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Walter Starkie

Walter Fitzwilliam Starkie CMG, CBE, Litt.D (9 August 1894 – 2 November 1976) was an Irish scholar, Hispanist, writer and musician. His reputation is principally based on his popular travel writing: Raggle-Taggle (1933), Spanish Raggle-Taggle (1934) and Don Gypsy (1936).

He is known as a translator of Spanish literature, and as a leading authority on the Romani people (Gypsies). He spoke the Romani language fluently.

Early life

Born in Ballybrack, Killiney, County Dublin, he was the eldest son of William Joseph Myles Starkie (1860–1920) and May Caroline Walsh. His father was a noted Greek scholar and translator of Aristophanes and the last Resident Commissioner of National Education for Ireland in the United Kingdom (1899–1920). His aunt, Edyth Starkie, was an established painter married to Arthur Rackham and his godfather was John Pentland Mahaffy, the tutor of Oscar Wilde. The academic Enid Starkie was his sister. Starkie grew up surrounded by writers, artists and academicians.

He was educated at Shrewsbury School and Trinity College, Dublin, where he graduated in 1920, taking first-class honours in classics, history and political science. After winning first prize for violin at the Royal Irish Academy of Music in 1913, his father, wanting a more traditional career for his son, turned down an opportunity for Walter to audition for Sir Henry Wood, conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra. His violin teacher was the celebrated Italian virtuoso and composer, Achille Simonetti, a master who had been taught by Camillo Sivori, the only pupil of Niccolo Paganini.[1]

He became a fellow of Trinity College in 1926 and the first Professor of Spanish in 1926; his position covered both Spanish and Italian (there was an earlier "Professorship of Modern Languages" created in 1776 also covering both Italian and Spanish[2][3]). One of his pupils at Trinity was Samuel Beckett.[4][5][6]

As Starkie suffered with chronic asthma throughout his life, he was sent to the warmer climate of Italy during World War I where he joined the YMCA providing entertainment for the British troops. After the armistice in November 1918, he befriended in the town of Montebello Vicentino five Hungarian Gypsy prisoners of war and aided them in acquiring wood to construct makeshift fiddles. To one of them, Farkas, he became a bloodbrother and he swore that he would someday visit Farkas in Hungary and mix with the Gypsy's tribe. That oath would affect the course of his life.[7] While on tour in Northern Italy he met Italia Augusta Porchietti, an Italian Red Cross nurse and amateur opera singer who was singing to patients and wounded soldiers at a hospital ward in Genoa. They were married on 10 August 1921 and had a son, Landi William, and a daughter, Alma Delfina.

Abbey Theatre

After the publication of his book on Luigi Pirandello, Starkie became a director of the Abbey Theatre in 1927 at the invitation of W.B. Yeats.[8][9] Recent productions had been fraught with controversy, and one of his roles was to act as arbiter among the factions.[10] In 1928, while Starkie was away in Italy, Yeats, along with Lady Gregory and Lennox Robinson, the other two board members, rejected Seán O'Casey's fourth play, The Silver Tassie, his lament of the First World War. When he returned to Dublin he voiced his disagreement with the other board members saying that, "This play was written with the purpose of showing the useless brutality of war and the public should be allowed to judge it for themselves. O'Casey is groping for a new kind of drama and the Abbey should produce the play".[11] In light of his previous successes at the Abbey Theatre the rejection caused much controversy and O'Casey severed his relations with the theatre and took the play to London where it premiered on 11 October 1929 at the Apollo Theatre with Charles Laughton and Barry Fitzgerald under the direction of Raymond Massey.[12] To many observers the loss of O'Casey marked the beginning of a decline in the fortunes of the Abbey.[13]

The following year (1928) the board rejected Denis Johnston's modernist play Shadowdance, and Starkie was charged with giving Johnston the bad news. In his spindly handwriting he wrote on the draft title-page the five words (referring to Lady Gregory), "The Old Lady Says NO", which Johnston used to retitle the play before putting on at Dublin's Gate Theatre the following year to considerable critical acclaim.[14]

At the start of World War II, Britain chose to send Catholics to Spain as their representatives, and so the Irish-Catholic, fiddle-playing Starkie was sent to Madrid as the British Council representative, which took him away from the theatre and nightlife of Dublin, and into World War II Spain. He resigned from the Abbey Theatre on 17 September 1942 and on the same day he accepted the invitation of Hilton Edwards and Micheál MacLiammóir to be on the board of directors at the Gate Theatre.

He was one of the founders of the Centre International des Études Fascistes (CINEF).[15] Its only publication, A Survey of Fascism (1928), had an article by him, "Whither is Ireland Heading – Is It Fascism? Thoughts on the Irish Free State?"[16][17] During the 1930s, he was an apologist for Benito Mussolini, whom he had interviewed in 1927.[18] In general terms he was influenced by the Irish poet and mystic George William Russell (AE) in his writing on co-operatives. He travelled to Abyssinia in 1935 and later wrote in favour of the Italian campaign there, opposing Éamon de Valera's call for sanctions,[17][19] fearing they would further isolate Italy and drive Benito Mussolini into an alliance with Adolf Hitler.[20] However soon after his appointment in Madrid his wife dropped her first name "Italia" to avoid being branded an agent of Mussolini.[21][22]

British Institute, Madrid

Sent to Spain as the British cultural representative he was the founder and first director of the British Institute in Madrid (1940–1954), and went on to open branches in Barcelona, Bilbao, Seville and Valencia. The institute was backed by the British Council and through lectures and exhibitions worked to influence Spanish opinion during World War II and help maintain Spanish neutrality.[23] Upon accepting this position he made a promise to Lord Lloyd not to write any new books and to put the "Raggle-Taggle Gypsies" to rest for the duration of the war. However, Spain, owing to her non-belligerent status, became an asylum for refugees from all over Europe, so his promise to curtail hobnobbing with Gypsies became impractical.[24] The Institute stood apart from the British Embassy, which tended to be stand-offish toward their local nationals. It was in itself an embassy to the survivors of Spain's intellectual eclipse following the Spanish Civil War. One of Starkie's early triumphs was organising a recital by the Czech pianist Rudolf Firkušný, who in October 1940 was passing through Madrid on his way to the United States. Starkie was able to locate a new Steinway and the concert went ahead, bringing together a significant gathering of Madrid society as well as representatives from the American Embassy and Dutch, Polish, Egyptian, Turkish, and Czech Ministers.[25]

In May 1943, the actor Leslie Howard came to Madrid to present a lecture on Hamlet in which he showed similarities between the play and the actions of Hitler. On his return trip to London from Lisbon, the plane on which he was travelling, BOAC Flight 777, was shot down over the Bay of Biscay. Among the four crew and thirteen passengers who died was the prominent Anglo-German and Jewish activist Wilfrid Israel, Francis German Cowlrick, and Gordon Thomas MacLean, who had lunched together at the British Institute in Madrid.[26]

On any one evening, Starkie could count on finding in the Institute at Calle Almagro 5, a great novelist such as Pío Baroja, a rising star like Camilo José Cela (Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, 1989), the essayist Azorín, composers like Joaquín Rodrigo and painters such as Ignacio Zuloaga.[27] He left behind him a thriving Institute. During the war he also helped organise and operate an escape route across the Pyrenees for British airmen shot down over France.[28] Walter and Augusta Starkie also allowed their large flat at number 24 Calle del Prado to be used as a safe house for escaping prisoners of war and Jewish refugees.[29][30]

From 1947 to 1956, Starkie was professor of comparative literature at the Complutense University of Madrid. In 1954, he was elected an honorary fellow of Trinity College, Dublin.[2] After he retired from the British Institute, he accepted a university position in the United States. It was his third American tour, taking him to the University of Texas, Austin (1957–58), New York University (1959), the University of Kansas (1960), Colorado University (1961), and finally to the University of California, Los Angeles (1961–70) where as Professor-in-Residence he was assigned to lecture in six Departments (English, Folklore-Mythology, Italian, Music, Spanish-Portuguese, and Theatre).[31]

After his retirement from U.C.L.A., Starkie returned with his wife, Italia Augusta, to live in Madrid. After suffering from a severe cardiac asthma attack he died there on 2 November 1976. Italia followed him six months later on 10 May 1977. They are buried in the British Cemetery in Madrid.

Writings

He won fame for his travels and was profiled by Time Magazine as a modern-day 'gypsy'.[32] He published accounts of his experiences as a university vacation vagabond following the trail of the Gypsies in Raggle Taggle, subtitled "Adventures with a fiddle in Hungary and Roumania" and sequels, Spanish Raggle Taggle and Don Gypsy which are picaresque accounts in the tradition of George Borrow, with frontispieces by Arthur Rackham. His observations of Gypsy life, while more anecdotal than scholarly, provide insights into these nomadic people.[10]

Julian Moynahan said of Starkie in reviewing Scholars and Gypsies for The New York Times Book Review (24 November 1963):[10]

"Many lives have been more interesting and enviable in the telling than the living, but not so here. Emerging from the shadow of a somewhat blighted inheritance, Walter Starkie chose and enjoyed a lifelong freedom which most of us throw away with both hands on the day we leave school and take our first jobs."[10]

Starkie was the President of the Gypsy Lore Society from 1962 to 1973.[33]

In addition to publishing a 1964 translation of plays from the Spanish Golden Age in the Modern Library volume as Eight Spanish Plays of the Golden Age, he published an abridged translation of Don Quixote in hardcover for Macmillan Publishers in London in 1954. Illustrated with drawings done by Gustave Doré in 1863 for the French language edition, Starkie's biographical introduction of Cervantes was 116 pages long.[34] In 1957 the abridged version of his translation was published for Mentor Books in the United States with the introduction shortened to seven pages.[35] In 1964 Starkie published his complete and unabridged version of his translation for New American Library.[36][37][38] Written in contemporary English, both unabridged and abridged versions have been in print since their publications, and are considered highly accurate, but Starkie does occasionally put Irish slang and phrase construction (e.g. the phrase "I'm thinking", instead of "I think", and the oath "Bad 'cess to you!") into the mouths of its peasant characters. This is a trait he repeats in his translation of The Mask, a brief one-acter by Lope de Rueda published in Eight Spanish Plays of the Golden Age.

Works

  • Jacinto Benavente (1924)
  • Luigi Pirandello (1926)
  • Raggle-Taggle: Adventures with a Fiddle in Hungary and Romania (1933)
  • Spanish Raggle-Taggle: Adventures with a Fiddle in Northern Spain (1934)
  • Don Gypsy: Adventures with a Fiddle in Barbary, Andulusia and La Mancha (1936)
  • The Waveless Plain: An Italian Autobiography (1938)
  • Grand Inquisitor (1940)
  • Semblanza de Cervantes y Shakespeare (1946)
  • In Sara's Tents (1953)
  • Conferencia conmemorativa Eugene O'Neill (1954)
  • The Road to Santiago: Pilgrims of St. James (1957)
  • Spain: A Musician's Journey Through Time and Space (1958)
  • Scholars and Gypsies: An Autobiography (1963)
  • Homage to Yeats, 1865–1965: Papers Read at a Clark Library Seminar (1965)

Works translated

Decorations

Bibliography

  • Ensayos Hispano-Ingleses. Homanaje a Walter Starkie, José Janés (editor), Barcelona, (1948)
  • Matteo Biagetti, Walter Starkie: Escritor, Académico, Peregrino, Edizioni Compostellane, (2010)
  • Mary M. Burke, "Walter Starkie", The Cracked Looking-Glass, Princeton: Princeton University Library, (2011), pp. 95–100.

