Eric Arthur Blair (25 June 1903 – 21 January
1950), better known by his
pen name
George Orwell, was an English novelist and
journalist. His work is marked by a
profound awareness of social injustice, an intense,
revolutionary opposition to
totalitarianism, his passion for clarity in
language and a belief in
democratic
socialism.
Considered perhaps the 20th century's best chronicler of
English culture, he wrote
literary criticism and
poetry, as well as
fiction and
polemical journalism. He is best known for the
dystopian novel
Nineteen Eighty-Four (written
1948, published 1949) and for the
satirical novella
Animal Farm (1945). His
Homage to Catalonia
(1938), an account of his experiences and observations in the
Spanish Civil War, and his
numerous
essays
are widely acclaimed. Orwell's influence on culture
popular and
political continues, several of his
neologisms, along with the term
Orwellian, having entered the
vernacular.
Biography
Early life and education
Eric
Arthur Blair was born on 25 June 1903 in Motihari
, Bihar
, Bengal Presidency, British India. His great-grandfather
Charles Blair had been a wealthy plantation owner in Jamaica
and his
grandfather, Thomas Richard Arthur Blair, a clergyman.
Although the gentility was passed down the generations, the
prosperity was not; Eric Blair described his family as "
lower-upper-middle class". His father, Richard
Walmesley Blair, worked in the
Opium
Department of the
Indian Civil
Service.
His mother, Ida Mabel Blair (née Limouzin),
grew up in Burma
where her
French father was involved in speculative ventures. Eric had
two sisters; Marjorie, five years older, and Avril, five years
younger. When Eric was one year old, Ida Blair took him to
England.
In 1905,
Blair's mother settled at Henley-on-Thames
. Eric was brought up in the company of his
mother and sisters, and apart from a brief visit he did not see his
father again until 1912. His mother's diary for 1905 indicates a
lively round of social activity and artistic interests.
The family
moved to Shiplake
before
World War I, and Eric became friendly
with the Buddicom family, especially Jacintha Buddicom. When they first
met, he was standing on his head in a field, and on being asked why
he said, "You are noticed more if you stand on your head than if
you are right way up". Jacintha and Eric read and wrote poetry and
dreamed of becoming famous writers. He told her that he might write
a book in similar style to that of
H.
G. Wells's
A Modern Utopia. During
this period, he enjoyed shooting, fishing, and birdwatching with
Jacintha’s brother and sister.
At the age
of six, Eric Blair attended the Anglican
parish school in Henley-on-Thames
, remaining until he was eight. His mother
wanted him to have a
public
school education, but his family was not wealthy enough to
afford the fees, making it necessary for him to obtain a
scholarship.
Ida Blair's brother Charles Limouzin, who
lived on the South Coast, recommended St Cyprian's
School
, Eastbourne
, Sussex. The
headmaster undertook to help Blair to win the scholarship, and made
a private financial arrangement which allowed Blair's parents to
pay only half the normal fees. Later, and with publication delayed
until after his death, Orwell was to write
Such, Such Were the Joys, an
account of his unhappy time at the school. At St. Cyprian's, Blair
first met
Cyril Connolly, who would
himself become a noted writer and who, as the editor of
Horizon magazine, would
publish many of Orwell's essays.
While at the school Blair wrote two poems
that were published in the Henley
and South Oxfordshire Standard, the local newspaper, came
second to Connolly in the Harrow
History Prize, had his work praised by the school's external
examiner, and earned scholarships to Wellington
and Eton
.
After a term at Wellington College, Blair transferred to Eton
College, where he was a
King's
Scholar (1917–1921). His tutor was
A. S. F. Gow, fellow of
Trinity
College, Cambridge
who remained a source of advice later in his
career. Blair was briefly taught French by
Aldous Huxley who spent a short interlude
teaching at Eton, but outside the classroom there was no contact
between them. Cyril Connolly followed Blair to Eton, but because
they were in separate years they did not associate with each other.
Blair's academic performance reports suggest that he neglected his
academic studies, but during his time he worked with
Roger Mynors to produce a college magazine and
participated in the
Eton Wall Game.
His parents could not afford to send him to university without
another scholarship, and they concluded from his poor results that
he would not be able to obtain one. However
Stephen Runciman, who was a close
contemporary, noted that he had a romantic idea about the East and,
for whatever reason, it was decided that Blair should join the
Indian Imperial Police. To do
this, it was necessary to pass an entrance examination.
His
father had retired to Southwold
, Suffolk by this time and
Blair was enrolled at a "crammer" there
called "Craighurst" where he brushed up on his classics, English
and History. Blair passed the exam, coming seventh out of
twenty-seven.
Burma
Blair's
grandmother lived at Moulmein
, and with family connections in the area, his
choice of posting was Burma
. In
October 1922 he sailed on board S.S.
Herefordshire via the
Suez
Canal
and Ceylon
to join the
Indian Imperial Police in Burma. A month later, he
arrived at Rangoon
and made the journey to Mandalay
, the site of the police training school.
After a
short posting at Maymyo
, Burma's
principal hill station, he was posted
to the frontier outpost of Myaungmya in
the Irrawaddy Delta at the beginning
of 1924.
His imperial policeman's life gave him considerable
responsibilities for a young man, while his contemporaries were
still at university in England.
When he was posted to Twante
as a
sub-divisional officer, he was responsible for the security of some
200,000 people. At the end of 1924 he was promoted to
Assistant District Superintendent and posted to Syriam
, which was
closer to Rangoon. In September 1925 he went to Insein
, the home of
the second largest jail in Burma. In Insein he had "long
talks on every conceivable subject" with a journalist friend, Elisa
Maria Langford-Rae (later the wife of
Kazi Lhendup Dorjee), who noted his
"sense of utter fairness in minutest details".
In April 1926 he moved to Moulmein, where his grandmother lived.
At the
end of that year, he went to Katha
, where he
contracted Dengue fever in 1927.
He was entitled to
leave in England
that year, and in view of his illness, was allowed to go home in
July. While on leave in England in 1927, he reappraised his life
and resigned from the Indian Imperial Police with the intention of
becoming a writer. His Burma police experience yielded the novel
Burmese Days (1934) and the
essays "
A Hanging" (1931) and "
Shooting an Elephant" (1936).
London and Paris
In England, he settled back in the family home at Southwold,
renewing acquaintance with local friends and attending an Old
Etonian dinner. He visited his old tutor Gow at Cambridge for
advice on becoming a writer, and as a result he decided to move to
London.
Ruth Pitter, a
family acquaintance, helped him find lodgings and by the end of
1927 he had moved into rooms in Portobello Road
(a blue plaque
commemorates his residence there). Pitter took a vague
interest in his writing as he set out to collect literary material
on a social class as different from his own as were the natives of
Burma.
Following the precedent of
Jack London,
whom he admired, he started his exploratory expeditions to the
poorer parts of London.
On his first outing he set out to Limehouse
Causeway spending his first night in a common
lodging house, possibly George Levy's
'kip'. For a while he "went native" in his own country,
dressing like a
tramp and making no
concessions to middle class mores and expectations; he recorded his
experiences of the low life for later use in "
The Spike", his first published essay, and
the latter half of his first book,
Down and Out in Paris and
London (1933).
In the spring of 1928, he moved to Paris, where the comparatively
low cost of living and bohemian lifestyle offered an attraction for
many aspiring writers. His Aunt Nellie Limouzin also lived there
and gave him social and, if necessary, financial support. He worked
on novels, but only
Burmese Days survives from that
activity. More successful as a journalist, he published articles in
Monde (not to be confused with
Le
Monde),
G.
K.'s Weekly and
Le
Progres Civique (founded by the left-wing coalition
Le Cartel des Gauches).
He fell seriously ill in March 1929 and shortly afterwards had all
his money stolen from the lodging house.
Whether through
necessity or simply to collect material, he undertook menial jobs
like dishwashing in a fashionable hotel on the rue de Rivoli
providing experiences to be used in Down and
Out in Paris and London. In August 1929 he sent a copy
of "The Spike" to
New
Adelphi magazine in London. This was owned by
John Middleton Murry who had released
editorial control to
Max Plowman and
Sir Richard Rees.
Plowman accepted the work for publication.
Southwold
In December 1929, after a year and three quarters in Paris, Blair
returned to England and went directly to his parents' house in
Southwold, which was to remain his base for the next five years.
The family was well established in the local community, and his
sister Avril was running a tea house in the town. He became
acquainted with many local people including a local gym teacher,
Brenda Salkield, the daughter of a clergyman. Although Salkield
rejected his offer of marriage she was to remain a friend and
regular correspondent about his work for many years. He also
renewed friendships with older friends such as Dennis Collings,
whose girlfriend Eleanor Jacques was also to play a part in his
life.
In the spring he had a short stay in Leeds with his sister Marjorie
and her husband Humphrey Dakin whose regard for Blair was as
unappreciative then as when he knew him as a child. Blair was
undertaking some review work for
Adelphi and acting as a
private tutor to a disabled child at Southwold. He followed this up
by tutoring a family of three boys one of whom, Richard Peters,
later became a distinguished academic. He went painting and bathing
on the beach, and there he met Mabel and Francis Fierz who were
later to influence his career. Over the next year he visited them
in London often meeting their friend Max Plowman. Other homes
available to him were those of Ruth Pitter and Richard Rees. These
acted as places for him to "change" for his sporadic tramping
expeditions where one of his jobs was to do domestic work at a
lodgings for half a crown a day.
Meanwhile, Blair now contributed regularly to
Adelphi,
with "
A Hanging" appearing in August 1931.
In August
and September 1931 his explorations extended to following the
East
End
tradition of working in the Kent hop fields (an
activity which his lead character in A Clergyman's Daughter also
engages in). At the end of this, he ended up in the Tooley
Street kip, but could not stand it for long and with a financial
contribution from his parents moved to Windsor Street where he
stayed until Christmas. "Hop Picking", by Eric Blair, appeared in
in the October 1931 issue of
New
Statesman, where Cyril Connolly was on the staff. Mabel
Fierz put him in contact with Leonard Moore who was to become his
literary agent.
