Gilbert Frankau

Gilbert Frankau

Gilbert Frankau (21 April 1884 – 4 November 1952) was a popular British novelist. He was known also for verse (he was a war poet of World War I) including a number of verse novels, and short stories. He was born in London into a Jewish family, but was baptised as an Anglican at the age of 13. After education at Eton College, he went into the family cigar business, and became Managing Director on his twenty-first birthday, his father Arthur Frankau having died in November 1904.[1] A few months before his death, at sixty-eight, from lung cancer, he converted to Roman Catholicism.

Career

Frankau served in the British Army from the outbreak of war in 1914. He was first commissioned in the 9th Battalion of the East Surrey Regiment on 6 October 1914,[2] and was later a Staff Captain – experiences that he later used in novels. He fought in major battles of the British Expeditionary Force in France and wrote for the Wipers Times before being invalided out on 22 February 1918.[3] The family business not having survived the war, he became a writer.

His novels, while having conventional romantic content, also contained material from his own conservative politics and meditations on Jewish identity in the climate of the times. Some of them were filmed (see Christopher Strong; If I Marry Again was based on a short story). His status as a divorcé (he married three times) frustrated his political ambitions – the Conservative Party of the time did not regard divorce as acceptable. His outspoken criticism of Stanley Baldwin also did nothing to endear him to the Tory leadership.[4]

Recalling the 1920s, Gilbert Frankau wrote: "Political journalism meant more to me than my novels and short stories. Only fiction, however, could make me enough money to gratify my supreme ambition – a seat in the House."[5] In 1928, he was invited by the then proprietor of "The Great Eight" – a group of weeklies including Tatler, The Graphic, and the Illustrated London News – to launch a new Right-wing weekly newspaper, Britannia.[6] Frankau threw himself into this venture with characteristic energy, but it was not a success.[7] After he had been unceremoniously removed from his post, TIME gleefully reported:[8]

"Twirling his glass of sherry, Gilbert 'Swankau' Frankau alibied: "'As the founder of Britannia [sip], I said what I thought, without fear or favor. Evidently I am against lots of people [sip], for I believe in everything British! That was what Britannia stood for while I held her helm.' "Actually the Frankau weekly Britannia stood not for but against everything British or foreign which did not come within the extreme Fascist fringe of the little Semite's whims. He was 'agin' the Government of Conservative Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin, 'agin' the David Lloyd George Liberals, 'agin' the Ramsay MacDonald Laborites..."

In the aftermath of this disappointment, Gilbert Frankau – according to his own account – approached a Tory politician he "knew to be rather close to Stanley Baldwin", offering to stand for Parliament at his own expense in the forthcoming General Election, but was advised: "'I'd better be frank with you. As a divorced man, you could never be adopted by the Conservative party. If you're so keen on a political career, I should try the Labour people. They're not so particular.'"[9] Frankau remained a staunch Right-winger, however. In 1933 his notorious Daily Express article "As a Jew I am Not Against Hitler"[10] was published shortly after Adolf Hitler had come to power in Germany; he later retracted his position. In fact, this particular piece was more balanced than the headline now appears: "Time alone will tell whether the little Austrian with the Charlie Chaplin moustache is a mere spellbinder or a statesman", comments Frankau, ending with the poignant question, "who are we, the great expounders of democracy, and how are we, already disarmed to the point of national danger, to interfere?"

His autobiography, completed in August 1939,[11] includes emphatically anti-German comments, such as: "The Pomper of Potsdam looked all of a war lord, even if he did bolt to Doorn like a rabbit. The Neurasthenic of Nuremberg and his gangster stooges look — the hooligans they are."[12]

Few of his literary works have survived in reputation.

Family

His mother Julia Frankau (1859–1916), sister of Mrs Aria and Owen Hall, wrote under the name Frank Danby (and is said to have collaborated with George Moore). His daughter Pamela Frankau from his first marriage was at least as successful as a writer. Another daughter also wrote, and Timothy d'Arch Smith, writer and bibliographer, is a grandson. His brother was comedian Ronald Frankau. His sister was the Cambridge don Joan Bennett (1896–1986), one of the "constellation of critics" called by the defence in the Lady Chatterley Trial.[13] His niece is the actress Rosemary Frankau.

Works

References

  1. Gilbert Frankau, Self-Portrait, Hutchinson 1940, Ch. 18 p99
  2. http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/28969/pages/9136
  3. http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/30535/supplements/2286
  4. Gilbert Frankau, Self-Portrait, Hutchinson 1940, Ch. 43 pp270-271
  5. Gilbert Frankau, Self-Portrait, Hutchinson 1940, Ch. 43 p265
  6. Gilbert Frankau, Self-Portrait, Hutchinson 1940, Ch. 54 pp331-334
  7. Gilbert Frankau, Self-Portrait, Hutchinson 1940, Chh. 54–60 refer passim, in some detail
  8. Time, Vol. XII, No. 26, Monday 24 December 1928: Agin, Agin, Agin
  9. Gilbert Frankau, Self-Portrait, Hutchinson 1940, Ch. 59 p367
  10. Daily Express, Tuesday 9 May 1933
  11. Gilbert Frankau, Self-Portrait, Hutchinson 1940, Epilogue p415
  12. Gilbert Frankau, Self-Portrait, Hutchinson 1940, Ch. 10 p58
  13. Michael Squires (ed.), Lady Chatterley's Lover and "À Propos of Lady Chatterley's Lover", Cambridge University Press 1993, Introduction ppxxxviii-xxxix

External links