The Vermillion Coast

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The Vermillion Coast, la Côte Vermeille, owes its name to the light red rock visible to sailors and fishermen in the western Mediterranean since before antiquity. This rocky, indented shore extends south from Perpignan to the Spanish border. Phoenicians and Romans traded for its wine and anchovies – on the seabed are countless amphorae used to transport wine across the middle sea. Hannibal rode this way on his elephants, along the Via Narbonensis and east on the Via Domitia. The queens of Aragon, the king of Majorca, kept summer palaces here.

Pyrennées Orientales

Charles Rennie Mackintosh (1868-1927), Glaswegian architect and designer, spent the last years of his life in this southern region known as the Pyrennées Orientales – administratively French but culturally Catalan. He had behind him an innovative career as an architect and interior designer. His work had influenced the Viennese Secessionists and the Art Deco movement. Sensing that his moment had passed, he moved south.

Mackintosh thought of himself as a painter. He came with his wife Margaret in 1923, and they settled initially in Amélie-les-Bains. This was a fashionable resort at the time for those seeking fresh air and hydrotherapy.

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The Mackintoshes visited the fishing village of Collioure on the coast, already past its heyday as an artists’ colony, made famous by Matisse, Derain and the Fauvistes in the 1910s.

Open window at Collioure by Henri Matisse, 1905

Open window at Collioure by Henri Matisse, 1905

When the couple returned to Roussillon the following year they settled in Ille-sur-Têt, inland from Perpignan. Eventually they moved to Port Vendres, next inlet along from Collioure. Port Vendres (named after the Goddess Venus) is the only deep-water harbour on the eastern Mediterranean and used to be the embarkation point for ferries to French North Africa. The Mackintoshes lived for two years in the Hotel du Commerce on the Quai Forgas, overlooking the lively nautical scene.

La rue du soleil, Port Vendres by Charles Rennie Mackintosh, 1926

La rue du soleil, Port Vendres by Charles Rennie Mackintosh, 1926

Mackintosh’s watercolours focus intensely on landscape and the human marks left on it – houses, piers, roads and ruined forts. In this he reminds me of the Provincetown lighthouses of that other design-trained painter – Edward Hopper. Both are deliberate, happy to leave out the human figure. There is the same attention to sun on stone, on roofs. Mackintosh captures the austere beauty of a treeless shore on which nothing much grows except vines and olives.

La Ville (Port Vendres), Charles Rennie Mackintosh, 1926

La Ville (Port Vendres), Charles Rennie Mackintosh, 1926

His strong sense of design comes through in the lines of composition creating a grid – like his furniture and buildings. The contemporary artist Mackintosh most admired was Gustav Klimt. They both preferred the proportions of the square. Klimt’s stylised Austrian lakeshores, especially those executed on the Attersee, are as crammed with light and reflection as Mackintosh’s Roussillon villages and ports.

Houses at Unterach on the Attersee, Gustav Klimt

Houses at Unterach on the Attersee, Gustav Klimt

Mackintosh died in London in 1928. His widow Margaret is said to have scattered his ashes into the sea near Port Vendres. During his brief painting career he never really sold his watercolours. There aren’t many of them. But now they are housed in the world’s major collections. Hindsight has also given his pioneering architecture and designs their due.

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Charles Rennie Mackintosh exhibition at the Dôme, Port Vendres

A little exhibition about Mackintosh and his work opens its doors for a couple of hours during the summer season in the Dôme, originally part of the military barracks in Port Vendres built to honour Louis XVI. A project is underway to develop a Mackintosh Trail in the towns and villages of the Alpes Maritimes where he painted his late luminous work.

Monsieur Mackintosh by Robert Crichton. Luath Press, Edinburgh, 2006. Bilingual edition.

Monsieur Mackintosh by Robert Crichton. Luath Press, Edinburgh, 2006. Bilingual edition.

Robert Crichton has written an excellent detailed account of the painter’s stay. His book redresses an absence, part detective work, part local history. What is especially pleasing about this bilingual guide is the way it hunts down the particular traces of Mackintosh’s stay – small hotels, farmyards, views that inspired specific watercolours. The historical and cultural detail of port life opens our eyes to the past as well as the present. Monsieur Mackintosh evokes a small corner of the world writ large in colour.

The border between France and Spain was a formidable barrier following the Spanish Civil War and during the Second World War. These days it is unmanned, the customs huts and military checkpoints that once evoked fear are derelict and forlorn, rotting in the salt wind. Spanish poet Antonio Machado just made it across, escaping from Franco’s victory in the Spanish Civil War. The little cemetery of Collioure is where he is buried, a stone’s throw from the sea.

The grave of Spanish poet Antonio Machado and his mother

The grave of Spanish poet Antonio Machado and his mother

Across the border in Portbou lies one of the twentieth century’s greatest philosophers. It’s a sleepy Spanish harbour squeezed between two bare hills, dominated by a bleak church and the railway shunting yards. Walter Benjamin, German-Jewish, was fleeing Nazi-occupied France. At 48 years-old and with heart disease, he managed to cross into Portbou but was refused entry by the Spanish authorities. The following morning he was to be handed over to the French, which would mean the Gestapo. He committed suicide in room number 3 of the Hostal França by overdosing on morphine.

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The cemetery at Port Bou

 

The town honours him in our twenty-first-century way, with informative plaques and a walking tour. His grave is in the cemetery perched on the rock above the greeny-blue bay.

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The grave of Walter Benjamin (1892-1940), Portbou

Spanish trains ran on a narrower gauge than their French equivalents and so merchandise – mostly oranges – had to be offloaded at the border town of Cerbère. Thousands of transpordeurs or transbordeuses were thus occupied for many years, bringing prosperity to this tiny fishing village. A statue commemorates their labour under the viaduct arches.

Monument to the Unknown Transbordeuse, Cerbère

Monument to the Unknown Transbordeuse, Cerbère

Because passengers needed to disembark and wait for onward connections, Cerbère developed a lively, transitory atmosphere during the Belle Époque. Stars of stage and silent screen, royalty, denizens of casinos and dancing girls all pitched up at the Belvedere du Rayon Vert. This striking hotel between the railway lines and the sea is the first reinforced concrete structure in Europe. It has the shape of a beached liner. Its small-paned windows with matching ironwork have the same grid-pattern pioneered by Charles Rennie Mackintosh, and ‘borrowed’ by Viennese designers Kolomann Moser and Hofmann.

The Hotel Belvedere du Rayon Vert, Cerbère

The Hotel Belvedere du Rayon Vert, Cerbère

The Belvedere has a cinema perched on its roof, beloved of the town’s youth down through the decades, with dark recesses and a view of the sea. The hotel is built flush with the train tracks. Guests whiled away a day or two in this pleasure palace until their train de luxe was called over the tannoys.

Facade of the school, Cerbère

Facade of the school, Cerbère

Here and there in the fishing villages of the Vermillion Coast you notice fine examples of Seaside Art Deco, for want of a better term. Some are tarted up Follies girls, others crumbling dowagers. The Belvedere is in process of being renovated.

Bas-relief at the entrance to the school, Cerbère

Bas-relief at the entrance to the school, Cerbère

It reminds me of a line by Tom Waits: “There’s nothing wrong with her a hundred dollars wouldn’t fix.” Curved nautical balconies, the line of windows and the lettering on a school facade all testify to the passage of a style along this shore. Like artists, refugees and ships in the night a hundred years ago, they face the sea.

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Entrance to Hotel du Belvedere du Rayon Vert

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Hotel Byron

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Poster for Hotel Byron, Villeneuve

The first of the grand hotels on Lake Geneva to exploit Lord Byron’s visit in 1816 opened its doors in 1839. The Hotel Byron was built in Villeneuve, a mile down the road from the Château de Chillon. It commanded a view west along the lake and south to the Dents du Midi. For a century the Byron welcomed guests following in the footsteps of the Romantic poets, of Gibbon and Rousseau.

Byron visited the castle at Chillon twice during that prolific summer of 1816. The first time was with Percy Bysshe Shelley, the second time with his old university chum, John Cam Hobhouse. After that first visit, both poets booked into Hotel de l’Ancre in Ouchy to dry out and escape the rain. They had had a stormy day boating on the lake. Byron wrote the thirteen verses of “The Prisoner of Chillon” in a couple of nights, and sent it off to his publisher John Murray in London. It became a best-seller immediately, partly because of its sentimentality but also because of the whiff of scandal attaching to Byron, the “Napoleon of rhyme”.

There are seven pillars of Gothic mould,

In Chillon’s dungeons deep and old.

The romantic shenanigans of Byron, Shelley and Mary Godwin, Shelley’s lover and author of Frankenstein, around the lake that summer, fueled an interest in all things Swiss. The poetry and the mountains did the rest.

The Hotel Byron was the largest hotel on the Swiss Riviera, mentioned in the first edition of Baedeker. Before the railway, “Going over the Simplon” often involved a pit-stop at Le Byron. Its guest list was an artistic Who’s Who of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries: Franz Liszt, Richard Wagner, Victor Hugo, Stefan Zweig and Rabindranath Tagore are among the scribbling luminaries who got a night’s kip within sight of the dungeon that Byron had made immortal in verse.

Hotel Byron, Villeneuve. 19th century engraving

Nathaniel Hawthorne, staying there in 1859, had this to say:

We found the Hotel Byron very grand indeed, and a good one too. There was a beautiful moonlight on the lake and hills, but we contented ourselves with looking out of our lofty window, whence, likewise, we had a sidelong glance at the battlements of Chillon, not more than a mile off, on the water’s edge… the hotel is on a magnificent scale of height and breadth, its staircases and corridors being the most spacious I have seen; but there is a kind of meagerness in the life there, and a certain lack of heartiness, that prevented us from feeling at home.

The shabby-chic was more to Henry James’s taste:

There is a charming Hôtel Byron at Villeneuve, the eastern end of the lake, of which I have retained a kindlier memory than of any of my Swiss resting-places. It has about it a kind of mellow gentility which is equally rare and delightful … It has none of that look of heated prosperity which has come of late years to intermingle so sordid an element with the pure grandeur of Swiss scenery.

Henry goes on to whine a bit about the decline of the Grand Tour and the rise of bling.  “Mr. Cook, the great entrepreneur of travel, with his coupons and his caravans of ‘personally-conducted’ sightseers … a hackneyed and cocknefied Europe.” He has a great way with a phrase though. It’s like a piece of Toblerone moving around in the mouth: “hackneyed and cocknefied Europe”. It could be a stag party coming out of the Gare du Nord.

The Château de Chillon with Hotel Byron in the background, 1867 engraving

Shopping at Geneva, 1867 engraving

In 1929, the Byron establishment, always financially precarious, fell on hard times. The ambiguously named Chillon College, a private boarding school catering to the sons of British colonialism, took over the premises. Chillon College was precursor to the many international schools around the lake today, serving the sons and daughters of the international rich, whose bank account are nearby. The Lausanne Gazette described the students as “a batallion of little Anglo-Saxons animating the corridors of the hotel”. The Straits Times went so far as to describe it as the “Eton of Switzerland”.

Chillon College, Villeneuve, the “Swiss Eton”

On the night of 23 January 1933, fifteen minutes past midnight, the Hotel Byron burned down, fortunately with no casualties among the boarders. Today there is an old people’s home on the site, still called Le Byron.

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The homintern: the photographic world of Islay Lyons (1922-1993)

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Twenty-five years ago, in October 1987, I was introduced to the photographer Algernon Islay de Courcy Lyons. He was with an old Bangkok hand, William Warren, on the Thonburi side of the Chao Phraya River. We were watching the dress rehearsal for the Royal Barge Ceremony. The king’s auspicious 60th birthday celebrations were in December of that year, and the royal barges were being given a rare outing.

We stood on the bleachers in front of the Temple of Dawn, with a fine view of the Grand Palace opposite. A murmur went through the crowd as police launches cruised down the river of kings. Outriders came into view, then the scarlet- and gold-clad rowers cutting the current in unison. Gold leaf on the oar blades caught the sun. The barges seemed to have descended from heaven.

Islay Lyons had been erstwhile lover of writer and filmmaker Kenneth Macpherson (1902-1971), who had been married to Bryher (pen name of Annie Winifred Ellerman, 1894-1983). Lyons and Macpherson had looked after the ageing Scots-Austrian writer, Norman Douglas, on Capri, until his death there in 1952.

Bryher (Winifred Ellerman), photo by Islay Lyons

Bryher was the daughter of shipping magnate Sir John Ellerman, who in the 1920s was thought to be the richest man in England. Both Bryher and Macpherson had been lovers of the American imagist poet H.D., Hilda Doolittle (1886-1961) in one of the twentieth century’s more bizarre ménages à trois. Macpherson and Bryher went on to conduct further affairs, he with men, she with women. Husband and wife remained lifelong friends.

This was the deep, not much glimpsed, homosexual literary world of the inter-war years. Lyons was one of the last sleepers in the homintern (based on Comintern: Communist International), a coinage attributed to the poet W. H. Auden, himself a paid-up member: the lavender conspiracy, as a similar term more evocatively puts it.

Bryher’s The Heart to Artemis: A Writer’s Memoirs (1963) spans a late Victorian childhood, two world wars and her peripatetic life among the literati, bankrolled by her father’s considerable wealth. A lifelong lesbian, she circumspectly expunges the word while at the same time leaving us in no doubt: “no single act gave me greater pleasure than having my hair cut short in 1920”.

Bryher, with a short back and sides, photographed by Man Ray, circa 1923

She changed her name by deed poll to Bryher, one of the Scilly Islands, in an attempt to free herself and her writing from family strictures. Her memoirs are remarkable not only for their sweep and poetic clarity, but also for the way she presents an open secret, deftly remaining within publishing convention in those years between the Wolfenden Report of 1957 and the Sexual Offenses Act of 1967. “I watched the seamen enviously because the thing that I wanted most was a boy’s sailor suit,” she writes of those “hot summer crossings” to Dieppe in the decade before the Great War. The French writer André Gide transported her “instantly to the Channel steamers of my childhood and the decks full of people in black and white cheviot ulsters”.

In America she entered a first morganatic marriage with Robert McAlmon, himself homosexual. She proposed to him over afternoon tea in the Hotel Breevort on Valentine’s Day 1921. They were married at New York City Hall later that same day and sailed to London on the White Star Liner Celtic, one of her father’s ships. She describes this arrangement matter-of-factly:

He wanted to go to Paris to meet Joyce but lacked the passage money. I put my problem before him and suggested that if we married, my family would leave me alone. I would give him part of my allowance, he would join me for occasional visits to my parents, but otherwise we would live strictly separate lives. It must be remembered that I had been brought up on French rather than English lines and that arranged marriages were perfectly familiar to me … we neither of us felt the slightest attraction towards each other but remained perfectly friendly. We were divorced in 1927 but could have got an annulment just as easily…

With Bryher’s family money McAlmon founded Contact Editions in Paris, publishing many of the expatriate American writers of the day, including Hemingway and a stable of lesbian writers – Gertrude Stein, Djuna Barnes, H.D. and Bryher herself.

In his early novel, Village (1924), McAlmon fictionalizes the South Dakota town of Madison, and his first love – for Gore Vidal’s father, Gene. McAlmon was fourteen, Gene fifteen. In what must be a rare excursus by a homosexual writer, Gore Vidal revisited McAlmon’s account of his father’s small-town teenage dalliance in his own memoir Palimpsest (1995).

Robert McAlmon: it is curious – to say the least – to encounter one’s father as a boy of fifteen as seen through the eyes of a boy of fourteen who is in love with him. I was intrigued by the possibilities of all this as I was by Jimmie’s sudden interest in Walt Whitman.

Jimmie was Jimmie Trimble, the love of Gore Vidal’s life, dead at Iwo Jima, March 1, 1945, age 20.

In 1932 McAlmon published A Scarlet Pansy in New York, under the pseudonym Robert Scully. This scurrilous, camp roman à clef lifts the lid on the gay goings on of the Roaring Twenties and on his marriage to Bryher. The pansy protagonist in question is Fay Etrange, from Kuntsville, Pennysylvania. Like McAlmon, she supports herself by working as a nude model. Bryher’s fictional counterpart is Marjorie Bull-Dike. A Scarlet Pansy takes embittered revenge on such Left Bank luminaries as Sylvia Beach, Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas, given names such as Fuchs, Pickup, Butsch, Godown and Kuntz. James Joyce described McAlmon’s later, above-the-counter account of literary Paris between the wars, Being Geniuses Together (1938), as “the office boy’s revenge”.

Graeme Taylor, John Glassco, Robert McAlmon, working on their tans, Nice, circa 1929

Bryher’s second marriage, to Kenneth Macpherson, seems also one of convenience, perhaps to do with inheritance. Though her only brother inherited the lion’s share of the family fortune, Bryher’s wealth allowed her and Macpherson to indulge a shared passion for experimental film, literature and travel, centered on Switzerland and Berlin before the rise of National Socialism put an end to all that. She flits in and out of literary history as the millionaire writer, dispensing cash. James Joyce, among others, benefited from Bryher’s largesse, via a monthly stipend from McAlmon. She came up with the cash for more than one apartment in Paris for down-at-heel artists. From 1933 onwards she was a benefactor to German Jews escaping the Nazi regime, notably facilitating Walter Benjamin’s escape.

