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William Bolitho Ryall

William Bolitho Ryall (1891–1930) was a South African journalist, writer and biographer who was a valued friend of prominent writers such as Ernest Hemingway, Noël Coward, Walter Lippmann and Walter Duranty.[1] He wrote under the name ‘William Bolitho’ but was known to his friends as ‘Bill Ryall’.[2] He died on 2 June 1930 at the age of 39 just as his reputation was being established.[3]

William Bolitho Ryall
BornCharles William Ryall
(1891-01-00)January 1891
Droitwich
Died2 June 1930(1930-06-02) (aged 39)
Avignon
OccupationNovelist, journalist

Life Edit

Ryall was born as Charles William Ryall in Droitwich, in January 1891.[4] His father was a Baptist minister, born in South Africa and he was taken there as an infant.[5] He changed his name to 'William Bolitho Ryall' which was his uncle's name who died in South Africa and who wrote the book Pensam: His Mysterious Tribulation published in 1883.[6][3] Before enlisting in the British Army he had gone to seminary in Gordonstown South African and become a deacon in the Anglican Church. In 1916 he was buried alive with fifteen other men in a mine explosion on the Somme. He was the only survivor and was initially thought to be dead, but was unconscious with a broken neck and other injuries.[3] He spent a year convalescing in a Scottish military hospital but never fully recovered his health.[3]

Journalism Edit

After the war he became the Paris correspondent of the Manchester Guardian, for which he covered the 1919 Peace Conference at Versailles. In 1920 he reported on the communist rebellion in the Ruhr valley in Germany. This incident later became the subject of his play entitled Overture.[7] In 1923 he was appointed correspondent with the New York World to which he contributed many notable dispatches.[3] In 1924 he reported on the housing conditions in Glasgow and these dispatches were published in the World and in the book, The Cancer of Empire. In 1925 he travelled throughout Italy interviewing people about Mussolini's regime and this resulted in the book Italy under Mussolini which brought to public notice the abuses of Mussolini's power.[3] Ryall arrived in New York on 26 September 1928, having sailed from Southampton on the S.S. Homerio.[8] He then had a thrice weekly column with the New York World.[3]

Twelve Against the Gods Edit

This book was published in 1929 and was an instant bestseller, being written in a racy, journalistic style. It covers the lives of twelve individuals in the following order: Alexander the Great, Casanova, Christopher Columbus, Mahomet, Lola Montez, Cagliostro (and Seraphina), Charles XII of Sweden, Napoleon I, Lucius Sergius Catiline, Napoleon III, Isadora Duncan, and Woodrow Wilson. Adventure is the theme that unites this unlikely assemblage. Bolitho argues that they were all adventurers who battled convention and conformity to achieve fame or notoriety. He sees human endeavour as a duality between conformity and non-conformity. "We are born adventurers, and the love of adventures never leaves us till we are very old; old, timid men, in whose interest it is that adventure should quite die out. This is why all the poets are on one side, and all the laws on the other; for laws are made by, and usually for, old men."[9] He points out that their lives show the difficulties involved, and the scant reward to be expected from such adventuring.[9]

Last Days Edit

Bolitho left New York City in April 1929 and travelled to London where a production of his play Overture was being organized. But by May he was not well and he travelled to his small château called La Préfète at Montfavet near Avignon, France, to recuperate. He had bought La Préfète while he lived in Paris and he planned to use his substantial income from writing to develop the garden with exotic African fruits and flowers. He had told Duranty that it would be a "place of wonder and beauty, no matter what it costs" but Duranty adds: "Poor Bolitho! He did not know that it would cost his life. An attack of acute appendicitis wrongly diagnosed by a local doctor, then a last minute rush in a local ambulance to the operating-table in Avignon, where he arrived too late; and death from peritonitis after thirty-six hours of agony."[10] His play, Overture, was later performed at the Longacre Theatre, New York from 5 Dec 1930 to Jan 1931 with 41 performances.[11] This is its only known performance.