At this time
Jonathan Cape rejected
A Scullion's Diary, the first version of
Down and
Out. On the advice of Richard Rees he offered it to
Faber & Faber, whose editorial
director,
T. S. Eliot, also
rejected it. To conclude the year Blair attempted another
exploratory venture of getting himself arrested so that he could
spend Christmas in prison, but the relevant authorities did not
cooperate and he returned home to Southwold after two days in a
police cell.
Teaching
Blair
then took a job teaching at the Hawthorne High School for Boys in
Hayes
, West London. This was a small school that
provided private schooling for local tradesmen and shopkeepers and
comprised only 20 boys and one other master. While at the school he
became friendly with the local curate and became involved with the
local church. Mabel Fierz had pursued matters with Moore, and at
the end of June 1932, Moore told Blair that
Victor Gollancz was prepared to publish
A Scullion's Diary for a £40 advance, for his recently
founded publishing house,
Victor
Gollancz Ltd, which was an outlet for radical and socialist
works.
At the end of the school summer term in 1932 Blair returned to
Southwold, where his parents had been able to buy their own home as
a result of a legacy. Blair and his sister Avril spent the summer
holidays making the house habitable while he also worked on
Burmese Days. He was also spending time with Eleanor
Jacques but her attachment to Dennis Collings remained an obstacle
to his hopes of a more serious relationship.
"Clink", an essay describing his failed attempt to get sent to
prison, appeared in the August 1932 number of
Adelphi. He
returned to teaching at Hayes and prepared for the publication of
his work now known as
Down and Out in Paris and London
which he wished to publish under an assumed name. In a letter to
Moore (dated 15 November 1932) he left the choice of pseudonym to
him and to Gollancz. Four days later, he wrote to Moore, suggesting
the pseudonyms
P. S. Burton (a name he
used when tramping),
Kenneth Miles,
George
Orwell, and
H. Lewis Allways. He finally
adopted the
nom de plume
George Orwell because, as he told Eleanor Jacques, "It is a good
round English name."
Down and Out in Paris and London was
published on 9 January 1933 but Blair was back at the school at
Hayes. He had little free time and was still working on
Burmese
Days.
Down and Out was successful and it was
published by Harper and Brothers in New York.
In the
summer Blair finished at Hawthornes to take up a teaching job at
Frays
College
, at Uxbridge
, West London.
This was a much larger establishment with 200 pupils and a full
complement of staff. He acquired a motorcycle and took trips
through the surrounding countryside. On one of these expeditions he
became soaked and caught a chill which developed into pneumonia. He
was taken to Uxbridge Cottage Hospital where for a time his life
was believed to be in danger. When he was discharged in January
1934, he returned to Southwold to convalesce and, supported by his
parents, never returned to teaching.
He was disappointed when Gollancz turned down
Burmese
Days, mainly on the grounds of potential libel actions but
Harpers were prepared to publish it in the United States. Meanwhile
back at home Blair started work on the novel
A Clergyman's Daughter drawing
upon his life as a teacher and on life in Southwold.
Eleanor Jacques was
now married and had gone to Singapore
and Brenda Salkield had left for Ireland, so Blair
was relatively lonely in Southwold — pottering on the allotment, walking alone and spending
time with his father. Eventually in October, after sending
A Clergyman's Daughter to Moore, he left for London to
take a job that had been found for him by his Aunt Nellie
Limouzin.
Hampstead
This job
was as a part-time assistant in "Booklover's Corner", a second-hand
bookshop in Hampstead
run by Francis and Myfanwy Westrope who were
friends of Nellie Limouzin in the Esperanto movement. The Westropes had an
easy-going outlook and provided him with comfortable accommodation
at Warwick Mansions, Pond Street. He was
job
sharing with
Jon Kimche who also
lived with the Westropes. Blair worked at the shop in the
afternoons, having the mornings free to write and the evenings to
socialise. These experiences provided background for the novel
Keep the Aspidistra
Flying (1936). As well as the various guests of the
Westropes, he was able to enjoy the company of Richard Rees and the
Adelphi writers and Mabel Fierz. The Westropes and Kimche
were members of the
Independent
Labour Party although at this time Blair was not seriously
politically aligned. He was writing for the
Adelphi and
dealing with pre-publication issues with
A Clergymans
Daughter and
Burmese Days.
At the beginning of 1935 he had to move out of Warwick Mansions,
and Mabel Fierz found him a flat in Parliament Hill.
A
Clergyman's Daughter was published on the 11 March 1935. In
the spring of 1935 Blair met his future wife
Eileen O'Shaughnessy when his landlady,
who was studying at the
University
of London, invited some of her fellow students. Around this
time, Blair had started to write reviews for the
New English Weekly.
In July,
Burmese Days was published and following
Connolly's review of it in the
New Statesman, the two
re-established contact.
In August Blair moved into a flat in
Kentish
Town
, which he shared with Michael Sayer and Rayner Heppenstall. He was working
on
Keep the Aspidistra Flying, and also tried to write a
serial for the
News
Chronicle, which was an unsuccessful venture. By October
1935 his flat-mates had moved out, and he was struggling to pay the
rent on his own.
The Road to Wigan Pier
At this time, Victor Gollancz suggested Orwell spend a short time
investigating social conditions in economically depressed
northern England. Two years earlier
J. B.
Priestley had written of England
north of the Trent and this had stimulated an interest in
reportage. Furthermore the depression had introduced a number of
working-class writers from the North of England to the reading
public.
On 31
January 1936, Orwell set out by public transport and on foot via
Coventry
, Stafford
, the Potteries and Macclesfield
, reaching Manchester
. Arriving after the banks had closed, he had
to stay in a common lodging house. Next day he picked up a list of
contact addresses sent by Richard Rees.
One of these,
trade union official Frank Meade,
suggested Wigan
, where
Orwell spent February staying in dirty lodgings over a tripe shop. At Wigan, he gained entry to many
houses to see how people lived, took systematic notes of housing
conditions and wages earned, went down a
coal
mine, and spent days at the local public library consulting
public health records and reports on working conditions in
mines.
During this time he was distracted by dealing with libel and
stylistic issues relating to
Keep the Aspidistra Flying.
He made a
quick visit to Liverpool
and spent March in South Yorkshire, spending time
in Sheffield
and Barnsley
. As well as visiting mines and observing
social conditions, he attended meetings of the Communist Party and
of
Oswald Mosley where he saw the
tactics of the Blackshirts.
He punctuated his stay with visits to his
sister at Headingley
, during which he visited the Brontë
Parsonage
at Haworth
.
His investigations gave rise to
The Road to Wigan Pier,
published by Gollancz for the
Left Book
Club in 1937.
The first half of this work documents his
social investigations of Lancashire
and Yorkshire
. It begins with an evocative description of
working life in the
coal mines. The
second half is a long essay of his upbringing, and the development
of his political conscience, which includes criticism of some of
the groups on the left. Gollancz feared the second half would
offend readers and inserted a mollifying preface to the book while
Orwell was in Spain.
Orwell
needed somewhere where he could concentrate on writing his book,
and once again help was provided by Aunt Nellie who was living in a
cottage at Wallington, Hertfordshire
. It was a very small cottage called the
"Stores" with almost no modern facilities in a tiny village. Orwell
took over the tenancy and had moved in by 2 April 1936. He started
work on the book by the end of April, and as well as writing, he
spent hours working on the garden and investigated the possibility
of reopening the Stores as a village shop.
Orwell married Eileen O'Shaughnessy on 9 June 1936. Shortly
afterwards, the political crisis began in Spain and Orwell followed
developments there closely. At the end of the year, concerned by
Francisco Franco's
Falangist uprising, Orwell decided to go to Spain to
take part in the
Spanish Civil War
on
the Republican side.
Under the erroneous impression that he needed papers to cross the
frontier, on
John
Strachey's recommendation Orwell applied unsuccessfully to
Harry Pollitt, leader of the
British Communist Party, who
suggested joining the International Brigade and advised him to get
safe passage from the Spanish Embassy in Paris. Not wishing to
commit himself until he'd seen the situation in situ, Orwell
instead used his
ILP
contacts to get a letter of introduction to John McNair in
Barcelona.
The Spanish Civil War and Catalonia
Orwell set out for Spain on about 23 December, dining with
Henry Miller in Paris on the way.
A few days later at
Barcelona
, he met John McNair of the ILP Office who quoted
him: "I've come to fight against Fascism".
Orwell
stepped into a complex political situation in Catalonia
. The Republican government was supported
by a number of factions with conflicting aims, including the
Workers' Party of
Marxist Unification (POUM — Partido Obrero de Unificación
Marxista), the anarcho-syndicalist CNT and the Unified Socialist Party of
Catalonia (a wing of the Spanish Communist Party, which was
backed by Soviet
arms and
aid). The ILP was linked to the POUM and so Orwell joined
the POUM.
After a
time at the Lenin Barracks in Barcelona he was sent to the
relatively quiet Aragon
Front under
Georges Kopp. By January 1937 he
was at Alcubierre
1500 feet above sea level in the depth of
winter. There was very little military action, and the lack
of equipment and other deprivations made it uncomfortable. Orwell,
with his Cadet Corps and police training was quickly made a
corporal. On the arrival of a British
ILP
Contingent about three weeks later, Orwell and the other
English militiaman, Williams, were sent with them to Monte Oscuro.
The newly-arrived ILP contingent included Bob Smillie,
Bob Edwards, Stafford Cottman
and Jack Branthwaite.
The unit was then sent on to Huesca
.
Meanwhile, back in England, Eileen had been handling the issues
relating to the publication of
The Road to Wigan Pier
before setting out for Spain herself, leaving Aunt Nellie Limouzin
to look after The Stores. Eileen volunteered for a post in John
McNair's office and with the help of Georges Kopp paid visits to
her husband, bringing him English tea, chocolate and cigars. Orwell
had to spend some days in hospital with a poisoned hand and had
most of his possessions stolen by the staff. He returned to the
front and saw some action in night attack on the Nationalist
trenches where he chased an enemy soldier with a bayonet and bombed
an enemy rifle position.
