Jan Morris, R.I.P. | National Review

Political News

[ad_1]

Jan Morris was undoubtedly a brilliant writer. Her prose had a natural liveliness. She observed, she did her homework. Travel pieces were her speciality, and her evocation of busy cities such as Hong Kong, Trieste, Venice, even New York, will always find a place in anthologies. She could turn her hand to writing well about anything. In the Mind’s Eye, reflections she published in 2018, is a little masterwork.

The literary brilliance had begun with James, the masculine gender she had been born with. James Morris made a name for himself as a star reporter on The Times. Accompanying Sir Edmund Hillary, the first to climb Mount Everest, he too had climbed close enough to the top and his scoop made him a national figure. His trilogy, Pax Britannica (1968), Heaven’s Command (1973), and Farewell the Trumpets (1978), are a timely appraisal of what he then called “the muddled grandeur” of the British Empire. It had been a force for good in the world, and “fighting a rearguard action is the right and honourable thing to do.”

But Conundrum (1974), the book describing the re-assignment of gender from James to Jan, was to hang over the brilliance and the flair. It is painful to read, and puzzling because the realization that something is wrong with being James is somehow associated with squatting under the piano aged four while his mother is playing Sibelius. Once I was on a television program with Jan, and the girl coming to dab anti-glare make-up on our faces was embarrassingly unsure what to do. Jan’s mother was English, her father was Welsh but Jan couldn’t speak the language, and her enthusiasm for Welsh nationalism showed that even someone who really was familiar with the ways of the world could harbor a sentimental side. She never divorced Elizabeth, married when she was James. Already prepared, there is a gravestone that reads, “Here are two friends, Jan and Elizabeth, at the end of one life.”

You Might Like
David Pryce-Jones is a British author and commentator and a senior editor of National Review.

[ad_2]

Read the Original Article Here

Articles You May Like

So Sad! Brian Stelter, Post Reporter Can’t Get Press Credentials from Trump Campaign
Dozens arrested at Yale and Columbia cancels classes amid protests
Taylor Swift course at UC Berkeley gets students singing along — and starry-eyed: ‘She’s incredibly fearless’
Trump Can’t Go to Supreme Court, So Instead He Surprised Construction Workers in NYC
Most people on weight loss drugs are spending less on restaurants and takeout, survey says

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *