Lord Peter Wimsey

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Early paperback edition cover of Murder Must Advertise
Early paperback edition cover of Murder Must Advertise

Lord Peter Death Bredon Wimsey is a fictional character in a series of detective novels and short stories by Dorothy L. Sayers, in which he solves mysteries — usually murder mysteries.

Born in 1890 and aging in real-time, Wimsey is described as having at best average height with straw-colored hair, a beaked nose, and a vaguely foolish face (reputedly his looks were patterned after academic Roy Ridley). He also possessed considerable intelligence and athletic ability, evidenced by playing cricket for Oxford University while earning a First.

In How I Came to Invent the Character of Lord Peter Wimsey,[1] Sayers wrote:

Lord Peter's large income ... I deliberately gave him ... After all it cost me nothing and at the time I was particularly hard up and it gave me pleasure to spend his fortune for him. When I was dissatisfied with my single unfurnished room I took a luxurious flat for him in Piccadilly. When my cheap rug got a hole in it, I ordered him an Aubusson carpet. When I had no money to pay my bus fare I presented him with a Daimler double-six, upholstered in a style of sober magnificence, and when I felt dull I let him drive it. I can heartily recommend this inexpensive way of furnishing to all who are disconnented with their incomes. It relieves the mind and does no harm to anybody.

The novels are set in Britain contemporary to when they were written, from the early 1920s to the late 1930s; the story "Talboys" (and Jill Paton Walsh's recent continuations Thrones, Dominations and A Presumption of Death) continue this into the early 1940s.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Lord Peter Wimsey is the second child of Mortimer, 15th Duke of Denver, and Honoria Lucasta, who lives on throughout the novels as the Dowager Duchess.

Lord Peter was educated at Eton College and Balliol College, Oxford, where he received a first-class degree in history. He served in the British Army from 1914-1918 (World War I) including a stint in the trenches, attaining the rank of Major in the Rifle Brigade. In the army he met Sergeant Mervyn Bunter, who had previously been in service. After the two shared what the Dowager Duchess referred to as "a jam" the two arranged that if they were both to survive the war, Bunter would become Wimsey's valet (or manservant or gentleman's personal gentleman).

Wimsey suffered a breakdown due to shell shock and was eventually sent home. After the war he was ill for many months, recovering at the family's ancestral home in Duke's Denver (fictional like the dukedom it gives its name to) which lies some fifteen miles beyond the 'original' Denver on the A10 near Downham Market). Bunter arrived, and with the approval of the Dowager Duchess, took up his post. Bunter moved Wimsey to a London flat at 110A Piccadilly, W1 as Wimsey recovered.

Lord Peter begins his hobby of investigation by recovering the Attenbury Emeralds. He also becomes good friends with Scotland Yard Chief Inspector Charles Parker. Bunter, being a man of many talents himself — not least photography — often proves instrumental for Peter's investigations. However, Wimsey is not entirely well. At the end of the investigation in Whose Body? (1923) he hallucinates that he is back in the trenches. He soon recovers his senses and goes on a long vacation.

The next year he returns to Duke's Denver to assist his older brother Gerald, accused of murdering their sister's fiance. As Gerald is the current Duke of Denver, the resulting trial takes place in the House of Lords. Lady Mary also falls under suspicion. Gerald's snobbish wife, Helen, and devil-may-care heir, Viscount St. George, also make appearances in the novels.

It is not exactly known when Wimsey recruited Miss Climpson to run an undercover employment agency for women in order to be able to garner information from the world of spinsters and widows which neither master or man would be able to access, but it is prior to Unnatural Death (1927).

In Strong Poison Lord Peter meets Harriet Deborah Vane and falls in love with her. Harriet is a cerebral, Oxford-educated mystery writer on trial for the murder of her former lover. Needless to say, Wimsey saves her from the gallows, but based on the principle that gratitude is not a good foundation for marriage, she politely but firmly declines his frequent proposals. Lord Peter does encourage his friend and foil, Chief Inspector Charles Parker, to propose to his sister Lady Mary Wimsey. They marry and have a son, named Charles Peter.

Wimsey continues to pursue Miss Vane, but does not get much satisfaction. He investigates a murder while on vacation in Scotland (Five Red Herrings). On his return he finds Miss Vane is not at home. He learns her location when reporter Salcombe Hardy asks Wimsey to comment on the murder victim Vane discovered on her walking-tour of England's coast (Have His Carcase). Hardy does not have to point out that Vane may have committed the murder herself. One who was once tried for murder does not have the best reputation. The next morning Wimsey is at her hotel — to investigate the death and offer proposals of marriage, to be sure, but also act as her patron and protector with press and police. Despite a prickly relationship, they do work together to identify the murderer.

Back in London, Wimsey goes undercover as "Death Bredon" at an advertising firm, working as a copywriter (Murder Must Advertise). Bredon is framed for murder, leading Charles Parker to "arrest" Bredon for murder in front of the press. To distinguish Death Bredon from Lord Peter Wimsey, Parker smuggles Wimsey out of the station and urges him to get into the papers. Accordingly Wimsey accompanies "a Royal personage" to a public event, leading the press to carry pictures of both "Bredon" and Wimsey.