References

  1. ^ Walter Starkie, Scholars and Gypsies (1963), pp. 90–91.
  2. ^ a b Webb, D.A. (1992). J.R., Barlett (ed.). Trinity College Dublin Record Volume 1991. Dublin: Trinity College Dublin Press. ISBN 1-871408-07-5.
  3. ^ "Welcome - Department of Hispanic Studies - Trinity College Dublin". Tcd.ie. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 November 2006. Retrieved 29 October 2008.
  5. ^ James Knowlson, Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett (1996), p. 52.
  6. ^ . The Irish Times. Archived from the original on 23 October 2010. Retrieved 29 October 2008.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^ Walter Starkie, Raggle-Taggle: Adventures with a Fiddle in Hungary and Romania (1933), pp. 3–6.
  8. ^ Robert Welch, Bruce Stewart, The Oxford Companion to Irish Literature (1996), p. 534.
  9. ^ "Dermot McManus in the 60s". Iol.ie. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  10. ^ a b c d "Gale - Product Login". go.galegroup.com. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  11. ^ Kokomo Daily Tribune, Indiana, 6 July 1928
  12. ^ "Storm in a tassie: the playwright, the poet and the Abbey Theatre". Irishtimes.com. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  13. ^ Gassner, John; Quinn, Edward (22 June 2018). The Reader's Encyclopedia of World Drama. Courier Corporation. ISBN 9780486420646. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  14. ^ James Whiston. "Starkie, Walter Fitzwilliam (1894–1976), Hispanic scholar and travel writer" (PDF). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  15. ^ Richard Griffiths, Fascism: 1880–1930 (2005), p. 42.
  16. ^ Griffiths, p. 125.
  17. ^ a b Clair Wills, That Neutral Island (2007), pp. 347–8.
  18. ^ The Irish Times – Weekend Edition, Adrian Frazier, 8 February 2003
  19. ^ Clair Wills, That Neutral Island (2007), p. 347.
  20. ^ "First Principles - Walter Starkie and the Greatest Novel of All". Firstprinciplesjournal.com. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  21. ^ Jimmy Burns, Papa Spy: Love, Faith and Betrayal in Wartime Spain, (2009), pp. 252–253.
  22. ^ "Irish Diary - Politics - - Author of La Roja - Papa Spy Jimmy Burns". Jimmy-burns.com. 18 December 2010. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  23. ^ Berdah, Jean François (1998). "La propagande culturelle britannique en Espagne pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale: Ambition et action du British Council (1939–1946)". Guerres Mondiales et Conflits Contemporains: Revue d'Histoire (in French) (189): 95–108. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  24. ^ Walter Starkie, In Sara's Tents (1953), pp. 7–10.
  25. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 15 February 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  26. ^ Ian Colvin, Flight 777: The Mystery of Leslie Howard, (London, 1957)
  27. ^ Tom Burns, The Use of Memory: Publishing and Further Pursuits (1993), pp. 102–103. Burns was First Secretary and Press Attaché at the British Embassy in Madrid during World War II.
  28. ^ James Michener, Iberia (1968), pp. 793–794.
  29. ^ "The secret Spanish evasion routes to save refugee Jews from the holocaust". Raoulwallenberg.net. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  30. ^ Jimmy Burns, Papa Spy: Love, Faith and Betrayal in Wartime Spain, (2009), p. 253.
  31. ^ "University of California: In Memoriam, May 1977". content.cdlib.org. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  32. ^ . Time.com. 11 January 1937. Archived from the original on 26 October 2012. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 January 2010. Retrieved 28 July 2010.
  34. ^ "Don Quixote by Walter Starkie, Abridged Hardcover, 1954 - AbeBooks". Abebooks.com. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  35. ^ [1][dead link]
  36. ^ Saavedra, Miguel de Cervantes; Friedman, Edward H. (1 December 2009). Don Quixote: Complete and Unabridged. Signet Classics. ISBN 978-0451531285.
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 December 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  38. ^ "Don Quixote by Walter Starkie - AbeBooks". Abebooks.com. Retrieved 22 June 2018.

