I have long wondered whether Tolkien had ever read anything
by A.E. Coppard. In the rear of my anthology
Tales Before Tolkien (2003),
I included a note on Coppard in the final section, “Author Notes and Recommended
Reading.” It reads:
Coppard, A[lfred]. E[dgar]. (1878-1957)
British writer, who specialized in
the short story, many of which fancifully describe rural England. While Coppard
published numerous collections, his own selection of his best work, The Collected
Tales of A.E. Coppard (1948), was very successful, and it provides a good
introduction to the author’s writings. (p. 429)
In his Foreword to his Collected Tales, Coppard noted
that the short story “is an ancient art originating in the folk tale, which was
a thing of joy before writing. . . . The folk tale ministered to an apparently
inborn and universal desire to hear tales, and it is my feeling that the closer
the modern short story conforms to that ancient tradition of being spoken to
you, rather than being read to you, the more acceptable it becomes.” It is a
view with which Tolkien would have felt some affinity.
Recently, Andoni Cossio discovered a photograph of Tolkien at
an Oxford party for the writer A.E. Coppard. It appeared in The Tatler and
Bystander of Wednesday, 11 February
1953. We haven’t have an exact date yet for the party, but it was in honor of
Coppard’s 75th birthday on Sunday, 4 January 1953. Oxford would not have been
in session that early in January, and the Hilary Full Term actually began on 18
January 1953, so the party would seem to have been sometime in late January or
early February (before the 11th, when the photograph was published).
There are actually four photographs published from the
event, accompanying the “Talk Around the Town” column by Gordon Beckles in that
issue of The Tatler and Bystander. (Click on the photos to make them larger.)
In one photograph, we see Tolkien standing with Richard
Hughes, who reviewed The Hobbit favorably in 1937, and who would provide
a blurb that would be used on the flaps of all three volumes of The Lord of
the Rings (1954-1955). Other literary figures seen in the photographs
include Enid Starkie, Louis Golding and C. Day Lewis. The caption to the
photograph with Tolkien notes it was taken in the Beckington Room at Lincoln
College, Oxford, presumably the place where the reading and reception took
place.
Coppard did not study at Oxford, but he lived in the Oxford
area from 1907 through 1919, when he was a clerk and an accountant at the Eagle
Ironworks. In Oxford he met for the first time other people interested in
books, and he began writing. His first of many books of short stories, Adam &
Eve & Pinch Me, was published in 1922 by the Golden Cockerel Press.
There is some correspondence files, held at Texas A & M
University, of the American poet and academic David Louis Posner (1921-1985)
from the time when he was at Wadham College, Oxford. Apparently, he was responsible
for planning a dinner for Coppard, probably separate from the public reading
and reception. There are a number of cards and letters sent to Posner at Wadham
dating from 1 December 1952 through 24 January 1953. Jonathan Cape, who had over
the years published a number of Coppard’s books, was the first to accept,
writing on 1 December 1952 and suggesting other people to invite. Those who
declined the invitation included Leonard Woolf, T.S. Eliot, Robert Gibbings (who
had joined the Golden Cockerel Press in 1924, and who had published a number of
Coppard’s books), and Christopher Sandford (who took over the Golden Cockerel
Press in 1933, and published one further Coppard title, Tapster’s Tapestry,
in 1938). The final letter in the
collection declining the invitation to the dinner was dated 24 January 1953, so
the dinner and the public reading seem to have been not long afterward. We can
narrow this down a bit further owing to the discovery of an article on the “Short
Story” in the Liverpool Daily Post for Monday, 2 February 1953, which
mentions the “birthday tribute paid during the past week by Oxford University
to a famous short story writer on reaching the age of seventy-five” (Coppard is
later named as “the recipient of the Varsity honour”). The “past week” would
have been from Sunday the 25th to Saturday the 31st of January. (Readers of the
Liverpool Daily Post may have seen this article as a follow-up to one “Remembered
Veterans” by “Brother Savage”, from 3 January 1953, in which it states, “the
approach of his [Coppard’s] birthday on January 4 has prompted Cecil Hunt, a
literary colleague, to suggest that there must be many who would wish this milestone
in Coppard’s life to be ‘garlanded by gratitude for the pleasure his work has
released.’”) At present, the week of
January 25th is the closest we can get to the specific date of the event.
What short story did Coppard read? It would be interesting to know, but so far
there is no firm evidence on the matter. That Posner kept a single Coppard
autograph manuscript with his letters
about the dinner might suggest that he obtained the manuscript from Coppard at
this time. The story is catalogued as “Chinfeather,” dated 3 November 1939, and
comprises eleven leaves, heavily corrected. It was published in the Coppard
collection Ugly Anna and Other Tales (1944).
If Coppard had read a recently completed story, then the
likely candidate would be “Lucy in Her Pink Jacket,” written in a few versions
between 18 November 1952 and 17 January 1953, when the latest draft was typed.
It was published in Esquire in December 1953, and collected in an eponymous
volume in 1954.
Of course it needn’t have been either story, which are here
entertained merely as possibilities with some slight circumstantial evidence. Hopefully,
future research will fill in the gaps about this occasion.
Thanks to Andoni Cossio (ORCID: 0000-0003-2745-5104) and
John Locke for assistance on this piece.