In April, Orwell returned to Barcelona where he applied to join the
International Brigades to
become involved in fighting closer to Madrid. However this was the
time of
Barcelona May Days and
Orwell was caught up in the factional fighting. He spent much of
the time on a roof, with a stack of novels, but encountered
Jon Kimche from his Hampstead days during
the stay. The subsequent campaign of lies and distortion carried
out by the Communist press, in which the POUM was accused of
collaborating with the fascists, had a dramatic effect on Orwell.
Instead of joining the International Brigades as he had intended,
he decided to return to the Aragon Front. Once the May fighting was
over, he was approached by a Communist friend who asked if he still
intended transferring to the International Brigades. Orwell
expressed surprise that they should still want him, because
according to the Communist press he was a fascist.
After his return to the front, a sniper's bullet caught him in the
throat. Orwell was considerably taller than the Spanish fighters
and had been warned against standing against the trench parapet.
Unable to
speak, and with blood pouring from his mouth, Orwell was
stretchered to Siétamo, loaded on an
ambulance and after a bumpy journey via Barbastro
arrived at the hospital at Lerida
.
He
recovered sufficiently to get up and on the 27 May 1937 was sent on
to Tarragona
and two days later to a POUM sanatorium in the
suburbs of Barcelona. The bullet had missed his main artery
by the barest margin and his voice was barely audible. He received
electrotherapy treatment and was
declared medically unfit for service.
By the middle of June the political situation in Barcelona had
deteriorated and the POUM — seen by the pro-Soviet Communists
as a
Trotskyist organisation — was
outlawed and under attack. Members, including Kopp, were arrested
and others were in hiding. Orwell and his wife were under threat
and had to lay low, although they broke cover to try to help
Kopp.
Finally
with their passports in order, they escaped from Spain by train,
diverting to Banyuls-sur-Mer
for a short stay before returning to
England. Orwell's experiences in the Spanish Civil War gave
rise to
Homage to
Catalonia (1938).
Rest and recuperation
Orwell returned to England in June 1937, and stayed at the
O'Shaughnessy home at Greenwich. He found his views on the Spanish
Civil War out of favour.
Kingsley
Martin rejected two of his works and Gollancz was equally
cautious. At the same time, the communist
Daily Worker was running an attack on
The Road to Wigan Pier, misquoting Orwell as saying "the
working classes smell"; a letter to Gollancz from Orwell
threatening libel action brought a stop to this. Orwell was also
able to find a more sympathetic publisher for his views in
Frederic Warburg of Secker & Warburg.
Orwell returned to Wallington, which he found in disarray after his
absence. He acquired goats, a rooster he called "Henry Ford", and a
poodle he called "Marx" and settled down to animal husbandry and
writing
Homage to Catalonia.
There were thoughts of going to India to work on a local newspaper
there, but by March 1938 Orwell's health had deteriorated.
He was
admitted to a sanitorium at Aylesford, Kent
to which his brother-in-law Laurence O'Shaughnessy
was attached. He was thought initially to be suffering from
tuberculosis and stayed in the
sanitorium until September. A stream of visitors came to see him
including Common, Heppenstall, Plowman and Cyril Connolly. Connolly
brought with him
Stephen Spender, a
cause of some embarrassment as Orwell had referred to Spender as a
"pansy friend" some time earlier.
Homage to
Catalonia was published by Secker & Warburg and was a
commercial flop. In the latter part of his stay at the clinic
Orwell was able to go for walks in the countryside and study
nature.
The novelist
L.H. Myers secretly funded a trip to
French Morocco for half a year for Orwell to
avoid the English winter and recover his health.
The Orwells set out
in September 1938 via Gibraltar
and Tangier
to avoid Spanish
Morocco and arrived at Marrakech
. They rented a villa on the road to Casablanca
and during that time Orwell wrote Coming Up for Air. They
arrived back in England on 30 March 1939 and
Coming Up for
Air was published in June. Time was spent between Wallington
and Southwold working on Orwell's
Dickens essay and it was in July 1939 that
Orwell's father, Richard Blair, died.
World War II and Animal Farm
On the outbreak of
World War II,
Orwell's wife Eileen started work in the Censorship Department in
London, staying during the week with her family in Greenwich.
Orwell also submitted his name to the Central Register for war
effort but nothing transpired. He returned to Wallington, and in
the autumn of 1939 he wrote essays for
Inside the Whale. For the next year he
was occupied writing reviews for plays, films and books for
The Listener,
Time and Tide and
New Adelphi. At the beginning of 1940, the first edition
of Connolly's
Horizon
appeared, and this provided a new outlet for Orwell's work as well
as new literary contacts.
In May the Orwells took lease of a flat in
London at Dorset Chambers, Chagford Street, Marylebone
. It was the time of the
Dunkirk evacuation and the death in
France of Eileen's brother Lawrence caused her considerable grief
and long term depression.
Orwell was declared "Unfit for any kind of military service" by the
Medical Board in June, but soon afterwards found an opportunity to
become involved in war activities by joining the
Home Guard. He shared
Tom Wintringham's socialist vision for the
Home Guard as a revolutionary People's Militia. Sergeant Orwell
managed to recruit Frederic Warburg to his unit.
During the Battle of Britain he used to spend
weekends with Warburg and his new friend Zionist Tosco Fyvel at Twyford, Berkshire
. At Wallington he worked on "
England Your England" and in London
wrote reviews for various periodicals. Visiting Eileen's family in
Greenwich brought him face-to-face with the effects of
the blitz on East London.
Early in 1941 he started writing for the American
Partisan Review and contributed to
Gollancz' anthology
The Betrayal of the Left, written in
the light of the Hitler-Stalin pact. He also applied unsuccessfully
for a job at the
Air Ministry. In the
Home Guard his mishandling of a mortar put two of his unit in
hospital. Meanwhile he was still writing reviews of books and plays
and at this time met the novelist
Anthony
Powell. He also took part in a few radio broadcasts for the
Eastern Service of the
BBC.
In March the Orwells
moved to St John's
Wood
in a 7th floor flat at Langford Court, while at
Wallington Orwell was "digging for victory" by planting
potatoes.
In August 1941, Orwell finally obtained "war work" when he was
taken on full time by the BBC's Eastern Service. He supervised
cultural broadcasts to India in the context of propaganda from Nazi
Germany designed to undermine Imperial links. This was Orwell's
first experience of the rigid conformity of life in an office.
However it gave him an opportunity to create cultural programmes
with contributions from
T. S. Eliot,
Dylan Thomas,
E.
M. Forster,
Mulk Raj
Anand, and
William Empson among
others.
At the end of August he had a dinner with
H. G. Wells which degenerated into a row because Wells
had taken offence at observations Orwell made about him in a
Horizon article. In October Orwell had a bout of
bronchitis and the illness recurred frequently.
David Astor was looking for a provocative
contributor for
The Observer
and invited Orwell to write for him — the first article
appearing in March 1942. In spring of 1942 Eileen changed jobs to
work at the
Ministry of Food and
Orwell's mother and sister Avril took war work in London and came
to stay with them. They all moved to a basement at Mortimer
Crescent in Kilburn in the summer.
At the BBC, Orwell introduced
Voice a literary programme
for his Indian broadcasts, and by now was leading an active social
life with literary friends, particularly on the political left.
Late in 1942, he started writing for the
left-wing weekly
Tribune directed by
Labour MPs
Aneurin Bevan and
George Strauss. In March 1943 Orwell's mother
died and around the same time he told Moore he was starting work on
a new book, which would turn out to be
Animal Farm.
In September 1943, Orwell resigned from the BBC post that he had
occupied for two years. His resignation followed a report
confirming his fears that few Indians listened to the broadcasts,
but he was also keen to concentrate on writing
Animal
Farm. At this time he was also discharged from the Home
Guard.
In November 1943, Orwell was appointed literary editor at
Tribune, where his assistant was his old friend
Jon Kimche. On 24 December 1943, the Tribune
published, under the authorship of "
John
Freeman", the short essay "Can Socialists Be Happy?", which has
since been broadly attributed to Orwell; see
Bibliography of George Orwell.
Orwell was on staff until early 1945, writing over 80 book reviews
as well as the regular column "
As I
Please". He was still writing reviews for other magazines, and
becoming a respected pundit among left-wing circles but also close
friends with people on the right like Powell, Astor and
Malcolm Muggeridge. By April 1944
Animal Farm was ready for publication.
Gollancz refused to
publish it, considering it an attack on the Soviet
regime
which was a crucial ally in the war. A similar fate was met
from other publishers (including
T.
S. Eliot at
Faber and Faber) until
Jonathan Cape agreed to take it.
In May
the Orwells had the opportunity to adopt a child, thanks to the
contacts of Eileen's sister Gwen O'Shaughnassy, then a doctor in
Newcastle
upon Tyne
. In June a
V-1
flying bomb landed on Mortimer Crescent and the Orwells had to
find somewhere else to live. Orwell had to scrabble around in the
rubble for his collection of books, which he had finally managed to
transfer from Wallington, and carting them away in a
wheelbarrow.
Another bombshell was Cape's withdrawal of support of
Animal
Farm. The decision is believed to be due to the influence of
Peter Smollett, who worked at the
Ministry of
Information and was later disclosed to be a Soviet agent.
The Orwells spent some time in the North East dealing with matters
in the adoption of a boy whom they named Richard Horatio.
In
October 1944 they had set up home in Islington
in a flat on the 7th floor of a block. Baby
Richard joined them there, and Eileen gave up work to look after
her family.
Secker and Warburg
had agreed to publish
Animal Farm, planned for the
following March, although it did not appear in print until August
1945. By February 1945 David Astor had invited Orwell to become a
war correspondent for the
Observer. Orwell had been looking for the opportunity
throughout the war, but his failed medical reports prevented him
from being allowed anywhere near action. He went to Paris after the
liberation of France and to Cologne once it had been
occupied.
It was while he was there that Eileen went into hospital for a
hysterectomy and died under anaesthetic
on 29 March 1945. She had not given Orwell much notice about this
operation because of worries about the cost and because she
expected to make a speedy recovery. Orwell returned home for a
while and then went back to Europe. He returned finally to London
to cover the
1945 UK General
Election at the beginning of July.
Animal Farm: A Fairy Story was published in
Britain on 17 August 1945, and a year later in the U.S., on 26
August 1946.