External links

  • "A True Friend of Spain" British Council in Spain
  • Eirdata page
  • University of California obituary
  • A True Friend of Spain: Professor Walter Starkie and the Early Years of the British Council in Spain / British Council – 70 Years in Spain
  • Enclave Revista Cultural de Castilla y León

walter, starkie, walter, fitzwilliam, starkie, litt, august, 1894, november, 1976, irish, scholar, hispanist, writer, musician, reputation, principally, based, popular, travel, writing, raggle, taggle, 1933, spanish, raggle, taggle, 1934, gypsy, 1936, known, t. Walter Fitzwilliam Starkie CMG CBE Litt D 9 August 1894 2 November 1976 was an Irish scholar Hispanist writer and musician His reputation is principally based on his popular travel writing Raggle Taggle 1933 Spanish Raggle Taggle 1934 and Don Gypsy 1936 He is known as a translator of Spanish literature and as a leading authority on the Romani people Gypsies He spoke the Romani language fluently Contents 1 Early life 2 Abbey Theatre 3 British Institute Madrid 4 Writings 5 Works 6 Works translated 7 Decorations 8 Bibliography 9 References 10 External linksEarly life EditBorn in Ballybrack Killiney County Dublin he was the eldest son of William Joseph Myles Starkie 1860 1920 and May Caroline Walsh His father was a noted Greek scholar and translator of Aristophanes and the last Resident Commissioner of National Education for Ireland in the United Kingdom 1899 1920 His aunt Edyth Starkie was an established painter married to Arthur Rackham and his godfather was John Pentland Mahaffy the tutor of Oscar Wilde The academic Enid Starkie was his sister Starkie grew up surrounded by writers artists and academicians He was educated at Shrewsbury School and Trinity College Dublin where he graduated in 1920 taking first class honours in classics history and political science After winning first prize for violin at the Royal Irish Academy of Music in 1913 his father wanting a more traditional career for his son turned down an opportunity for Walter to audition for Sir Henry Wood conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra His violin teacher was the celebrated Italian virtuoso and composer Achille Simonetti a master who had been taught by Camillo Sivori the only pupil of Niccolo Paganini 1 He became a fellow of Trinity College in 1926 and the first Professor of Spanish in 1926 his position covered both Spanish and Italian there was an earlier Professorship of Modern Languages created in 1776 also covering both Italian and Spanish 2 3 One of his pupils at Trinity was Samuel Beckett 4 5 6 As Starkie suffered with chronic asthma throughout his life he was sent to the warmer climate of Italy during World War I where he joined the YMCA providing entertainment for the British troops After the armistice in November 1918 he befriended in the town of Montebello Vicentino five Hungarian Gypsy prisoners of war and aided them in acquiring wood to construct makeshift fiddles To one of them Farkas he became a bloodbrother and he swore that he would someday visit Farkas in Hungary and mix with the Gypsy s tribe That oath would affect the course of his life 7 While on tour in Northern Italy he met Italia Augusta Porchietti an Italian Red Cross nurse and amateur opera singer who was singing to patients and wounded soldiers at a hospital ward in Genoa They were married on 10 August 1921 and had a son Landi William and a daughter Alma Delfina Abbey Theatre EditAfter the publication of his book on Luigi Pirandello Starkie became a director of the Abbey Theatre in 1927 at the invitation of W B Yeats 8 9 Recent productions had been fraught with controversy and one of his roles was to act as arbiter among the factions 10 In 1928 while Starkie was away in Italy Yeats along with Lady Gregory and Lennox Robinson the other two board members rejected Sean O Casey s fourth play The Silver Tassie his lament of the First World War When he returned to Dublin he voiced his disagreement with the other board members saying that This play was written with the purpose of showing the useless brutality of war and the public should be allowed to judge it for themselves O Casey is groping for a new kind of drama and the Abbey should produce the play 11 In light of his previous successes at the Abbey Theatre the rejection caused much controversy and O Casey severed his relations with the theatre and took the play to London