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Required reading: Last letters from a traveller

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  • Required reading: Last letters from a traveller

    The Times, UK
    May 20 2006

    Required reading


    Last letters from a traveller

    As Jan Morris reaches 80, she has returned to Hav, the mythical
    destination of her first novel. Salley Vickers celebrates a lifetime
    of journeying


    HAV
    by Jan Morris
    Faber (June 1), £16.99; 301pp

    WHEN MY YOUNGER SON turned 16, we went to open his bank account. The
    bank manager looked dubiously at my son's passport, which bore a name
    that differed from the one on the account forms. My son had tried,
    but failed, to have his given name changed legally: at that time you
    could change your surname by law, but your forename was apparently
    carved in stone.


    By way of explanation, my son announced: `I have the same problem as
    Jan Morris,' at which the bank manager became first flustered and
    then propitiating. Afterwards, I said admiringly: `You realise what
    he . . .?' `Sure,' my son said. `I said it to disarm him.'

    This sums up some of the cultural impact of Morris, whose most
    famous, if not her greatest contribution to our age was publicly and
    courageously to cross - besides many geographical ones - the gender
    boundary and who insouciantly remarks in Pleasures of a Tangled Life:
    `I cannot recommend too highly the pleasures of androgyny.' Jan
    Morris's writing has been as catholic and genial as James Morris's
    was. Venice, published when she was still James, a book which
    eloquently discloses a city close to my own heart, is rightly
    considered a classic.

    Her later, and in some ways even better book The Venetian Empire,
    written as Jan, explores that remarkable state's maritime expansion
    through the eastern Mediterranean. The book is written through the
    vista of a voyage, and the draw of the ocean is discernible in
    another of Morris's later works, the strange but somehow typical
    Fisher's Face, a biography of Lord `Jacky' Fisher, Admiral of the
    Fleet, a man of mighty contradictions.

    Fisher's transformation of the Royal Navy was truly prodigious. His
    inspirations and miscalculations were equally so, and only a writer
    as naturally sympathetic to eccentricity as Morris could capture such
    idiosyncratic genius and lunacy.

    Morris has always been proud of her Welsh origins and that is the
    country where she has felt finally at home. She said in a BBC
    interview that of all her many achievements her proudest was being
    elected a member of the Welsh Gorsedd of Bards. From her book on
    Wales, `the damp, demanding and obsessively interesting country', I
    learnt why it is home to so many ancient yews and that beavers still
    lived and built dams there until well into the 18th century.

    If her father secured her attachment to Wales, it was probably from
    her mother, educated in Germany, that Morris acquired her acute
    feeling for the complexities of Europe. Yet, paradoxically, the
    strongest element of that sense is precisely its non-existence, or
    rather its ideational existence, a concept exemplified in what was
    announced as her `final' book, Trieste and The Meaning of Nowhere.

    Morris has movingly said that Trieste is her ideal city because for
    her it is the capital of `that great empire, which is nowhere', `a
    fourth world, beyond the Third World, where the people all feel the
    same, where, whatever their colour or sex or religion or, or anything
    at all, they really at heart feel a certain way about important
    things . . . wherever you go in the world you'll find somebody with
    whom you immediately feel at home. And you know that they feel at
    home with you.'

    That Trieste turns out not to be her last book is a matter for
    celebration. For, in her 80th year, we have a new creation from her
    intrepid inner traveller.

    Hav is the sequel, or second half, of her only novel, Last Letters
    from Hav, shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1985. The country of
    Hav is a mythic place, whose non-existence in the physical world
    exemplifies Morris's deeper affinity with the reality of that `fourth
    world'.

    In Hav `nobody knows what native is. Now as then, you can take your
    choice! Chopin, for example, when he came here with George Sand in
    1839 after their unhappy holiday in Majorca . . . rented a house in
    the Armenian quarter of the Old City and briefly took Armenian
    lessons with the city trumpeter of the day. On the other hand James
    Joyce spent nearly all his time at the Cafe München, the famous
    writers' haunt on Bundstrasse, while Richard Burton the explorer, as
    one might expect, went entirely Arab, strode around the city in
    burnous and golden dagger, flagrantly snubbed the British Resident
    and was rumoured to have got up to terrible things in the darker
    corners of the Medina . . .'

    By the end of the first book, the warships of an enemy power were
    menacing - and in the revisited Hav we see the incursions of a
    depredating world that has, in the 20 intervening years, in our
    parallel one, become salient.

    Hav, as observed by both the book's narrator and its author (who are
    almost one and the same), is the culmination of a life of meditation
    on the philosophical and existential implications of travel and, as
    such, its conclusions are intentionally ambiguous.

    It is, as one might expect of this writer, a deeply civilised and
    civilising book. Of all the qualities that Morris values, she places
    kindness first. Kindness has the same root as kin. To be kind is to
    recognise kinship, that we are all, in essence, of the same kind. We
    are lucky to have Jan Morris, and her gift of transporting us to
    other realms, and other, apparently foreign, sensibilities to aid us
    in this lifesaving understanding.

    EXTRACT FROM 'HAV'

    Inside . . . I found remainders of the past: here a decidedly
    Russian-style landscape (muffled ladies in long skirts snowballing
    with preternaturally rosy children), here a chipped and rusted enamel
    advertisement (TAKE THE TRAIN! MEDITERRANEAN EXPRESS DIRECT TO
    MOSCOW, with a fanciful representation of onion domes and Cossacks),
    and standing in a dark corner cold and unpolished, a fine old samovar
    surmounted by a Russian imperial eagle. But they were no more than
    hints, really, rather than relics of what had once been there.

    `Oh dear me no, Miss Morris, the Impériale is not what it was,' said
    Miss Yegen, when we settled down in her cosy sitting-room for, as she
    put it, `a little light something before bed'.

    `But what would you do? No trains, very few visitors - only Chinese
    and Arab commercials, by and large - and certainly no help from the
    Government. They wanted to pull the place down, actually, when they
    pulled down the station ruins, and it was only because we all made a
    fuss that they let it stand.'

    So making a fuss did have some effect, in the new Hav? `Not often,
    but sometimes. There's not much what you might call public opinion
    these days. The papers don't spend much time on everyday matters - I
    was surprised when the Mirror had that article about me and the
    hotel, but that may have been the influence of Signor BIancheri,
    who's always had a soft spot for the Impériale. Still, it was
    certainly people making a fuss who saved the Roof-Race.'

    I'd forgotten all about the Roof-Race.

    `Oh feelings ran so high about the Roof-Race that those Cathars
    really couldn't go ahead and do away with it. They meant to, you know
    . . .'
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