Jura and Nineteen Eighty-Four
Animal Farm struck a particular resonance in the post-war
climate and its worldwide success made Orwell a sought-after
figure.
For the next four years Orwell mixed journalistic work —
mainly for the
Tribune, the
Observer and the
Manchester Evening
News, though he also contributed to many small-circulation
political and
literary
magazines — with writing his best-known work,
Nineteen Eighty-Four, which was
published in 1949.
In the year following Eileen's death he published around 130
articles and was active in various political lobbying campaigns.
He
employed a housekeeper, Susan Watson, to look after his adopted son
at the Islington
flat, which visitors now described as
"bleak". In September he spent a fortnight on the
island of Jura
in the
Inner
Hebrides
and saw it
as a place to escape from the hassle of London literary
life. David Astor was instrumental in arranging a place for
Orwell at Jura. Astor's family owned Scottish estates in the area
and a fellow Old Etonian Robert Fletcher had a property on the
island. During the winter of 1945 to 1946 Orwell made several
hopeless and unwelcome marriage proposals to younger women,
including Celia Kirwan (
Arthur
Koestler's sister-in-law), Ann Popham who happened to live in
the same block of flats and
Sonia
Brownell, one of Connolly's coterie at the
Horizon
office. Orwell suffered a tubercular haemorrhage in February 1946
but disguised his illness. In 1945 or early 1946, while still
living at Canonbury Square, Orwell wrote an article on "British
Cookery", complete with recipes, commissioned by the
British Council. Given the post-war
shortages, both parties agreed not to publish it. His sister
Marjorie died of kidney disease in May and shortly after, on 22 May
1946, Orwell set off to live at Jura.
Barnhill was an abandoned farmhouse
with outbuildings near the northern end of the island, situated at
the end of a five-mile (8 km), heavily rutted track from
Ardlussa, where the owners lived. Conditions at the farmhouse were
primitive but the natural history and the challenge of improving
the place appealed to Orwell. His sister Avril accompanied him
there and young novelist Paul Potts made up the party. In July
Susan Watson arrived with his son Richard. Tensions developed and
Potts departed after one of his manuscripts was used to light the
fire. Orwell meanwhile set to work on
Nineteen Eighty-Four. Later Susan
Watson's boyfriend
David Holbrook
arrived. A fan of Orwell since schooldays, he found the reality
very different, with Orwell hostile and disagreeable probably
because of Holbrook's membership of the Communist Party. Susan
Watson could no longer stand being with Avril and she and her
boyfriend left.
Orwell returned to London in late 1946 and picked up his literary
journalism again. Now a well-known writer, he was swamped with
work. Apart from a visit to Jura in the new year he stayed in
London for
one of the
coldest British winters on record and with such a national
shortage of fuel that he burnt his furniture and his child's toys.
The heavy smog in the days before the
Clean Air Act 1956 did little to help his
health about which he was reticent, keeping clear of medical
attention. Meanwhile he had to cope with rival claims of publishers
Gollancz and Warburg for publishing rights. About this time he
co-edited a collection titled
British Pamphleteers with
Reginald Reynolds. In April 1947
he left London for good, ending the leases on the Islington flat
and Wallington cottage. Back on Jura in gales and rainstorms he
struggled to get on with
Nineteen Eighty-Four but through
the summer and autumn made good progress. During that time his
sister's family visited, and Orwell led a disastrous boating
expedition which nearly led to loss of life and a soaking which was
not good for his health. In December a chest specialist was
summoned from Glasgow who pronounced Orwell seriously ill and a
week before Christmas 1947 he was in Hairmyres hospital in East
Kilbride, then a small village in the countryside, on the outskirts
of Glasgow. Tuberculosis was diagnosed and the request for
permission to import
streptomycin to
treat Orwell went as far as
Aneurin
Bevan, now Minister of Health. By the end of July 1948 Orwell
was able to return to Jura and by December he had finished the
manuscript of
Nineteen Eighty-Four. In January 1949, in a
very weak condition, he set off for a sanatorium in
Gloucestershire, escorted by Richard Rees.
The
sanatorium at Cranham consisted of a series of small wooden chalets
or huts in a remote part of the Cotswolds
near Stroud
.
Visitors were shocked by Orwell's appearance and concerned by the
short-comings and ineffectiveness of the treatment. Friends were
worried about his finances, but by now he was comparatively
well-off and making arrangements with his accountants to reduce his
tax bill. He was writing to many of his friends, including Jacintha
Buddicom, who had "rediscovered" him, and in March 1949, was
visited by Celia Kirwan.
Kirwan had just started working for a
Foreign
Office
unit, the Information Research
Department, set up by the Labour government to publish anti-communist propaganda, and Orwell gave
her a list of people he considered to be unsuitable as IRD authors
because of their pro-communist leanings. Orwell's list, not published until 2003,
consisted mainly of writers but also included actors and Labour
MPs. Orwell received more streptomycin treatment and improved
slightly. In June 1949
Nineteen Eighty-Four was published
to immediate critical and popular acclaim.
Final months and death
Orwell
courted Sonia Brownell a second time during the summer, and they
announced their marriage in September, shortly before he was
removed to University College Hospital
in London. Sonia took charge of Orwell's
affairs and attended diligently in hospital causing concern to some
old friends like Muggeridge. The wedding took place in the hospital
room on 13 October 1949, with David Astor as best man. Orwell was
in decline and visited by an assortment of visitors including
Muggeridge, Connolly,
Lucian Freud,
Stephen Spender, Evelyn Waugh, Paul Potts, Anthony Powell and his
Eton tutor Anthony Gow.
Plans to go to the Swiss Alps
were mooted, but Orwell was getting weaker by
Christmas. Early on the morning of 21 January 1950, an
artery burst in his lungs, killing him at age 46.

George Orwell's grave
Orwell had requested to be buried in accordance with the Anglican
rite in the graveyard of the closest church to wherever he happened
to die. The graveyards in central London had no space, and fearing
that he might have to be cremated, against his wishes, his widow
appealed to his friends to see if any of them knew of a church with
space in its graveyard.
David Astor lived in Sutton
Courtenay
, Oxfordshire and
negotiated with the vicar for Orwell to be interred in All Saints'
Churchyard there, although he had no connection with the
village. His gravestone bore the simple epitaph: "Here lies
Eric Arthur Blair, born 25 June 1903, died 21 January 1950"; no
mention is made on the gravestone of his more famous
pen-name.
Orwell's son, Richard Blair, was raised by an aunt after his
father's death. He maintains a low public profile, though he has
occasionally given interviews about the few memories he has of his
father. Richard Blair worked for many years as an agricultural
agent for the British government.
Literary career
During most of his career, Orwell was best known for his
journalism, in essays, reviews, columns in
newspapers and magazines and in his books of reportage:
Down and Out in
Paris and London (describing a period of poverty in these
cities),
The Road to Wigan
Pier (describing the living conditions of the poor in
northern England, and the class divide generally) and
Homage to Catalonia. According to
Irving Howe, Orwell was "the best
English essayist since
Hazlitt,
perhaps since
Dr Johnson."
Modern readers are more often introduced to Orwell as a novelist,
particularly through his enormously successful titles
Animal Farm and
Nineteen Eighty-Four. The former
is often thought to reflect developments in the Soviet Union after
the
Russian Revolution;
the latter, life under
totalitarian
rule.
Nineteen
Eighty-Four is often compared to
Brave New World by
Aldous Huxley; both are powerful
dystopian novels warning of a future world where
the state exerts complete control. In 1984,
Nineteen
Eighty-Four and
Ray Bradbury's
Fahrenheit 451 were honored
with the
Prometheus Award for their
contributions to dystopian literature.
Coming Up for Air, his
last novel before
World War II is the
most English of his novels; alarums of war mingle with images of
idyllic
Thames-side
Edwardian childhood of protagonist George Bowling.
The novel is pessimistic; industrialism and capitalism have killed
the best of Old England, and there were great, new external
threats. In homely terms, Bowling posits the totalitarian
hypotheses of Borkenau, Orwell, Silone and Koestler: "Old Hitler's
something different. So's Joe Stalin. They aren't like these chaps
in the old days who crucified people and chopped their heads off
and so forth, just for the fun of it ... They're something quite
new — something that's never been heard of before".
Literary influences
In an autobiographical piece that Orwell sent to the editors of
Twentieth Century Authors in 1940, he wrote: "The writers
I care about most and never grow tired of are:
Shakespeare,
Swift,
Fielding,
Dickens,
Charles
Reade,
Flaubert and, among
modern writers,
James Joyce,
T. S. Eliot and
D.
H. Lawrence. But I believe the modern writer who
has influenced me most is
Somerset
Maugham, whom I admire immensely for his power of telling a
story straightforwardly and without frills." Elsewhere, Orwell
strongly praised the works of
Jack
London, especially his book
The Road. Orwell's
investigation of poverty in
The Road to Wigan Pier
strongly resembles that of Jack London's
The People of the
Abyss, in which the American journalist disguises himself as
an out-of-work sailor in order to investigate the lives of the poor
in London. In his essay "Politics vs. Literature: An Examination of
Gulliver's Travels" (1946) Orwell wrote: "If I had to make a list
of six books which were to be preserved when all others were
destroyed, I would certainly put
Gulliver's Travels among
them."
Other writers admired by Orwell included:
Ralph Waldo Emerson,
G. K.
Chesterton,
George Gissing,
Graham Greene,
Herman Melville,
Henry Miller,
Tobias
Smollett,
Mark Twain,
Joseph Conrad and
Yevgeny Zamyatin. He was both an admirer
and a critic of
Rudyard Kipling,
praising Kipling as a gifted writer and a "good bad poet" whose
work is "spurious" and "morally insensitive and aesthetically
disgusting," but undeniably seductive and able to speak to certain
aspects of reality more effectively than more enlightened
authors.