where it premiered on 11 October 1929 at the Apollo Theatre with Charles Laughton and Barry Fitzgerald under the direction of Raymond Massey 12 To many observers the loss of O Casey marked the beginning of a decline in the fortunes of the Abbey 13 The following year 1928 the board rejected Denis Johnston s modernist play Shadowdance and Starkie was charged with giving Johnston the bad news In his spindly handwriting he wrote on the draft title page the five words referring to Lady Gregory The Old Lady Says NO which Johnston used to retitle the play before putting on at Dublin s Gate Theatre the following year to considerable critical acclaim 14 At the start of World War II Britain chose to send Catholics to Spain as their representatives and so the Irish Catholic fiddle playing Starkie was sent to Madrid as the British Council representative which took him away from the theatre and nightlife of Dublin and into World War II Spain He resigned from the Abbey Theatre on 17 September 1942 and on the same day he accepted the invitation of Hilton Edwards and Micheal MacLiammoir to be on the board of directors at the Gate Theatre He was one of the founders of the Centre International des Etudes Fascistes CINEF 15 Its only publication A Survey of Fascism 1928 had an article by him Whither is Ireland Heading Is It Fascism Thoughts on the Irish Free State 16 17 During the 1930s he was an apologist for Benito Mussolini whom he had interviewed in 1927 18 In general terms he was influenced by the Irish poet and mystic George William Russell AE in his writing on co operatives He travelled to Abyssinia in 1935 and later wrote in favour of the Italian campaign there opposing Eamon de Valera s call for sanctions 17 19 fearing they would further isolate Italy and drive Benito Mussolini into an alliance with Adolf Hitler 20 However soon after his appointment in Madrid his wife dropped her first name Italia to avoid being branded an agent of Mussolini 21 22 British Institute Madrid EditSent to Spain as the British cultural representative he was the founder and first director of the British Institute in Madrid 1940 1954 and went on to open branches in Barcelona Bilbao Seville and Valencia The institute was backed by the British Council and through lectures and exhibitions worked to influence Spanish opinion during World War II and help maintain Spanish neutrality 23 Upon accepting this position he made a promise to Lord Lloyd not to write any new books and to put the Raggle Taggle Gypsies to rest for the duration of the war However Spain owing to her non belligerent status became an asylum for refugees from all over Europe so his promise to curtail hobnobbing with Gypsies became impractical 24 The Institute stood apart from the British Embassy which tended to be stand offish toward their local nationals It was in itself an embassy to the survivors of Spain s intellectual eclipse following the Spanish Civil War One of Starkie s early triumphs was organising a recital by the Czech pianist Rudolf Firkusny who in October 1940 was passing through Madrid on his way to the United States Starkie was able to locate a new Steinway and the concert went ahead bringing together a significant gathering of Madrid society as well as representatives from the American Embassy and Dutch Polish Egyptian Turkish and Czech Ministers 25 In May 1943 the actor Leslie Howard came to Madrid to present a lecture on Hamlet in which he showed similarities between the play and the actions of Hitler On his return trip to London from Lisbon the plane on which he was travelling BOAC Flight 777 was shot down over the Bay of Biscay Among the four crew and thirteen passengers who died was the prominent Anglo German and Jewish activist Wilfrid Israel Francis German Cowlrick and Gordon Thomas MacLean who had lunched together at the British Institute in Madrid 26 On any one evening Starkie could count on finding in the Institute at Calle Almagro 5 a great novelist such as Pio Baroja a rising star like Camilo Jose Cela Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature 1989 the essayist Azorin composers like Joaquin Rodrigo and painters such as Ignacio Zuloaga 27 He left behind him a thriving Institute During the war he also helped organise and operate an escape route across the Pyrenees for British airmen shot down over France 28 Walter and Augusta Starkie also allowed their large flat at number 24 