VictorCanning (1911-1986), once a famous thriller writer with a
reputation matching that of Alistair Mclean or Hammond Innes (and
writing much better English than either of them) has now fallen out
of print and been largely forgotten. His work varied in quality, but
the best of it was magnificent. His masterpiece,
The Rainbird Pattern, won the Crime Writers’
Association Silver Dagger and the Edgar award in the USA in 1973,
and was filmed by Hitchcock in 1976 under the title
Family Plot. Many people will also remember his delightful
children’s book, The Runaways, describing the
parallel adventures of a cheetah that has escaped from Longleat and
gives birth to cubs on Salisbury Plain, and a teenager who has
escaped from an approved school and is determined to stay out of
police clutches until his father comes back from a sea voyage and
can help him clear his name. Others may remember his re-telling of
Arthurian legends in the Crimson Chalice trilogy.
Canning was born in Plymouth in 1911 and lived there until about
1925, when the family moved to Oxford. Later he worked in Somerset
before becoming a full-time writer in 1934 after the huge success of
his firstbook, Mr Finchley discovers his England. After
service in North Africa and Italy in the Second World War, he
settled in Kent and started writing thrillers at a steady rate. He
returned to Devon in 1972 and lived there for several years before
finally settling in Gloucestershire. He retained his Devon accent up
to his death in 1986, and made frequent allusions to the county in
his work.
From 1915 to 1919 his father served as an ambulance driver in
Flanders, and Victor with his mother and sisters went to Calstock to
live. A younger brother of his mother, Cecil McDonald Gould (or
Goold), lived there with his family and later worked there on the
railway, becoming station master at Calstock and Gunnislake. Victor
often went back to see him after the war, since they were quite
close in age. It was then, probably, that he became fascinated by
the Calstock Viaduct which more than ten years later he would
incorporate into one of the best of his early novels,
The Viaduct, published in 1939 by Hodder and Stoughton. He
published it under the pen-name Alan Gould, which he was using for
his serious novels, reserving his real name Victor Canning for the
whimsical comic novels he was also writing.
The Viaduct was set in 1870 in the fictional village of
Caradon, obviously based on Calstock. John Seabright is sent to take
charge of a construction team building a viaduct to carry the
railway line between London and Penzance over the river Tamar. There
is tension between the traditionally minded villagers and the rough
gang of navvies. Francesca, the daughter of a local aristocrat Lord
Maddacleave, has progressive ideas and would like to train for a
profession, but is expected by her family to conform to convention.
A romance develops between her and Oliver Bearsted, Seabright's
deputy,stronger on his side than on hers since she is attracted
mainly by the thoughtof getting away from her family.
A local farmer, Ernest Notter, takes his bride to Plymouth for their
honeymoon. On the return journey on board a coastal steamer, they
meet a drunken group of navvies, one of whom tries to kiss Mrs
Notter, is hit over the head by Ernest, falls overboard and drowns.
Notter runs away, is caught and is charged with murder. The Cornish
jury acquits him, which enrages a friend ofthe dead navvy who first
tries to burn down the farmer's house, and then, having been sacked
by Seabright, sets about sabotaging the viaduct. An outbreak of
typhoid kills ten of the navvies and Seabright's estranged wife. In
a melodramatic climax, Bearsted foils an attempt to blow up the
viaduct, but falls into the river and dies, along with the son of
the local postmistress who has raised the alarm. Seabright and
Francesca fall in love.
Since the Calstock viaduct went up after 1900, one may wonder why
Canning set his book thirty years earlier. Probably he had been
doing his research about the building of the line, and wanted his
characters to include people who had known and worked with Brunel.
He was obviously fascinated by the attitudes of the traditionalists
of the mid-Victorian era and the social upheavals that were
imminent. Perhaps, too, he wanted to make surethat nobody in
Calstock who might otherwise recognise themselves and take offence
could identify directly with the characters in thebook.
|
The book contains plenty of incident and is grippinglytold with good
observation of people and places. For a taste of Canning’s
style, here is a short extract from an early chapter, in which the
hero John Seabright has an encounter with a local grandee.
As they approached the water Seabright was aware of a small
group on the quay edge. There were two lads, one of them the
boy, Harry, who had rowed him across the previous day, the other
a taller,more slenderly built lad with a head of fine dark hair
that swept back from his brow in rich waves. His luxuriant hair
and a thin, almost delicate face gave him a girlish look. Both
the boys were stripped save for white swimming-drawers, and
beside them, one hand holding the reins of a fat chestnut cob,
the other holding up a gold hunter, was a middle-aged well
dressed man. His curly brimmed bowler hat was pushed back a
little to reveal a round, well-fed face, the eyes small and the
chin sunk into a plump morass of skin. His coat front was open
to show a fine buff coloured waistcoat.