Orwell as literary critic
Throughout his life Orwell continually supported himself as a book
reviewer, writing works so long and sophisticated they have had an
influence on literary criticism. He wrote in the conclusion to his
1940 essay on
Charles Dickens, When
one reads any strongly individual piece of writing, one has the
impression of seeing a face somewhere behind the page. It is not
necessarily the actual face of the writer. I feel this very
strongly with
Swift, with
Defoe, with
Fielding,
Stendhal,
Thackeray,
Flaubert, though in several cases I do not
know what these people looked like and do not want to know. What
one sees is the face that the writer ought to have. Well, in the
case of Dickens I see a face that is not quite the face of
Dickens's photographs, though it resembles it. It is the face of a
man of about forty, with a small beard and a high colour. He is
laughing, with a touch of anger in his laughter, but no triumph, no
malignity. It is the face of a man who is always fighting against
something, but who fights in the open and is not frightened, the
face of a man who is generously angry — in other words, of a
nineteenth-century liberal, a free intelligence, a type hated with
equal hatred by all the smelly little orthodoxies which are now
contending for our souls.
George Woodcock suggested that the
last two sentences characterised Orwell as much as his
subject.
Reactions to Orwell's works
Koestler mentioned Orwell's "uncompromising intellectual honesty
[which] made him appear almost inhuman at times."
Ben Wattenberg stated: "Orwell’s writing
pierced intellectual hypocrisy wherever he found it." According to
historian
Piers Brendon, "Orwell was
the saint of common decency who would in earlier days, said his BBC
boss Rushbrook Williams, 'have been either canonised - or burnt at
the stake'. However,
Raymond
Williams in
Politics
and Letters: Interviews with New Left Review describes Orwell
as a "successful impersonation of a plain man who bumps into
experience in an unmediated way and tells the truth about it."
Christopher Norris
summarises by noting that Orwell's "homespun empiricist outlook -
his assumption that the truth was just there to be told in a
straightforward common--sense way - now seems not merely naive but
culpably self-deluding".
Orwell's work has taken a prominent place in the school literature
curriculum, with
Animal Farm often being seen as an
examination topic for early the early teens (GCSE in the UK), and
Nineteen Eighty-Four as a topic for pre university
examinations (A Levels in the UK). Alan Brown noted that this
brings to the forefront questions about the political content of
teaching practices. Study aids, in particular with potted
biographies have helped propagate the Orwell myth so that as an
embodiment of human values he is presented as a "trustworthy
guide", while examination questions sometimes suggest a "right ways
of answering" in line with the myth.
Historian John Rodden stated: "
John
Podhoretz did claim that if Orwell were alive today, he’d be
standing with the
neo-conservatives and against the Left.
And the question arises, to what extent can you even begin to
predict the political positions of somebody who’s been dead three
decades and more by that time?"
In
Orwell's Victory,
Christopher Hitchens argues, "In answer
to the accusation of inconsistency Orwell as a writer was forever
taking his own temperature. In other words, here was someone who
never stopped testing and adjusting his intelligence".
John Rodden points out the "undeniable conservative features in the
Orwell physiognomy" and remarks on how "to some extent Orwell
facilitated the kinds of uses and abuses by the Right that his name
has been put to. In other ways there has been the politics of
selective quotation." Rodden refers to the essay "
Why I Write", in which Orwell refers to the
Spanish Civil War as being his "watershed political experience",
saying "The Spanish War and other events in 1936-37, turned the
scale. Thereafter I knew where I stood. Every line of serious work
that I have written since 1936 has been written directly or
indirectly against totalitarianism and
for Democratic
Socialism as I understand it." (emphasis in original) Rodden goes
on to explain how, during the McCarthy era, the introduction to the
Signet edition of
Animal Farm, which sold more 20 million
copies, makes use of "the politics of ellipsis":
If the book itself, Animal Farm, had left any
doubt of the matter, Orwell dispelled it in his essay Why I
Write: 'Every line of serious work that I’ve written since
1936 has been written directly or indirectly against
Totalitarianism... dot, dot, dot, dot,.' "For Democratic Socialism"
is vaporized, just like Winston Smith did it at the Ministry of
Truth, and that’s very much what happened beginning of the McCarthy
era and just continued, Orwell being selectively quoted.
T.R. Fyvel wrote about Orwell: "His crucial experience ... was his
struggle to turn himself into a writer, one which led through long
periods of poverty, failure and humiliation, and about which he has
written almost nothing directly. The sweat and agony was less in
the slum-life than in the effort to turn the experience into
literature."
In 1981,
a Baptist minister in Jackson County
, Florida
challenged
the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four suitability as proper
reading for young Americans, arguing it contained pro-Communist,
anti-Semitic, and sexually explicit material.
Influence on language and writing
In his essay Politics and the English
Language (1946), Orwell wrote about the importance of
honest and clear language and said that vague writing can be used
as a tool of political manipulation. In Nineteen
Eighty-Four he described how the state controlled thought by
controlling language, making certain ideas literally unthinkable.
The adjective Orwellian refers to
the frightening world of Nineteen Eighty-Four, in which
the state controls thought and misinformation is widespread.
Several words and phrases from Nineteen Eighty-Four have
entered popular language. Newspeak
is a simplified and obfuscatory language designed to make
independent thought impossible. Doublethink means holding two contradictory
beliefs simultaneously.The Thought
Police are those who suppress all dissenting opinion.
Prolefeed is homogenized,
manufactured superficial literature, film and music, used to
control and indoctrinate the populace through docility.
Big
Brother is a supreme dictator who watches everyone.
From Orwell's novel Animal Farm
comes the sentence, "All animals are equal, but some animals are
more equal than others", describing theoretical equality in a
grossly unequal society. Orwell may have been the first to use the
term cold war, in his essay, "You
and the Atomic Bomb", published in Tribune, 19 October
1945. He wrote: "We may be heading not for general breakdown but
for an epoch as horribly stable as the slave empires of antiquity.
James Burnham's theory has been much
discussed, but few people have yet considered its ideological
implications;— this is, the kind of world-view, the kind of
beliefs, and the social structure that would probably prevail in a
State which was at once unconquerable and in a permanent state of
'cold war' with its neighbours."
In "Politics and the
English Language," George Orwell provides six rules for
writers:
- Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used
to seeing in print.
- Never use a long word where a short one will do.
- If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out.
- Never use the passive voice where
you can use the active.
- Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word, or a jargon word
if you can think of an everyday English equivalent.
- Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright
barbarous.
Personal life
Childhood
Jacintha Buddicom's account
Eric & Us provides an insight into the Blair's
childhood. She quoted his sister Avril that "he was essentially an
aloof, undemonstrative person" and said herself of his friendship
with the Buddicoms "I do not think he needed any other friends
beyond the schoolfriend he occasionally and appreciatively referred
to as 'CC'". Cyril Connolly provides an account of Blair as a child
in Enemies of
Promise.Years later, Blair mordantly recalled his Prep
School in the essay "Such, Such
Were the Joys", claiming among other things that he "was made
to study like a dog" to earn a scholarship, which he alleged that
was solely to enhance the school's prestige with parents. Jacintha
Buddicom repudiated Orwell's schoolboy misery described in the
essay, stating that "he was a specially happy child".
Connolly remarked of him as a schoolboy, "The remarkable thing
about Orwell was that alone among the boys he was an intellectual
and not a parrot for he thought for himself". At Eton his former
headmaster's son observed, "He was extremely argumentative —
about anything — and criticising the masters and criticising
the other boys.... We enjoyed arguing with him. He would generally
win the arguments — or think he had anyhow." Roger Mynors concurs: "Endless arguments about
all sorts of things, in which he was one of the great leaders. He
was one of those boys who thought for himself...."
Blair liked to carry out practical jokes. Buddicom recalls him
swinging from the luggage rack in a railway carriage like an
orang-utang to frighten a woman passenger out of the compartment.
At Eton he played tricks on his master in house, among which was to
enter a spoof advertisement in a College magazine implying
pederasty. Gow, his tutor, said he "made himself as big a nuisance
as he could" and "was a very unattractive boy". Later Blair was
expelled from the crammer at Southwold for sending a dead rat as a
birthday present to the town surveyor. In one of his As I
Please essays he refers to a protracted joke when he answered
an advertisement for a woman who claimed a cure for obesity.
Blair had an enduring interest in natural history which stemmed from his
childhood. In letters from school he wrote about caterpillars and
butterflies. and Buddicom recalls his keen interest in ornithology.
He also enjoyed fishing and shooting rabbits, and conducting
experiments as in cooking a hedgehog or shooting down a jackdaw
from the Eton roof to dissect it. His zeal for scientific
experiments extended to explosives — again Buddicom recalls a
cook giving notice because of the noise. Later in Southwold his
sister Avril recalled him blowing up the garden. When teaching he
enthused his students with his nature-rambles both at Southwold and
Hayes. His adult diaries are permeated with his observations on
nature.
Relationships
Buddicom
and Blair lost touch shortly after he went to Burma
, and she
became unsympathetic towards him. She wrote that it was
because of the letters he wrote complaining about his life, but an
addendum to Eric & Us by
Venables reveals that he may have lost sympathy through an incident
which was at best a clumsy seduction.
Mabel Fierz, who later became his confidante, said "He used to say
the one thing he wished in this world was that he'd been attractive
to women. He liked women and had many girlfriends I think in Burma.
He had a girl in Southwold and another girl in London. He was
rather a womaniser, yet he was afraid he wasn't attractive."
Brenda Salkield (Southwold) preferred friendship to any deeper
relationship and maintained a correspondence with Blair for many
years, particularly as a sounding board for his ideas. She wrote
"He was a great letter writer. Endless letters, And I mean when he
wrote you a letter he wrote pages." His correspondence with Eleanor Jacques
(London) was more prosaic, dwelling on a closer relationship and
referring to past assignments or planning future ones in London and
Burnham
Beeches
.
When Orwell was in the sanitorium in Kent his wife's friend Lydia
Jackson visited. He invited her for a walk and out of sight "an
awkward situation arose." Jackson was to be the most critical of
Orwell's marriage to Eileen O'Shaughnessy but their later
correspondence hints a complicity. Eileen at the time was more
concerned about Orwell's closeness to Brenda Salkeld. Orwell was to
have an affair with his secretary at Tribune which caused Eileen
much distress, and others have been mooted. In a letter to Ann
Popham he wrote: 'I was sometimes unfaithful to Eileen, and I also
treated her badly, and I think she treated me badly, too, at times,
but it was a real marriage, in the sense that we had been through
awful struggles together and she understood all about my work,
etc.', Similarly he suggested to Celia Kirwan that they had both
been unfaithful. There are several testaments that it was a
well-matched and happy marriage
Orwell was very lonely after Eileen's death, and desperate for a
wife, both as companion for himself and as mother for Richard. He
proposed marriage to four women, and eventually Sonia Brownell accepted.
Political views
Orwell liked to provoke argument by challenging the status quo, but
he was also a traditionalist with a love of old English values. He
criticised and satirised, from the inside, the various social
milieus in which he found himself - provincial town life in A
Clergyman's Daughter; middle class
pretention in Keep the Aspidistra Flying; preparatory
schools in Such Such were the Joys; colonialism in Burmese Days, and
socialist groups in the The Road to Wigan Pier. In his
Adelphi days he described himself as a "Tory-anarchist".
The Spanish Civil War played the most important part in defining
Orwell's socialism. He wrote to Cyril Connolly from Barcelona on 8
June 1937: "I have seen wonderful things and at last really believe
in Socialism, which I never did before". Having witnessed the
success of the anarcho-syndicalist communities, and the
subsequent brutal suppression of the anarcho-syndicalists and other
revolutionaries by the Soviet Union
-backed Communists, Orwell
returned from Catalonia a staunch anti-Stalinist and joined the Independent Labour Party,
his card being issued on 13 June 1938. Although he was never
a Trotskyist, he was strongly influenced
by the Trotskyist and anarchist critiques of the Soviet regime, and
by the anarchists' emphasis on individual freedom. In Part 2 of
The Road to Wigan Pier, published by the Left Book Club, Orwell stated: "a real
Socialist is one who wishes - not merely conceives it as desirable,
but actively wishes - to see tyranny overthrown". Orwell stated in
"Why I Write" (1946): "Every line of serious work that I have
written since 1936 has been written, directly or indirectly,
against totalitarianism and for
democratic socialism, as I
understand it." Orwell was a proponent of a federal socialist
Europe, a position outlined in his 1947 essay "Toward European
Unity", which first appeared in Partisan Review. According to
biographer John Newsinger,
the other crucial dimension to Orwell's socialism was
his recognition that the Soviet Union was not
socialist.
Unlike many on the left, instead of abandoning
socialism once he discovered the full horror of Stalinist rule in
the Soviet Union, Orwell abandoned the Soviet Union and instead
remained a socialist--indeed he became more committed to the
socialist cause than ever."
In his 1938 essay "Why I joined the Independent Labour Party",
published in the ILP-affiliated New
Leader, Orwell wrote:For some years past I have managed to
make the capitalist class pay me several pounds a week for writing
books against capitalism. But I do not delude myself that this
state of affairs is going to last forever ... the only régime
which, in the long run, will dare to permit freedom of speech is a
Socialist régime. If Fascism triumphs I am finished as a writer -
that is to say, finished in my only effective capacity. That of
itself would be a sufficient reason for joining a Socialist
party.Towards the end of the essay, he wrote: "I do not mean I have
lost all faith in the Labour Party. My most earnest hope is that
the Labour Party will win a clear majority in the next General
Election."
Like most other left-wing in the
United Kingdom in the pre-World War II
era, Orwell was opposed to rearmament against Nazi Germany —
but he changed his view after the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and the
outbreak of the war. He left the ILP over its pacifism and adopted
a political position of "revolutionary patriotism". In December
1940 he wrote in Tribune (the Labour left's weekly): "We
are in a strange period of history in which a revolutionary has to
be a patriot and a patriot has to be a revolutionary." During the
war, Orwell was highly critical of the popular idea that an
Anglo-Soviet alliance would be the basis of a post-war world of
peace and prosperity. In 1942, commenting on journalist E. H. Carr's pro-Soviet views, Orwell stated: "all the
appeasers, e.g. Professor E. H. Carr, have switched their
allegiance from Hitler to Stalin."
On anarchism, Orwell wrote in The Road
to Wigan Pier: "I worked out an anarchistic theory that all
government is evil, that the punishment always does more harm than
the crime and the people can be trusted to behave decently if you
will only let them alone." He continued to deconstruct his former
opinion as "sentimental nonsense" and argued that "it is always
necessary to protect peaceful people from violence. In any state of
society where crime can be profitable you have got to have a harsh
criminal law and administer it ruthlessly."
In his reply (dated 15 November 1943) to an invitation from the
Duchess of
Atholl to speak for the British League for European Freedom, he
stated that he didn't agree with their objectives. He admitted that
what they said was "more truthful than the lying propaganda found
in most of the press" but added that he could not "associate
himself with an essentially Conservative body" that claimed to
"defend democracy in Europe" but had "nothing to say about British
imperialism". His closing paragraph stated: "I belong to the Left
and must work inside it, much as I hate Russian totalitarianism and
its poisonous influence in this country."
Orwell joined the staff of Tribune as literary editor, and
from then until his death, was a left-wing (though hardly orthodox)
Labour-supporting democratic socialist. He canvassed for the Labour
Party in the 1945 general election and was broadly supportive of
its actions in office. According to Newsinger, although Orwell "was
always critical of the 1945-51 Labour government's moderation, his
support for it began to pull him to the right politically. This did
not lead him to embrace conservatism, imperialism or reaction, but
to defend, albeit critically, Labour reformism." Between 1945 and
1947, with A. J. Ayer and Bertrand Russell, he contributed a series
of articles and essays to Polemic, a short-lived British
"Magazine of Philosophy, Psychology, and Aesthetics" edited by the
ex-Communist Humphrey Slater.
Writing in the spring of 1945 a long essay titled "Antisemitism in
Britain", for the Contemporary Jewish Record, Orwell
stated that anti-Semitism was on the
increase in Britain, and that it was "irrational and will not yield
to arguments." He argued that it would be useful to discover why
anti-Semites could "swallow such absurdities on one particular
subject while remaining sane on others." He wrote: "For quite six
years the English admirers of Hitler contrived not to learn of the
existence of Dachau and Buchenwald. ... Many English people have
heard almost nothing about the extermination of German and Polish
Jews during the present war. Their own anti-Semitism has caused
this vast crime to bounce off their consciousness." In Nineteen Eighty-Four, written
shortly after the war, Orwell portrayed the Party as enlisting
anti-Semitic passions against their enemy, Goldstein. Nevertheless,
he opposed the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine, taking an anti-colonialist stance
against Zionism.
Orwell publicly defended P.G.
Wodehouse against charges of being a
Nazi sympathiser; a defence based on
Wodehouse's lack of interest in and ignorance of politics.
The British intelligence group Special
Branch maintained a file on Orwell for more than 20 years of
his life. The dossier, published by The National
Archives
, mentions that according to one investigator,
Orwell had "advanced Communist views and several of his Indian
friends say that they have often seen him at Communist
meetings". MI5
, the
intelligence department of the Home
Office, noted: "It is evident from his recent writings — 'The
Lion and the Unicorn' — and his contribution to Gollancz's
symposium The Betrayal of the Left that he does not hold
with the Communist Party nor they with him."
Social interactions
Orwell was noted for very close and enduring friendships with a few
friends, but these were generally people with a similar background
or with a similar level of literary ability. Ungregarious, he was
out of place in a crowd and his discomfort was exacerbated when he
was outside his own class. Though representing himself as a
spokesman for the common man he often appeared out of place with
real working people. His brother-in-law Humphrey Dakin, a "Hail
fellow, well met" type, who took him to a local pub in Leeds, said
that he was told by the landlord: "Don't bring that bugger in here
again". Adrian Fierz commented "He wasn't interested in racing or
greyhounds or pub crawling or shove
ha'penny. He just did not have much in common with people who
did not share his intellectual interests". Awkwardness attended
many of his encounters with working class representatives as with
Pollitt and McNair. but his courtesy and good manners were often
commented on. Jack Common observed on
meeting him for the first time "Right away manners, and more than
manners — breeding — showed through".
In his tramping days, he did domestic work for a time. His extreme
politeness was recalled by a member of the family he worked for;
she declared that the family referred to him as "Laurel" after the film comedian. With his
gangling figure and awkwardness, Orwell's friends often saw him as
a figure of fun. Geoffrey Gorer
commented "He was awfully likely to knock things off tables, trip
over things. I mean, he was a gangling, physically badly
co-ordinated young man. I think his feelings that even the
inanimate world was against him..." When he shared a flat with
Heppenstall and Sayer, he was treated in a patronising manner by
the younger men. At the BBC, in the 1940s, "everybody would pull
his leg" and Spender described him as having real entertainment
value "like, as I say, watching a Charlie Chaplin movie". A friend
of Eileen's reminisced about her tolerance and humour, often at
Orwell's expense.
Orwell has often been accused of having had an authoritarian
streak. In Burma, he struck out at a Burmese boy who while "fooling
around" with his friends "accidentally bumped into him" at a
station so that he "fell heavily" down some stairs. One of his
former pupils recalled being beaten so hard he could not sit down
for a week. When sharing a flat with Orwell, Heppenstall came home
late one night in an advanced stage of loud inebriation. The upshot
was that Heppenstall ended up with a bloody nose and was locked in
a room. When he complained, Orwell hit him a crack across the legs
with a shooting stick and Heppenstall then had to defend himself
with a chair. Years later, after Orwell's death, Heppenstall wrote
a dramatic account of the incident called "The Shooting Stick" and
Mabel Fierz confirmed that Heppenstall came to her in a sorry state
the following day.
However, Orwell got on well with young people. The pupil he beat
considered him the best of teachers, and the young recruits in
Barcelona tried to drink him under the table — though without
success. His nephew recalled Uncle Eric laughing louder than anyone
in the cinema at a Charlie Chaplin film.
In the wake of his most famous works, he attracted many uncritical
hangers-on, but many others who sought him found him aloof and even
dull. With his soft voice, he was sometimes shouted down or
excluded from discussions. At this time, he was severely ill; it
was wartime or the austerity period after it; during the war his
wife suffered from depression; and after her death he was lonely
and unhappy. In addition to that, he always lived frugally and
seemed unable to care for himself properly. As a result of all
this, people found his circumstances bleak. Some, like Michael Ayrton, called him "Gloomy George",
but others developed the idea that he was a "secular saint".