Reputation Edit

Noël Coward:
"He died young enough to be called ‘brilliant’, and not decrepit enough to be called ‘great’, which is sad, because he would have enjoyed hugely that particular form of eminence, and I feel that he would have given his wreath of laurels a slightly rakish tilt, however old he was."[12]
Ernest Hemingway:
"In the old days, when your correspondent was a working newspaper man, he had a friend named Bill Ryall, then a European correspondent for the Manchester Guardian. This Ryall had a white, lantern-jawed face of the sort that is supposed to haunt you if seen suddenly in a London fog, but on a bright windy day in Paris meeting him on the boulevard wearing a long fur-collared great coat he had the never-far-from-tragic look of a ham Shakespearean actor. None of us thought of him as a genius then and I do not think he thought of himself as one either, being too busy, too intelligent, and, then, too sardonic to go in for being a genius in a city where they were a nickel a dozen and it was much more distinguished to be hard working. He was a South African and had been very badly blown up in the war while commanding infantry. Afterwards he had gotten into the intelligence service and at the time of the peace conference he had been a sort of pay-off man for the disbursing of certain sums spent by the British to subsidize and influence certain individuals and certain organs of the French press. He talked very frankly about this and as I was a kid then he told me many things that were the beginning of whatever education I received in international politics. Later Ryall wrote under the name of William Bolitho, went to New York, became a genius, and worked at it until he died. You may have read his Murder For Profit, his Twelve Against The Gods, or some of the pieces he wrote in the old N.Y. World. I never saw him after he became Bolitho, but when he was Ryall he was a wonderful guy. He may have been even finer when he was Bolitho but I do not see how it would be possible. I think sometimes being a genius in that hick town must have bored him very much. But I never saw him to ask him.”[13]
Walter Lippmann:
“For Bolitho was a radiant person. In his company ordinary things were transfigured, acquiring the glamour of mystery and great import. His talk had a quality which belonged to one who dwelt familiarly, so it seemed, with the hidden elements of man’s life and with the infinite permutations of his affairs. In his presence it was easy to believe that one had a private revelation of those great concerns which in prosaic living seem verbal and remote; with him one walked quickly through portals, that are usually closed, into the statelier mansions of the soul. He was an eager guide. Whoever happened to be there, he took with him in his explorations, not pausing to ask whether his companion had the wit or the courage for such adventures. He was lavish in his talk."[14]
Walter Duranty:
"Of all the people I have met in the last twenty years, and there have been some high-sounding names amongst them, I think Bolitho had the finest intellect. Under forty when he died, he had already made his name as a forceful and original writer, but his mental range wait far beyond the limits of literature. He possessed to a remarkable degree the same quality which proved the key to Lenin's success, namely, the gift of making a quick and accurate summary of facts and drawing therefrom the right, logical and inevitable conclusions. . . . Unlike most people, he never blindly accepted the opinion of others, but always thought things out for himself, and never ceased to impress on me the necessity of doing that at all times."[15]

Publications Edit

  • Leviathan, (Essays, chiefly on international politics), London: Chapman & Dodd, 1923.
  • Cancer of Empire, (On housing in Glasgow.) Illustrated. London, New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1924.
  • Murder for Profit, (Profiles of murderers), First published September 1926. London: Jonathan Cape, 1933. The Travellers' library
  • Italy under Mussolini, New York: The Press Publishing Company, (New York World) 1926, London: The Macmillan Company, 1926.
  • Twelve against the Gods: The Story of Adventure, London: William Heinemann Ltd, 1930, Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1939. [Penguin Books. no. 230.]
  • Camera Obscura (A collection of his essays and articles), with Preface by Noël Coward, William Heinemann: London; [printed in U.S.A., 1931.]
  • Overture. A drama in three acts, New York, [1931.] [French's Standard Library Edition.]

References Edit

  1. ^ See these authors' remarks under 'Reputation' below.
  2. ^ Walter Duranty dedicated his book, I Write as I Please 'To the memory of Bill Ryall (William Bolitho)’, though he refers to him as 'Bolitho' throughout the book.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Report on Bolitho's death - New York Times, 4 June 1930. Available in the New York Times archives at https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9807E5DD1238E03ABC4C53DFB066838B629EDE# Accessed 10.11.2014;
  4. ^ Cf. England & Wales, FreeBMD Birth Index, 1837-1915. Confirmed by the authority of his daughter, Camilla Bolitho Ryall. See the genealogy.com forum at http://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/bolitho/20/ posting by Camilla Bolitho Ryall, dated 14 Aug. 1999 Accessed 2015.05.14
  5. ^ As indicated by his daughter, Camilla Bolitho Ryall. See the genealogy.com forum at http://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/bolitho/20/ posting by Camilla Bolitho Ryall, dated 14 Aug. 1999 Accessed 2015.05.14 Also, Ryall's name appears in the 1891 census for Droitwich but not in the 1901 census anywhere in the UK. See www.ancestry.com records. Accessed 2015.05.23.
  6. ^ On the authority of his daughter, Camilla Bolitho Ryall, see the genealogy.com forum http://genforum.genealogy.com/bolitho/messages/18.html Accessed 2015/05/14
  7. ^ Walter Duranty, I Write as I Please¸ New York: Simon & Schuster, 1935, ch. 9, pp. 93-5.
  8. ^ 'List or Manifest of Alien Passengers for the United States.' Available at www.ancestry.com. New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957. His age is listed as 37 confirming 1891 as his year of birth,.
  9. ^ a b Introduction to Twelve Against the Gods, p. 14.
  10. ^ Walter Duranty, I Write as I Please¸ New York: Simon & Schuster, 1935, p. 254.
  11. ^ See the IMDb website under Maurice Cass - other works: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0143912/otherworks accessed 13.11.2014
  12. ^ Noël Coward, writing in the Preface to Bolitho's book Camera Obscura, p.5.
  13. ^ Ernest Hemingway, "The Malady of Power: a second serious letter",Esquire, v. 4, no. 5 (Nov. 1935). Also, in By-Line Ernest Hemingway: Selected Articles and Dispatches of Four Decades, Edited by William White, New York: Touchstone (Simon & Schuster), 1998, pp. 221-222.
  14. ^ Walter Lippmann, ‘William Bolitho – A Memoir’ in Twelve Against the Gods, Penguin Edition, p.vii.
  15. ^ Walter Duranty, I Write as I Please, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1935, ch. 9, p. 95