By 1935, Lord Peter is in Europe, acting as an unofficial attache for the British Foreign Office. Harriet Vane contacts him about a problem she has been asked to investigate in her college at Oxford (Gaudy Night). At the end of their investigation, Vane finally accepts Peter's proposal of marriage. The couple marry, on October 8, 1935, at St. Cross Church, Holywell, Oxford (depicted in the opening collection of letters and diary entries in Busman's Honeymoon).

The Wimseys go off on honeymoon to Talboys, a house in east Hertfordshire near to where the young Harriet's father was a country doctor, and which she has loved from childhood, and which Peter has bought for her as a wedding present. There, they find the body of the previous owner, and spend their honeymoon solving the case, thus having the eponymous busman's honeymoon (Busman's Honeymoon).

The Wimseys have three children: Bredon Delagardie Peter Wimsey (born in October 1936 in the story "The Haunted Policeman" and featured in the 1942 story "Talboys"); Roger Wimsey (born 1938), and Paul Wimsey (born 1940). Note that in A Presumption of Death the second son is called Paul, because in the wartime publications of The Wimsey Papers Dorothy L. Sayers called him that.

Other recurring characters include multiple appearances from solicitor Murbles, newshound Salcombe Hardy, and city whizz The Hon. Freddy Arbuthnot, who finds himself entangled in the case in the first of the Wimsey books, 1923's Whose Body?.

Among Lord Peter's hobbies, apart from criminology, is collecting incunabula (very early printed books). He is an expert on matters of food (especially wine) and male fashion, as well as on classical music. He is quite good at playing Bach's works for keyboard instruments on a piano he babies even more than his books, wines, and cars. One of Lord Peter's cars is a 12-cylinder ("double-six") 1927 Daimler four-seater, which he calls "Mrs. Merdle" after a character in Little Dorrit (by Charles Dickens).

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] Novels

With year of first publication

[edit] Short story collections

[edit] Stage, movies, television and radio

The cover of Gaudy Night, from the BBC series. Featuring Edward Petherbridge as Lord Peter Wimsey
The cover of Gaudy Night, from the BBC series. Featuring Edward Petherbridge as Lord Peter Wimsey

The novel Busman's Honeymoon was originally a stage play by Sayers and her friend Muriel St. Clare Byrne.

Some of the Lord Peter Wimsey novels were made into two very successful television series by the BBC. Lord Peter Wimsey was played by Ian Carmichael in a series that ran from 1972 to 1975 and adapted five novels, and by Edward Petherbridge in 1987, wherein the three major Wimsey/Vane novels were dramatized. Harriet was played by Harriet Walter. The BBC was unable to secure the rights to turn Busman's Honeymoon into the fourth part of the series. Both series are now available on videotape and DVD.

Edward Petherbridge also played Wimsey in the UK production of the Busman's Honeymoon play staged at the Lyric Hammersmith in 1988 (it also toured in the North of England), with the role of Harriet being taken by his real life spouse, Emily Richard.

Ian Carmichael also starred as Wimsey in radio adaptations of the novels made by the BBC, all of which have been available on cassette and CD from the BBC Radio Collection. In the original series, which ran on Radio 4 from 1973–1983, no adaptation was made of the seminal Gaudy Night, perhaps because the leading character in this novel is Harriet and not Peter; this was corrected in 2005 when a version specially recorded for the BBC Radio Collection was released starring Carmichael and Joanna David. The CD also includes a panel discussion on the novel, the major participants in which are P. D. James and Jill Paton Walsh.

There was a 1935 British movie of The Silent Passenger in which Lord Peter solved a mystery on the boat train crossing the English Channel, but the film does not seem to be available on videotape, at least in the United States. Sayers disliked the film; James Brabazon describes it as an "oddity, in which Dorothy's contribution was altered out of all recognition."

The 1940 film The Haunted Honeymoon (US title) or Busman's Honeymoon (UK title), starring Robert Montgomery and Constance Cummings as Lord and Lady Peter, is available on videotape in generic boxes on the secondary market. Any resemblance of its characters and events to those in Busman's Honeymoon is more than coincidental but less than satisfactory to Sayers's fans; the film script simplifies the novel's plot a great deal. (In the TV adaptation of Murder Must Advertise, a movie poster of Robert Montgomery is prominently visible on the wall in the secretaries' office.) Sayers refused even to see this movie.

[edit] Books about Lord Peter by other authors

As a footnote, Lord Peter Wimsey has also been included by the science fiction writer Philip José Farmer as a member of the Wold Newton family; and Laurie R. King's detective character Mary Russell meets Lord Peter at a party in the novel A Letter of Mary.

[edit] External links

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Quoted by Barbara Reynolds in Dorothy L. Sayers: Her Life and Soul with the parenthetical "not entirely accurate, but why should it be?", page 230.
  • Lord Peter Wimsey's Who's Who or Debrett-like entry is located in most books. Depending on the printing it is in the front or the rear of each book. The same Who's Who article is consulted by Miss Meteyard in Murder Must Advertise when she begins to suspect that new copywriter Mr. Bredon is not just the bumbling oaf he pretends to be.
  • A short biographical essay, said to be the work of Peter's uncle Paul Austin Delagardie, the brother of the Dowager Duchess, appears in many editions.