Lifestyle
Orwell was a heavy smoker, rolling his own cigarettes from strong
shag tobacco, in spite of his
bronchial condition, and he even smoked in sanatoriums and
hospitals, which was permitted in those days. He undermined his
health with a penchant for the rugged life which often put him in
cold and damp situations both in the long term as in Catalonia and
Jura, and short term, for example in motorcycling in the rain and a
shipwreck of his own creation. His love of strong tea was legendary —
he had Fortnum
& Mason
's tea brought to him in Catalonia and in 1946
published "A Nice Cup of Tea" on
how to make it. He appreciated English beer, taken regularly
and moderately, and despised drinkers of lager. Not being
particular about food, he enjoyed the wartime "Victory Pie"
extolled canteen food at the BBC and once ate the cat's dinner by
mistake. However he preferred traditional English dishes such as
roast beef and kippers and reports of his Islington days refer to
the cosy afternoon tea table.
His dress sense was unpredictable and usually casual. In Southwold
he had the best cloth from the local tailor, but was equally happy
in his tramping outfit. His attire in the Spanish Civil War, along
with his size 12 boots was a source of amusement. David Astor
described him as looking like a prep school master, while according
to the Special Branch dossier, Orwell's tendency of clothing
himself "in Bohemian fashion" revealed that the author was "a
Communist".
Orwell's confusing approach to matters of social decorum — on
the one hand expecting a working class guest to dress for dinner,
and on the other hand slurping tea out of a saucer at the BBC
canteen — helped stoke his reputation as an English
eccentric.
Biographies
Orwell's will requested that no biography of him be written, and
his wife Sonia Orwell repelled every attempt by those who tried to
persuade her to let them write about him. Various recollections and
interpretations were published in the 1950s and 1960s but Sonia saw
the 1968 Collected Works as the record of his life. She
did appoint Muggeridge as official biographer, but later
biographers have seen this as deliberate spoiling as Muggeridge
eventually gave up the work In 1973 American authors Stansky and
Williams produced an unauthorised account of his early years which
inevitably lacked Sonia Orwell's input. She then commissioned
Bernard Crick, a left-wing professor
of politics at London University
to complete a biography and asked all Orwell's friends to
co-operate. Crick collated a considerable amount of material in his
work which was published in 1980, but his questioning of the
literal truth of Orwell's first-person writings led to conflict
with Sonia who tried unsuccessfully to suppress the book. Crick
concentrated on the facts of Orwell's life rather than his
character, and as a professor of politics presented primarily a
political perspective on Orwell's life and work.
After Sonia Orwell's death many more works were produced in the
1980s with 1984 being a particularly fruitful year for Orwelliana.
These included collections of reminiscences by Coppard and Crick
and Stephen Wadhams.
In 1991 a biography was produced by Michael Shelden, an American
Professor of Literature. Shelden was more concerned with the
literary nature of Orwell’s work seeking explanations for Orwell's
character and treating his first person writings as
autobiographical. Shelden introduced several new pieces of
information correcting some of the errors and omissions in Crick's
earlier work. Shelden attributed to Orwell an obsessive belief in
his failure and inadequacy.
Peter Davison's production of the Complete Works of George
Orwell, completed in 2000 put most of the Orwell Archive in
the public domain. Jeffrey Meyers, a prolific American biographer,
was first to take advantage of this and produced a work that was
more willing to investigate the darker side of Orwell and question
the saintly image. Why Orwell
Matters was published by Christopher Hitchens in
2002.
In 2003, the centenary of Orwell's birth resulted in the two most
up-to-date biographies by Gordon Bowker and D. J. Taylor, both academics and writers in the
United Kingdom. Taylor notes the stage management which surrounds
much of Orwell's behaviour, and Bowker highlights the essential
sense of decency which he considers to have been Orwell's main
driver.
Bibliography
- Novels
- Books based on personal experiences
While the substance of many of Orwell's novels, particularly
Burmese Days, is drawn from his personal experiences, the
following are works presented as narrative documentaries, rather
than being fictionalised.
About George Orwell
- Anderson, Paul (ed). Orwell in Tribune: 'As I Please' and
Other Writings. Methuen/Politico's 2006. ISBN
1-842-75155-7
- Bowker, Gordon. George Orwell. Little Brown. 2003.
ISBN 0-316-86115-4
- Buddicom, Jacintha. Eric & Us. Finlay Publisher.
2006. ISBN 0-9553708-0-9
- Caute, David. Dr. Orwell and Mr. Blair, Weidenfeld
& Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-81438-9
- Crick, Bernard. George Orwell:
A Life. Penguin. 1982. ISBN 0-14-005856-7
- Flynn, Nigel. George Orwell. The Rourke Corporation,
Inc. 1990. ISBN 0-86593-018-X
- Hitchens, Christopher.
Why Orwell Matters. Basic Books. 2003. ISBN
0-465-03049-1
- Hollis, Christopher. A Study of George Orwell: The Man and
His Works. Chicago: Henry Regnery Co. 1956. .
- Larkin, Emma. Finding George Orwell in Burma. Penguin.
2005. ISBN 1-59420-052-1
- Lee, Robert A, Orwell's Fiction. University of Notre
Dame Press, 1969. LC 74-75151
- Leif, Ruth Ann, Homage to Oceania. The Prophetic
Vision of George Orwell. Ohio State U.P. [1969]
- Meyers, Jeffery. Orwell: Wintry Conscience of a
Generation. W.W.Norton. 2000. ISBN 0-393-32263-7
- Newsinger, John. Orwell's
Politics. Macmillan. 1999. ISBN 0-333-68287-4
- Rodden, John (ed.) The Cambridge
Companion to George Orwell. Cambridge. 2007. ISBN
987-0-521-85842-7
- Shelden, Michael. Orwell:
The Authorized Biography. HarperCollins. 1991. ISBN
0-06-016709-2
- Smith, D. & Mosher, M. Orwell for Beginners. 1984.
London: Writers and Readers Publishing Cooperative.
- Taylor, D. J. Orwell: The Life. Henry Holt and
Company. 2003. ISBN 0-8050-7473-2
- West, W. J. The Larger Evils. Edinburgh: Canongate
Press. 1992. ISBN 0-86241-382-6 (Nineteen Eighty-Four – The
truth behind the satire.)
- West, W. J. (ed.) George Orwell: The Lost Writings.
New York: Arbor House. 1984. ISBN 0-87795-745-2
- Williams, Raymond,
Orwell, Fontana/Collins, 1971
- Woodcock, George. The
Crystal Spirit. Little Brown. 1966. ISBN 1-55164-268-9
- Orwell's meeting with dos Passos in 1937 Barcelona
referenced in Stephen Koch, “The Breaking Point: Hemingway, dos
Passos, and the Murder of Jose Robles”
See also
References
- "Why I Write" in The Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters
of George Orwell Volume 1 - An Age Like This 1945-1950 p.23
(Penguin)
- "Still the Moon Under Water", Economist.com, 28
Jul 2008
- Taylor, D. J. Orwell: The Life. Henry Holt and
Company. 2003. ISBN 0-8050-7473-2]
- The Road to Wigan Pier pg 1, Ch. 8
- Bernard Crick George Orwell: A Life Secker &
Warburg 1980. Several earlier biographers suggested that Mrs Blair
moved to England in 1907 based on information given by Avril Blair
reminiscing of a time before she was born. The evidence to the
contrary is the diary of Ida Blair for 1905 and a photograph of
Eric aged 3 in an English suburban garden. The earlier date also
coincides with a difficult posting for Blair senior, and Marjorie
(6) needing an English education.
- Jacintha Buddicom Eric and Us Frewin 1974.
- Letters home September 1914 quoted in Bernard Crick George
Orwell: A Life".
- Henley and South Oxfordshire Standard 2 October 1914
- Henley and South Oxfordshire Standard 21 July 1916
- Stephen Runciman in Stephen Wadhams' Remembering
Orwell Penguin 1984
- Michael Shelden Orwell: The Authorised Biography
William Heinemann 1991
- Bernard Crick George Orwell: A Life, quote from
interview with Gow
- Ruth Pitter BBC Overseas Service broadcast, 3 January
1956
- R. S. Peters A Boy's View of George Orwell Psychology
and Ethical Development Allen & Unwin 1974
- Stella Judt I once met George Orwell in I once Met
1996
- Bernard Crick Interview with Geoffrey Stevens in George
Orwell: A Life
- Avril Dunn My Brother George Orwell Twentieth Century
1961
- Correspondence in Collected Essays Journalism and
Letters Secker & Warburg 1968
- Orwell, Sonia and Angus, Ian (eds.)Orwell: An Age Like
This, letters 31 and 33 (New York: Harcourt, Brace &
World)
- The conventional view that this was a specific commission with
a £500 advance is based on a recollection by George Gorer. However
Taylor argues that Orwell's subsequent circumstances showed no
indication of such largesse, Gollancz was not a person to part with
such a sum on speculation, and Gollancz took little proprietorial
interest in progress — D. J. Taylor Orwell: The Life
Chatto & Windus 2003
- "Notes on the Spanish Militia" in The Collected Essays,
Journalism and Letters of George Orwell Volume 1 - An Age Like This
1945-1950 p.352 (Penguin)
- John McNair — Interview with Ian Angus UCL 1964
- Letter to Eileen Blair April 1937 in The Collected Essays,
Journalism and Letters of George Orwell Volume 1 - An Age Like This
1945-1950 p.296 (Penguin)
- Newsinger, John "Orwell and the Spanish Revolution"
International Socialism Journal Issue 62 Spring
1994
- "Harry Milton - The Man Who Saved Orwell" The Hoover
Institute. Retrieved on 23 December 2008
- The author states that evidence discovered at the National
Historical Archives in Madrid in 1989 of a security police report
to the Tribunal for Espionage and High Treason described 'Eric
Blair and his wife Eileen Blair, as 'known Trotskyists' and as
'linking agents of the ILP and the POUM'. Newsinger goes on to
state that given Orwell's precarious health, "there can be little
doubt that if he had been arrested he would have died in
prison."