External links Edit

william, bolitho, ryall, 1891, 1930, south, african, journalist, writer, biographer, valued, friend, prominent, writers, such, ernest, hemingway, noël, coward, walter, lippmann, walter, duranty, wrote, under, name, william, bolitho, known, friends, bill, ryall. William Bolitho Ryall 1891 1930 was a South African journalist writer and biographer who was a valued friend of prominent writers such as Ernest Hemingway Noel Coward Walter Lippmann and Walter Duranty 1 He wrote under the name William Bolitho but was known to his friends as Bill Ryall 2 He died on 2 June 1930 at the age of 39 just as his reputation was being established 3 William Bolitho RyallBornCharles William Ryall 1891 01 00 January 1891DroitwichDied2 June 1930 1930 06 02 aged 39 AvignonOccupationNovelist journalist Contents 1 Life 1 1 Journalism 1 2 Twelve Against the Gods 1 3 Last Days 2 Reputation 3 Publications 4 References 5 External linksLife EditRyall was born as Charles William Ryall in Droitwich in January 1891 4 His father was a Baptist minister born in South Africa and he was taken there as an infant 5 He changed his name to William Bolitho Ryall which was his uncle s name who died in South Africa and who wrote the book Pensam His Mysterious Tribulation published in 1883 6 3 Before enlisting in the British Army he had gone to seminary in Gordonstown South African and become a deacon in the Anglican Church In 1916 he was buried alive with fifteen other men in a mine explosion on the Somme He was the only survivor and was initially thought to be dead but was unconscious with a broken neck and other injuries 3 He spent a year convalescing in a Scottish military hospital but never fully recovered his health 3 Journalism Edit After the war he became the Paris correspondent of the Manchester Guardian for which he covered the 1919 Peace Conference at Versailles In 1920 he reported on the communist rebellion in the Ruhr valley in Germany This incident later became the subject of his play entitled Overture 7 In 1923 he was appointed correspondent with the New York World to which he contributed many notable dispatches 3 In 1924 he reported on the housing conditions in Glasgow and these dispatches were published in the World and in the book The Cancer of Empire In 1925 he travelled throughout Italy interviewing people about Mussolini s regime and this resulted in the book Italy under Mussolini which brought to public notice the abuses of Mussolini s power 3 Ryall arrived in New York on 26 September 1928 having sailed from Southampton on the S S Homerio 8 He then had a thrice weekly column with the New York World 3 Twelve Against the Gods Edit This book was published in 1929 and was an instant bestseller being written in a racy journalistic style It covers the lives of twelve individuals in the following order Alexander the Great Casanova Christopher Columbus Mahomet Lola Montez Cagliostro and Seraphina Charles XII of Sweden Napoleon I Lucius Sergius Catiline Napoleon III Isadora Duncan and Woodrow Wilson Adventure is the theme that unites this unlikely assemblage Bolitho argues that they were all adventurers who battled convention and conformity to achieve fame or notoriety He sees human endeavour as a duality between conformity and non conformity We are born adventurers and the love of adventures never leaves us till we are very old old timid men in whose interest it is that adventure should quite die out This is why all the poets are on one side and all the laws on the other for laws are made by and usually for old men 9 He points out that their lives show the difficulties involved and the scant reward to be expected from such adventuring 9 Last Days Edit Bolitho left New York City in April 1929 and travelled to London where a production of his play Overture was being organized But by May he was not well and he travelled to his small chateau called La Prefete at Montfavet near Avignon France to recuperate He had bought La Prefete while he lived in Paris and he planned to use his substantial income from writing to develop the garden with exotic African fruits and flowers He had told Duranty that it would be a place of wonder and beauty no matter what it costs but Duranty adds Poor Bolitho He did not know that it would cost his life An attack of acute appendicitis wrongly diagnosed by a local doctor then a last minute rush in a local ambulance to the operating table in Avignon where he arrived too late and death from peritonitis after thirty six hours of agony 10 His play Overture was later performed at the Longacre Theatre New York from 5 Dec 1930 to Jan 1931 with 41 performances 11 This is its only known performance Reputation EditNoel Coward He died young enough to be called brilliant and not decrepit enough to be called great which is sad because he would have enjoyed hugely that particular form of eminence and I feel that he would have given his wreath of laurels a slightly rakish tilt however old he was 12 Ernest Hemingway In the old days when your correspondent was a working newspaper man he had a friend named Bill Ryall then a European correspondent for the Manchester Guardian This Ryall had a white lantern jawed face of the sort that is supposed to haunt you if seen suddenly in a London fog but on a bright windy day in Paris meeting him on the boulevard wearing a long fur collared great coat he had the never far from tragic look of a ham Shakespearean actor None of us thought of him as a genius then and I do not think he thought of himself as one either being too busy too intelligent and then too sardonic to go in for being a genius in a city where they were a nickel a dozen and it was much more distinguished to be hard working He was a South African and had been very badly blown up