age 14 Works EditMaiden Voyage London Hamish Hamilton 1943 ISBN 0 241 02376 9 Exact Change 1999 ISBN 1 878972 28 6 In Youth is Pleasure London Routledge 1945 New York E P Dutton 1985 ISBN 0 525 48161 3 Brave and Cruel and Other Stories London Hamish Hamilton 1948 Comprising The Coffin on the Hill The Barn Narcissus Bay At Sea When I Was Thirteen The Judas Tree The Trout Stream Leaves from a Young Person s Notebook Brave and Cruel The Fire in the Wood A Voice Through a Cloud London J Lehmann 1950 London Enitharmon Press 2004 ISBN 1 904634 06 0 A Last Sheaf edited by Eric Oliver London John Lehmann 1951 Comprising Sickert at St Peter s The Earth s Crust Memories of a Vanished Period A Fragment of a Life Story A Party Evergreen Seaton Leverett A Picture in the Snow Ghosts The Hateful Word The Diamond Badge Poems The Denton Welch Journals edited by Jocelyn Brooke London Hamish Hamilton 1952 revised 1973 As The Journals of Denton Welch edited by Michael De la Noy London Allison amp Busby 1984 Dumb Instrument London Enitharmon Press 1976 I Left My Grandfather s House Allison amp Busby 1984 London Enitharmon Press 2006 ISBN 1 904634 28 1 Fragments Of A Life Story The Collected Short Writings Of Denton Welch edited by Michael De la Noy London Penguin Books 1987 ISBN 978 0140076202 Collects Brave and Cruel A Last Sheaf and previously unpublished shorter works A Lunch Appointment Elysium Press 1993 When I was an Art Student Elysium Press 1998 Where Nothing Sleeps The Complete Short Stories and Other Related Works edited by James Methuen Campbell North Yorkshire Tartarus Press 2005 ISBN 978 1 872621 94 4 Includes all the material from the above plus some further unpublished pieces and selected extracts from the journals Further reading EditDe la Noy Michael The Making of a Writer 1984 ISBN 0 670 80056 2 Methuen Campbell James Denton Welch Writer and Artist Carlton in Coverdale Tartarus Press 2002 ISBN 1 872621 60 0 and 2003 ISBN 1 86064 924 6 References Edit a b c d e De la Noy Michael Welch Maurice Denton Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 38116 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c Crain Caleb 20 June 1999 It s Pretty but Is It Broken The New York Times a b c Denton Welch An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Center Retrieved 12 May 2019 a b Irvine Ian 27 November 2005 Denton Welch Dreams of cheap lipstick and Turkish Delight The Independent Retrieved 12 May 2019 David Atkins Welch s contemporary at Repton albeit in a different house suggested in The Author Magazine of Spring 1992 that Welch was bullied by Dahl but there is no reference to this in Maiden Voyage Nor is it in Dahl s own account of his Repton years Boy Dahl did mention Welch a fine writer in his first draft specifically his running away from Repton but not in the published book see Sturrock 2010 Storyteller The Life of Roald Dahl London HarperPress Lewis John 1994 Such Things Happen the life of a typographer Stowmarket Suffolk Unicorn Press p 34 ISBN 0 906290 06 6 James King Herbert Read The Last Modern London Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1990 p 220 Nawrocki Jim You ve Never Heard of Denton Welch The Gay amp Lesbian Review Worldwide p 32 Phillips Robert 1971 A Voice Through a Cloud Denton Welch s Ultimate Voyage The Centennial Review Michigan State University Press 15 2 218 228 JSTOR 23737757 Skenazy Paul 6 April 1986 The Sense and Sensuality of Denton Welch The Washington Post The Journals of Denton Welch Critical Context Essay eNotes com De la Noy Michael 25 June 1998 Obituary Gerald Leet The Independent James Methuen Campbell stated that before his death in 1998 Gerald Leet who sometimes used his middle name Mackenzie as a surname was more co operative for his own biography of Welch published in 2002 a b Cranston Maurice 1951 Denton Welch in The Spectator 1 June 1951 reprinted in Spectator Harvest 1952 ed Wilson Harris London Hamish Hamilton p 74 Methuen Campbell James 2002 Denton Welch Writer and Artist Carlton in Coverdale Tartarus Press ISBN 1872621600 p 24 Methuen Campbell 2002 p 83 Entitled A Morning with the Versatile Peer Lord Berners in the Ancient Seat of Learning it first appeared in Time and Tide magazine 5 July 1952 The Denton Welch dolls house V amp A Museum of Childhood Victoria and Albert Museum Retrieved 12 May 2019 Phillips Robert 1974 Denton Welch New York Twayne p 28 Brooke Jocelyn 1964 The Dual Role A Study of Denton Welch as Painter and Writer The Texas Quarterly Autumn 1964 University of Texas at Austin p 120 a b A Born Writer s Pictures The Times Thursday 10 September 1953 Hollinghurst Alan 1984 Diminished Pictures Times Literary Supplement 21 December 1984 p 1479 Bennett Alan 7 February 2004 Austerity in Colour The Guardian Burroughs W S 2002 The Cat Inside Penguin Books p 67 Burroughs William S 1984 The Place of Dead Roads Calder p 306 ISBN 0714540307 Howard Ferguson Discovery John Waters s role models part two Vice 23 November 2010 Retrieved 23 March 2021 Stewart Annabelle 2010 Barbara Hanrahan A Biography Adelaide Wakefield Press ISBN 9781862548244 p 92 Beryl Bainbridge 1932 2010 5 July 2010 Tsagaris Ellen M 1998 The Subversion of Romance in the Novels of Barbara Pym Bowling Green Bowling Green State University Popular Press ISBN 9780879727642 p 5 De la Noy Michael 4 April 1995 Obituary Eric Oliver The Independent In his introduction to the 1985 edition of In Youth is Pleasure Burroughs says My Kim Carson sic is Denton Welch Phillips 1974 p 147 Bailey Paul 1984 Sensitive Plant The Observer 25 November O Brien Kate 1945 The Spectator Book Review 2 March p 206 Swingler Randall 1963 Smooth Diamond in The Times Literary Supplement No 3197 7 June Or rather more completely Ariel in the Tree Trunk the title of Roeder s introduction to the first edition of I Left My Grandfather s House published in 1958 Cranston Maurice 1963 The Courage of Naivete in The Listener May 30 Methuen Campbell 2002 p 85External links EditDenton Welch Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Denton Welch amp oldid 1115120768, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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