- Malcolm Muggeridge recalls that when he asked Orwell about the
usefulness of such broadcasts, he replied "Perhaps not, he said,
somewhat crestfallen. He added, more cheerfully, that anyway, no
one could pick up the broadcasts except on short-wave sets which
cost about the equivalent of an Indian laborer's earnings over 10
years. At this thought he began to chuckle: a dry, vibrant, somehow
rusty chuckle, very characteristic and very endearing."
http://orwell.ru/library/novels/Burmese_Days/english/e_mm_int
Malcolm Muggeridge: “Introduction” Published: Time Incorporation
Book Division, USA, New York. — 1962. Burmese Days
- Orwell, G. & Davison, P. I Have Tried to
Tell the Truth Secker & Warburg, 1999 ISBN 0436203707,
9780436203701
- Timothy Garton Ash: "Orwell's List" in "The New York Review of Books",
Number 14, 25 September 2003
- Barnhill is located at 56° 06' 39" N 5° 41' 30"
W (British national grid
reference system NR705970)
- David Holbrook in Stephen Wadham's Remembering Orwell
Penguin Books 1984
- The Guardian John Ezard Blair's babe Did love
turn Orwell into a government stooge? Saturday 21 June
2003
- Andrew Anthony, 'Review: George Orwell's Books', The
Observer, 11 May 2003, Observer Review Pages, Pg. 1.
- Irving Howe
considered Orwell "the best English essayist since Hazlitt"
George Orwell: “As the bones know” by Irving Howe,
Harper's
Magazine January 1969; reprinted in Newsweek as "was the finest journalist of his
day and the foremost architect of the English essay since
Hazlitt.".
- Letter to Gleb Struve, 17 February 1944, Orwell:
Essays, Journalism and Letters Vol 3, ed Sonia Brownell and Ian
Angus
- George Woodcock Introduction to Stephen Wadhams Remembering
Orwell Penguin 1984
- Orwell Today
- "Orwell’s Century" Think
Tank with Ben Wattenberg. PBS
- "The saint of common decency" by Piers Brendon
The Guardian, 7 June 2003
- Raymond Williams Politics and Letters 1979
- Christopher Norris Language, Truth and Ideology:Orwell and
the Post War Left in Inside the Myth:Orwel views from the
Left Lawrence and Whishart 1984
- Alan Brown Examining Orwell: Political and Literary Values
in Education in Christopher Norris Inside the Myth
Orwell:Views from the Left Lawrence and Wishart 1984
- Editorial review of Orwell's Victory by
Christopher Hitchens
- T R Fyvel A Writer's Life World Review June 1950
- T. R. Fyvel, A Case for George Orwell?, Twentieth
Century, September 1956, pp.257–8
- George Orwell: You and the Atomic Bomb
- Jacintha Buddicom Eric & Us Frewin 1974.
- Cyril Connolly, Enemies of Promise, 1938 ISBN
0-233-97936-0
- John Wilkes in Stephen Wadhams Remembering Orwell" Penguin
Books 1984.
- Roger Mynors in Stephen Wadhams Remembering Orwell
Penguin Books 1984.
- Christopher Hollis A Study of George Orwell
- Interview with Bernard Crick in George Orwell: A
life
- Audrey Coppard and Bernard Crick Orwell Remembered
1984
- Collected Essays Journalism and Letters Secker &
Warburg 1968
- Bernard Crick George Orwell: A Life Secker &
Warburg 1980
- R. S. Peters A Boy's View of George Orwell in
Psychology and Ethical Development Allen & Unwin
1974
- Geoffrey Stevens in Stephen Wadhams Remembering Orwell
Penguin 1984
- Stephen Wadhams Remembering Orwell Penguin Books
1984
- Correspondence in Collected Essays Journalism and
Letters, Secker & Warburg 1968
- Peter Davison ed. George Orwell: Complete Works XI
336
- George Orwell: A Life, Bernard Crick, p.480
- Celia Goodman interview with Shelden June 1989 in Michael
Shelden Orwell:The Authorised Biography
- Henry Dakin in Stephen Wadhams Remembering Orwell
- Patrica Donahue in Stephen Wadhams Remembering
Orwell
- Michael Meyer Not Prince Hamlet: Literary and Theatrcal
Memoirs 1989
- Richard Rees, Orwell: Fugitive from the Camp of
Victory, Secker & Warburg 1961
- Rayner Heppenstall, Four Absentees, Barrie and
Rockcliff 1960
- Cyril Connolly George Orwell 3 in The Evening
Colonnade David Bruce and Watson 1973
- The Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters of George
Orwell Volume 1 - An Age Like This 1945-1950 p.301
(Penguin)
- "Why I Write" in The Collected Essays, Journalism and
Letters of George Orwell Volume 1 - An Age Like This 1945-1950
p.23 (Penguin)
- [1]
- The Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters of George
Orwell Volume 1 - An Age Like This 1945-1950 p.373
(Penguin)
- "Why I Write" in The Collected Essays, Journalism and
Letters of George Orwell Volume 1 - An Age Like This 1945-1950
p.374 (Penguin)
- Orwell, Sonia and Angus, Ian (eds.). The Collected Essays,
Journalism and Letters of George Orwell Volume 4: In Front of Your
Nose (1945-1950) (Penguin)
- John Newsinger in Socialist Review Issue
276 July/August 2003
- David Buckman, Art-Historical Notes: "Where are the Hirsts of the
1930s now?" , The Independent, 13 Nov 1998
- Stefan Collini, Absent Minds: Intellectuals in Britain, Oxford
University Press, 2006. ISBN 9780199291052
- "Antisemitism in Britain", in As I Please: 1943–1945,
pp 332–341.
- "Notes on Nationalism", 1945
- Ian Angus Interview 23–25 April 1965 quoted in Stansky and
Abrahams The Unknown George Orwell
- Adrian Fierz in Stephen Wadhams Remembering
Orwell
- John McNair George Orwell: The Man I knew MA
Thesis — Newcastle University Library 1965 quoted in Bernard
Crick George Orwell: A Life
- Jack Common Collection Newcastle University Library quoted in
Bernard Crick George Orwell: A Life Secker & Warburg
1980
- Geoffrey Gorer - recorded for Melvyn Bragg BBC Omnibus
production The Road to the Left 1970
- Rayner Heppenstall Four Absentees in Audrey Coppard
and Bernard Crick Orwell Remembered 1984
- Sunday Wilshin in Stephen Wadhams Remembering Orwell
Penguin Books 1984
- Stephen Spender in Stephen Wadhams Remembering Orwell
Penguin Books 1984
- Maung Htin Aung George Orwell and Burma in Miriam Goss
The World of George Orwell Weidenfield & Nicholson
1971
- Geoffrey Stevens, Bernard Crick Interview in George Orwell:
A Life Secker & Warburg 1980
- Heppenstall "The Shooting Stick Twentieth Century April
1955
- Mabel Fierz, Bernard Crick Interview (1973) in George
Orwell: A Life Secker & Warburg 1980
- Michael Meyer Not Prince Hamlet: Literary and Theatrical
Memoirs Secker and Warburg 1989
- T. R. Fyval George Orwell: A Personal Memoir 1982
- Lettice Cooper in Stephen Wadhams Remembering Orwell
Penguin Books 1984
- Julian Symonds in Stephen Wadhams Remembering Orwell
Penguin Books 1984
- Patricia Donahue in Stephen Wadhams Remembering Orwell
Penguin Books 1984
- George Orwell: A Life, Bernard Crick, p.502
- George Orwell: A Life, Bernard Crick, p.504
- Jack Denny in Stephen Wadhams Remembering Orwell
Penguin Books 1984
- Bob Edwards in Audrey Coppard and Bernard Crick Orwell
Remembered 1984
- Jennie Lee in Peter Davison Complete Works XI 5
- David Astor Interview in Michael Shelden
- Jack Braithwaite in Wadhams Remembering Orwell Penguin
Books 1984
- John Morris Some are more equal than others Penguin
New Writing No. 40 1950
- D. J. Taylor Orwell: The Life. Henry Holt and Company.
2003. ISBN 0-8050-7473-2
- Peter Stansky and William Abrahams The Unknown Orwell
Constable 1972
- Gordon Bowker - Orwell and the biographers in John
Rodden The Cambridge Companion to George Orwell
Cambridge University Press
2007
- Gordon Bowker - Orwell and the biographers in John
Rodden The Cambridge Companion to George Orwell Cambridge
University Press 2007
- Peter Davison The Complete Works of George Orwell
Random House, ISBN 0151351015
- Jeffrey Meyers Orwell: Wintry Conscience of a
Generation W. W. Norton & Company, Incorporated, 2001ISBN
0393322637
- Gordon Bowker George Orwell Little, Brown 2003
- Observer review: Orwell by DJ Taylor and George Orwell by
Gordon Bowker Observer on Sunday 1 June 2003
External links
- George Orwell - Penguin Books official website for
George Orwell
- 'Collected Essays of George Orwell'
- Is Bad Writing Necessary? - An essay
comparing Theodor Adorno and George
Orwell's lives and writing styles. In Lingua Franca, (December/January
2000).
- Lesson plans for Orwell's works at Web English
Teacher
- Orwell's Burma, an essay in
Time
- Orwell's Century, Think Tank Transcript
- George Orwell in Lleida A photograph of a
column of the POUM, including a man who appears
to be Orwell, about 1936/37.
- George Orwell: A literary Trotskyist?
- George Orwell: International
Socialist? by Peter
Sedgwick
- George Orwell in the World of Science Fiction
- The
George Orwell Web Source - Essays, novels, reviews and
exclusive images of Orwell.
- George
Orwell-Eric Arthur Blair- Orwell's books, As I Please columns,
poems, essays, Orwell news feed.
- The Orwell Diaries: a daily extract from Orwell's
diary from the same date seventy years before
- The
Orwell Prize
- Thesis statements and important quotes from the
novel
- UK National Archives Reveal George Orwell watched
by MI5
- Works by George Orwell
(public domain in Canada)
- Orwell's life on Jura