in the war while commanding infantry Afterwards he had gotten into the intelligence service and at the time of the peace conference he had been a sort of pay off man for the disbursing of certain sums spent by the British to subsidize and influence certain individuals and certain organs of the French press He talked very frankly about this and as I was a kid then he told me many things that were the beginning of whatever education I received in international politics Later Ryall wrote under the name of William Bolitho went to New York became a genius and worked at it until he died You may have read his Murder For Profit his Twelve Against The Gods or some of the pieces he wrote in the old N Y World I never saw him after he became Bolitho but when he was Ryall he was a wonderful guy He may have been even finer when he was Bolitho but I do not see how it would be possible I think sometimes being a genius in that hick town must have bored him very much But I never saw him to ask him 13 Walter Lippmann For Bolitho was a radiant person In his company ordinary things were transfigured acquiring the glamour of mystery and great import His talk had a quality which belonged to one who dwelt familiarly so it seemed with the hidden elements of man s life and with the infinite permutations of his affairs In his presence it was easy to believe that one had a private revelation of those great concerns which in prosaic living seem verbal and remote with him one walked quickly through portals that are usually closed into the statelier mansions of the soul He was an eager guide Whoever happened to be there he took with him in his explorations not pausing to ask whether his companion had the wit or the courage for such adventures He was lavish in his talk 14 Walter Duranty Of all the people I have met in the last twenty years and there have been some high sounding names amongst them I think Bolitho had the finest intellect Under forty when he died he had already made his name as a forceful and original writer but his mental range wait far beyond the limits of literature He possessed to a remarkable degree the same quality which proved the key to Lenin s success namely the gift of making a quick and accurate summary of facts and drawing therefrom the right logical and inevitable conclusions Unlike most people he never blindly accepted the opinion of others but always thought things out for himself and never ceased to impress on me the necessity of doing that at all times 15 Publications EditLeviathan Essays chiefly on international politics London Chapman amp Dodd 1923 Cancer of Empire On housing in Glasgow Illustrated London New York G P Putnam s Sons 1924 Murder for Profit Profiles of murderers First published September 1926 London Jonathan Cape 1933 The Travellers library Italy under Mussolini New York The Press Publishing Company New York World 1926 London The Macmillan Company 1926 Twelve against the Gods The Story of Adventure London William Heinemann Ltd 1930 Harmondsworth Penguin Books 1939 Penguin Books no 230 Camera Obscura A collection of his essays and articles with Preface by Noel Coward William Heinemann London printed in U S A 1931 Overture A drama in three acts New York 1931 French s Standard Library Edition References Edit See these authors remarks under Reputation below Walter Duranty dedicated his book I Write as I Please To the memory of Bill Ryall William Bolitho though he refers to him as Bolitho throughout the book a b c d e f g Report on Bolitho s death New York Times 4 June 1930 Available in the New York Times archives at https query nytimes com gst abstract html res 9807E5DD1238E03ABC4C53DFB066838B629EDE Accessed 10 11 2014 Cf England amp Wales FreeBMD Birth Index 1837 1915 Confirmed by the authority of his daughter Camilla Bolitho Ryall See the genealogy com forum at http www genealogy com forum surnames topics bolitho 20 posting by Camilla Bolitho Ryall dated 14 Aug 1999 Accessed 2015 05 14 As indicated by his daughter Camilla Bolitho Ryall See the genealogy com forum at http www genealogy com forum surnames topics bolitho 20 posting by Camilla Bolitho Ryall dated 14 Aug 1999 Accessed 2015 05 14 Also Ryall s name appears in the 1891 census for Droitwich but not in the 1901 census anywhere in the UK See www ancestry com records Accessed 2015 05 23 On the authority of his daughter Camilla Bolitho Ryall see the genealogy com forum http genforum genealogy com bolitho messages 18 html Accessed 2015 05 14 Walter Duranty I Write as I Please New York Simon amp Schuster 1935 ch 9 pp 93 5 List or Manifest of Alien Passengers for the United States Available at www ancestry com New York Passenger Lists 1820 1957 His age is listed as 37 confirming 1891 as his year of birth a b Introduction to Twelve Against the Gods p 14 Walter Duranty I Write as I Please New York Simon amp Schuster 1935 p 254 See the IMDb website under Maurice Cass other works https www imdb com name nm0143912 otherworks accessed 13 11 2014 Noel Coward writing in the Preface to Bolitho s book Camera Obscura p 5 Ernest Hemingway The Malady of Power a second serious letter Esquire v 4 no 5 Nov 1935 Also in By Line Ernest Hemingway Selected Articles and Dispatches of Four Decades Edited by William White New York Touchstone Simon amp Schuster 1998 pp 221 222 Walter Lippmann William Bolitho A Memoir in Twelve Against the Gods Penguin Edition p vii Walter Duranty I Write as I Please New York Simon amp Schuster 1935 ch 9 p 95External links EditQuotations by William Bolitho http strangewondrous net browse author b bolitho william Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Bolitho Ryall amp oldid 1176169143, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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