Calle del Prado to be used as a safe house for escaping prisoners of war and Jewish refugees 29 30 From 1947 to 1956 Starkie was professor of comparative literature at the Complutense University of Madrid In 1954 he was elected an honorary fellow of Trinity College Dublin 2 After he retired from the British Institute he accepted a university position in the United States It was his third American tour taking him to the University of Texas Austin 1957 58 New York University 1959 the University of Kansas 1960 Colorado University 1961 and finally to the University of California Los Angeles 1961 70 where as Professor in Residence he was assigned to lecture in six Departments English Folklore Mythology Italian Music Spanish Portuguese and Theatre 31 After his retirement from U C L A Starkie returned with his wife Italia Augusta to live in Madrid After suffering from a severe cardiac asthma attack he died there on 2 November 1976 Italia followed him six months later on 10 May 1977 They are buried in the British Cemetery in Madrid Writings EditHe won fame for his travels and was profiled by Time Magazine as a modern day gypsy 32 He published accounts of his experiences as a university vacation vagabond following the trail of the Gypsies in Raggle Taggle subtitled Adventures with a fiddle in Hungary and Roumania and sequels Spanish Raggle Taggle and Don Gypsy which are picaresque accounts in the tradition of George Borrow with frontispieces by Arthur Rackham His observations of Gypsy life while more anecdotal than scholarly provide insights into these nomadic people 10 Julian Moynahan said of Starkie in reviewing Scholars and Gypsies for The New York Times Book Review 24 November 1963 10 Many lives have been more interesting and enviable in the telling than the living but not so here Emerging from the shadow of a somewhat blighted inheritance Walter Starkie chose and enjoyed a lifelong freedom which most of us throw away with both hands on the day we leave school and take our first jobs 10 Starkie was the President of the Gypsy Lore Society from 1962 to 1973 33 In addition to publishing a 1964 translation of plays from the Spanish Golden Age in the Modern Library volume as Eight Spanish Plays of the Golden Age he published an abridged translation of Don Quixote in hardcover for Macmillan Publishers in London in 1954 Illustrated with drawings done by Gustave Dore in 1863 for the French language edition Starkie s biographical introduction of Cervantes was 116 pages long 34 In 1957 the abridged version of his translation was published for Mentor Books in the United States with the introduction shortened to seven pages 35 In 1964 Starkie published his complete and unabridged version of his translation for New American Library 36 37 38 Written in contemporary English both unabridged and abridged versions have been in print since their publications and are considered highly accurate but Starkie does occasionally put Irish slang and phrase construction e g the phrase I m thinking instead of I think and the oath Bad cess to you into the mouths of its peasant characters This is a trait he repeats in his translation of The Mask a brief one acter by Lope de Rueda published in Eight Spanish Plays of the Golden Age Works EditJacinto Benavente 1924 Luigi Pirandello 1926 Raggle Taggle Adventures with a Fiddle in Hungary and Romania 1933 Spanish Raggle Taggle Adventures with a Fiddle in Northern Spain 1934 Don Gypsy Adventures with a Fiddle in Barbary Andulusia and La Mancha 1936 The Waveless Plain An Italian Autobiography 1938 Grand Inquisitor 1940 Semblanza de Cervantes y Shakespeare 1946 In Sara s Tents 1953 Conferencia conmemorativa Eugene O Neill 1954 The Road to Santiago Pilgrims of St James 1957 Spain A Musician s Journey Through Time and Space 1958 Scholars and Gypsies An Autobiography 1963 Homage to Yeats 1865 1965 Papers Read at a Clark Library Seminar 1965 Works translated EditTiger Juan Ramon Perez de Ayala 1933 The Spaniards in their History Ramon Menendez Pidal 1950 Tower of Ivory Rodolfo Fonseca 1953 This is Spain Ignacio Olague 1954 Don Quixote Miguel de Cervantes 1954 abridged and 1964 unabridged The Deceitful Marriage and other Exemplary Novels Cervantes 1963 Eight Spanish Plays of the Golden Age 1964 Decorations EditKnight of the Order of Alfonso XII 1928 Chevalier de la Legion d Honneur 1931 Knight of the Order of the Crown of Italy 1933 Commander of