“Now you understand,” he addressed the two boys.
“You take different sides, the first one there makes his
choice, up to the top, any way you choose,and the. first one
back gets this—” His hand released the reins and the
bright flicker of a half-guinea soared into the air and fell
into the dust of the quay. “There it is—the first
back picks it up.”
“Now I wonder what the devil he’s up to?”
murmured Minns as they approached the group. “He’s
Mr. Cator—some kind of relation of Lord
Maddacleave—andthe tall boy is Lord Maddacleave’s
son, the Right Honourable Philip Preston. The other is a village
lad, but the boy Philip mixe swith them.”
Mr. Cator gave them a glance as they approached, nodded
carelessly to Minns and then swung heavily into his saddle.
“Are you ready?” he cried, looking at his
watch.“One, two, three—off you go!”
Seabright watched curiously. He saw the two young bodies, tensed
as Cator spoke, and then, at the go, they were off. They
sprinted across the quayside and dived together into the river
and were threshing away downstream as fast as they could swim.
The water flew into the air from their arms, a bright spray that
caught the sunlight.
“Two fine boys,” said Mr. Cator. Not a pin to choose
between ’em so far.”
The boys were making for the middle pier of the viaduct.Harry
reached it first and grasped the wooden boom that protected
thecut-water. He swung himself out of the water and began to
climb the scaffold ingto the right of the pier. Philip, a few
seconds behind him, took the left-hand side, and as they climbed
upwards the group of masons and labourers on the wide platform
at the head of the pier stopped work and looked downwards at
them. On the climb Philip’s agility made up for
Harry’s advantage in the water and they reached the top
together. The masons gave them a cheer which went echoing across
the water.
“Now home!” panted Philip, grinning at Harry, and
without a second’s hesitation he drew back along the
platform and then ran forward,diving outwards.
Back on the quay Seabright sawthat movement and for a moment was
filled with fear. The young fool, he thoughtangrily. The drop
was a good fifty feet and the cut-water boom spread out intothe
water below. He saw the flash of bare limbs as Philip shot
downwards and then the splash as he struck the water. He held
his breath, his mind troubled with a vision of underwater piles.
The next moment he breathed freely, the boy appeared and began
swimming vigorously back to the quay and before he had gone
three strokes there was a splash on the other side of the pier
as Harryfollowed his example.
“Did you see that, gentlemen?” Cator’s face
was flushed with vicarious excitement. “They’ve got
spunk, By Jove, I didn’t think they would do it. Eighty
feet if it’s an inch.” He drove his horse to the
quayside and halloed them on.
They came, fighting side by side against the stream, and Harry
began to draw ahead. He came panting into the quay steps and
pulled himself from the water. He reached the half guinea six
feet ahead of Philip.
“Magnificent!” bellowed Cator, looking at his watch.
“Seven minutes and sixteen seconds. You’ve earned
your money, Harry, me boy. Philip, you’re degenerate.
You’ve disappointed me!”
Philip grinned. “Harry was always a better swimmer than
I,sir.”
Seabright intruded himself.
“Excuse me, sir,” he addressed Cator. “My name
is Seabright, John Seabright, and I’m the engineer in
charge of the works here—”
“Indeed!” There was a hint of truculence in
Cator’s voice as he answered, as though he guessed that
there was trouble coming and would make no effort to avoid it.
“I don’t wish to seem a spoilsport, but I feel bound
to point out that it was extremely foolhardy to encourage these
lads to risk their necks up that scaffolding—”
“Who asked you for your opinion, sir?”
Seabright ignored the deliberate provocation in Cator’s
words.
“I am not giving an opinion now, sir. I am giving an
order. In future you two boys will keep away from the viaduct
scaffolding. Minns—you will see that the men get
instructions to let no one there without authority.” He
turned to Cator and looked quietly at him. He knew his type
well, the jolly, easy-living sort that went about encouraging
wagers, happy when they had set men or animals in competition
and never careful of any risk unless it was to their own necks.
“If you want to help one of these lads to a broken neck,
sir, you can so far as I’m concerned, but you won’t
do it on our scaffolding. If you’re so keen on swimming
and climbing I suggest you do some yourself, it would do no harm
to your body!”
“By God, sir!” Cator’s face flushed red, but
his anger was lost in a happy burst of laughter from Philip.
Cator swung towards him fiercely. “Stop laughing, sir! Is
it so funny to see your own flesh and blood insulted?”
Sadly the book itself is not only out of print, it is also almost
unobtainable. Very few copies are ever seen on the second hand
market. I hope that some enterprising publisher can be found who
will republish it, and that people who read this article will
encourage them.
|