Daniel Chaucer (ie Ford Madox Ford), The Simple Life
Ltd, John Lane, The Bodley Head, London 1911.
Current selling price £300 +
Seeing that every branch of Waterstones is presently crammed
with fat paperback reprints of the Parade’s End tetrology, now perhaps is the time for publishers to consider new
editions of the less well-known titles by Ford Madox Ford. One of the
contenders must be The Simple Life Ltd (1911), one of two satires with similar themes, the other being The New Humpty Dumpty (1912 ). A reprint would certainly please members of
Ford’s fast-growing band of followers. At present there is no copy of The
Simple Life Ltd on ABE. Indeed, there
appears only to have been one edition, and this is an ever present item on some bookseller’s wants lists.
Simple Life Ltd is
still regarded as a ‘curio‘ among critics, positioned somewhere between the
early fiction and poetry and the experimental, impressionistic work of Ford’s mature
years. Published at a difficult period of his life, just two years after he had
been displaced as editor of The Fortnightly Review, it is a satire on Utopian lifestyles, but
predominantly focuses on those who corrupt the ideals of the simple-life
movement for their own gain. It features
caricatures of many of those with which Ford had been associated a few years
earlier, while living a simple life himself in Pent Farm, Kent and Limpsfield, Surrey. These figures
included anarchists and proto-socialists such as Kropotkin, Edward Pease and
the Garnetts. The frequently abrasive satire at the expense of many of his
former friends may explain why Ford chose to write under the pseudonym Daniel
Chaucer, which he continued to use for The New Humpty Dumpty.
The straight-forward plot of the novel revolves around the
lives of a group of Simple-Lifers (as they are called throughout the book) who,
led by the charismatic Simon Bransdon ( a thinly disguised version of Joseph
Conrad) settle in cottages on land belonging to a Tory squire. Here they engage
in the usual alternative pursuits of vegetarianism, abstemiousness, weaving,
maypole dancing and homeopathy, while they investigate such paranormal
phenomena as telepathy and thought transference. This idyllic existence begins
to implode when one of the more fervent supporters of the utopian philosophy
leaves the colony for university and returns as a Thoreau-like critic of the
leader’s achievements, while the colony’s administrator is first revealed as a
peculator and then is shown abandoning the colony to set up his own garden city in East Croydon.
In the end the settlement is destroyed by fire—an
appropriately symbolic end for a social experiment that carries within it the
seeds of its own destruction.
The Simple Life Limited
is interesting from a historical perspective. While it was being written physically
threatening anarchist activity (such as the Sydney Street Siege) was continuing
in London side by side with the peaceful Garden City movement, which, initiated
principally by the Quaker Ebenezer Howard, had borne its first fruit with the
establishment in 1903 of Letchworth Garden City. Ford could hardly have been
unaware of the ideals of Howard and his disciples and if he visited Letchworth may
have noticed that these principles when turned into bricks and mortar did not
always benefit those who most deserved to be rewarded. Today, it is ironic to
discover that some of the ‘ early
‘houses in ‘ the World’s First Garden City ‘,though originally built as ‘
affordable ‘ alternatives to the insalubrious terraces of industrial cities, are now among the most expensive homes in Hertfordshire,
and as such well beyond the
pockets of today’s simple-lifer .
The recent TV-induced surge in the popularity of Ford
doesn’t seem to have affected his online values much, if at all. Most
firsts, of his many works in fiction and non-fiction come in at under £20, some
at under £15. Such low prices are probably a reflection of his high productivity
and the necessarily uneven quality of his output, which amounted to, on average,
a book a year. Even early editions of the Parades End tetrology aren’t expensive. The exceptions are his
‘masterpiece‘, the Good Soldier (1915), which is online at £2,500, and the two
satires, The Simple Life Limited
and The New Humpty Dumpty—the
latter being of particular interest to those studying the history of socialism
and environmentalism.
I would to thank Nathan Waddell of the University of
Nottingham for allowing me to see the whole of his article on The Simple
Life Limited. [R. M. Healey]
Many thanks Robin. £300 might be cautious for a very sharp copy and in a d/j it would be thrice that. 'Good Soldier' - his masterpiece and a Connolly 100 is, as we have noted, a £10000 book in a jacket. I enjoyed the recent Hueffer fest on the BBC - there are some echoes of 'Simple Life' in the Wannup family. The late Peter Howard had a bunch of early jacketed FMF's he would take to fairs for many a year, oddly they were not subject to his usual very deep discounts...
Above is Ford with Joyce and Pound, the unassuming party on the right is John Quinn, lawyer to the Modernists. His literature collection, sold in 1924 was probably the most desirable of the last 100 years. He owned most of Joseph Conrad’s major manuscripts, the manuscript of Joyce’s 'Ulysses', Synge’s manuscript of 'The Playboy of the Western World', Eliot’s 'Waste Land' and much of Yeats’ best work in manuscript. Those lawyers...
Very glad Bookride has returned!
ReplyDeleteAnother dull "what I paid for it in the 70's" comment. In this instance, a first of "Good Soldier", no dust-wrapper, but inscribed by Ford to Violet Hunt in March, 1915; the inscription incorporating the phrase "the saddest story", Ford's intended title for the book. £75, from a dealer then in business in Cecil Court, bought for a library for which I worked at the time.
ReplyDeleteL-B That actually is the saddest story. Violet Hunt is practically the dedicatee. That copy has probably gone up 100 times since the 70s. Still £75 was a night at the Ritz back then! Thanks for the input. N
ReplyDelete