the Order of the British Empire 1948 Knight of the Order of Isabella the Catholic Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George 1954 Bibliography EditEnsayos Hispano Ingleses Homanaje a Walter Starkie Jose Janes editor Barcelona 1948 Matteo Biagetti Walter Starkie Escritor Academico Peregrino Edizioni Compostellane 2010 Mary M Burke Walter Starkie The Cracked Looking Glass Princeton Princeton University Library 2011 pp 95 100 References Edit Walter Starkie Scholars and Gypsies 1963 pp 90 91 a b Webb D A 1992 J R Barlett ed Trinity College Dublin Record Volume 1991 Dublin Trinity College Dublin Press ISBN 1 871408 07 5 Welcome Department of Hispanic Studies Trinity College Dublin Tcd ie Retrieved 22 June 2018 Samuel Beckett Archived from the original on 1 November 2006 Retrieved 29 October 2008 James Knowlson Damned to Fame The Life of Samuel Beckett 1996 p 52 Archived copy The Irish Times Archived from the original on 23 October 2010 Retrieved 29 October 2008 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Walter Starkie Raggle Taggle Adventures with a Fiddle in Hungary and Romania 1933 pp 3 6 Robert Welch Bruce Stewart The Oxford Companion to Irish Literature 1996 p 534 Dermot McManus in the 60s Iol ie Retrieved 22 June 2018 a b c d Gale Product Login go galegroup com Retrieved 22 June 2018 Kokomo Daily Tribune Indiana 6 July 1928 Storm in a tassie the playwright the poet and the Abbey Theatre Irishtimes com Retrieved 22 June 2018 Gassner John Quinn Edward 22 June 2018 The Reader s Encyclopedia of World Drama Courier Corporation ISBN 9780486420646 Retrieved 22 June 2018 James Whiston Starkie Walter Fitzwilliam 1894 1976 Hispanic scholar and travel writer PDF Oxford University Press Retrieved 22 June 2018 Richard Griffiths Fascism 1880 1930 2005 p 42 Griffiths p 125 a b Clair Wills That Neutral Island 2007 pp 347 8 The Irish Times Weekend Edition Adrian Frazier 8 February 2003 Clair Wills That Neutral Island 2007 p 347 First Principles Walter Starkie and the Greatest Novel of All Firstprinciplesjournal com Retrieved 22 June 2018 Jimmy Burns Papa Spy Love Faith and Betrayal in Wartime Spain 2009 pp 252 253 Irish Diary Politics Author of La Roja Papa Spy Jimmy Burns Jimmy burns com 18 December 2010 Retrieved 22 June 2018 Berdah Jean Francois 1998 La propagande culturelle britannique en Espagne pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale Ambition et action du British Council 1939 1946 Guerres Mondiales et Conflits Contemporains Revue d Histoire in French 189 95 108 Retrieved 22 June 2018 Walter Starkie In Sara s Tents 1953 pp 7 10 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 15 February 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Ian Colvin Flight 777 The Mystery of Leslie Howard London 1957 Tom Burns The Use of Memory Publishing and Further Pursuits 1993 pp 102 103 Burns was First Secretary and Press Attache at the British Embassy in Madrid during World War II James Michener Iberia 1968 pp 793 794 The secret Spanish evasion routes to save refugee Jews from the holocaust Raoulwallenberg net Retrieved 22 June 2018 Jimmy Burns Papa Spy Love Faith and Betrayal in Wartime Spain 2009 p 253 University of California In Memoriam May 1977 content cdlib org Retrieved 22 June 2018 Books Scholar Gypsy Time com 11 January 1937 Archived from the original on 26 October 2012 Retrieved 22 June 2018 The University of Liverpool SC amp A Home Archived from the original on 29 January 2010 Retrieved 28 July 2010 Don Quixote by Walter Starkie Abridged Hardcover 1954 AbeBooks Abebooks com Retrieved 22 June 2018 1 dead link Saavedra Miguel de Cervantes Friedman Edward H 1 December 2009 Don Quixote Complete and Unabridged Signet Classics ISBN 978 0451531285 Bennet The United States s review of Don Quixote Archived from the original on 29 December 2011 Retrieved 26 June 2012 Don Quixote by Walter Starkie AbeBooks Abebooks com Retrieved 22 June 2018 External links Edit A True Friend of Spain British Council in Spain Eirdata page University of California obituary A True Friend of Spain Professor Walter Starkie and the Early Years of the British Council in Spain British Council 70 Years in Spain Enclave Revista Cultural de Castilla y Leon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walter Starkie amp oldid 1122876656, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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