Kenneth Macpherson, photo by Islay Lyons

Macpherson, Bryher and H.D. spent much of the 1920s and ‘30s on the shore of Lake Geneva. Bryher had been counseled by her father to take up residence in Switzerland as a tax shelter. They lived initially at Territet, near Montreux in Canton Vaud, which the Ellermans had used as a base for their extensive travels around the Mediterranean. Bryher’s father had been something of a mountaineer. Bryher first met the imagist poet H.D. in Cornwall in July 1918.

The door opened and I started in surprise. I had seen the face before, on a Greek statue or in some indefinable territory of the mind. We were meeting again after a long absence but not for the first time… the voice had a birdlike quality that was nearer to song than speech. There was a bowl of wild flowers on the table, another pile of books on the chair. We sat down and looked at each other or, more correctly, I stared… It was the moment I had longed for during seven interminable years.

Macpherson and Doolittle began their affair in 1926. Bryher divorced McAlmon in 1927 and married Macpherson in the same year, as a screen for all three of them in various ways. In 1929 H.D. became pregnant by Macpherson and had an abortion. Territet was also home to two tiger cubs, dogs, cats and monkeys. H.D.’s nine year-old daughter Perdita, from an earlier relationship with the Scottish musicologist Cecil Gray, joined this menagerie. She was formally adopted by Bryher and Macpherson and took the name Perdita Macpherson.

Kenneth Macpherson and H.D. (Hilda Doolittle) nursing tiger cubs, Territet, Switzerland, 1928

Bryher and Macpherson built the marvelous modernist-inspired Villa Kenwin (its name a merger of their names, Kenneth and Winifred) near Montreux in 1930. “It was the time of the Bauhaus … I loved the new functional furniture, the horizontal windows and the abolition of what I thought of as messy decoration.” Kenwin’s first architect was Hungarian film set designer and architect Alexander Ferenczy, a pupil of Alfred Loos, who died in a car accident in 1931. Ferenczy designed sets for such greats of the film world as Alexander Korda (Samson and Delilah) and Friedrich Zelnik.

Villa Kenwin on Lake Geneva

The villa retains his cinematographic stamp and awareness of the uses of light. Hans Henselmann, later appointed head architect for the city of Berlin in 1953, took up the project upon Ferenczy’s death. Though much of Bryher’s and all of Macpherson’s writing has fallen out of fashion and fills the shelves of the antiquarians, the house which bears their conjoined names has stood the test of time.

Robert Herring, Kenneth Macpherson and Bryher, Spitsbergen, Norway, 1929

“Switzerland was the perfect place for our headquarters. It was possible to see French, German, American and English films all in the same week,” writes Bryher. It was here that this arty ménage published Close Up, one of the first critical journals of film as an art form. They conceived and filmed Borderline (1930), starring Paul Robeson and H.D., focusing on race and a triangular relationship.

Borderline (1930) starring a young Paul Robeson, reissued on DVD

Believed lost, a copy was rediscovered in Switzerland in 1983. In 2006, the British Film Institute restored it and a screening and eventual DVD release has led to renewed interest in Macpherson as a pioneering cinematographic modernist. The spare lines, nautical detail, tiling and open spaces of the Villa Kenwin have also recently been restored to Bauhaus glory following decades of neglect.

Bryher and H.D. (Hilda Doolittle) during the filming of Borderline (1930)

The Second World War, which Bryher had predicted, found her with uncertain status as an English national in Switzerland. Her work on behalf of German refugees left her vulnerable in the event of a German invasion, a real possibility at the time:

There came the day when the Swiss radio warned us of imminent invasion. All the population was invited to resist. We were to disregard any further broadcasts, soldiers not with the army were to fulfill orders previously given to them, civilians were to make sure that they were equipped with brassards bearing the Federal Colours and then turn hoses of boiling water on the enemy… I was told afterwards that the main bridge at Basel was to have been destroyed after twelve minutes and it went to eight minutes before the order was countermanded.

After the war, Macpherson and boyfriend Islay Lyons settled into the Villa Tuoro on Capri, along with longtime resident and citizen of the island, the infamous Scottish-Austrian writer Norman Douglas (1868-1952). Bryher, as so often, funding the arrangement, persuaded Macpherson and Lyons to look after the ageing Douglas until his death.

Norman Douglas, the old roué, photo by Islay Lyons

The island had a long history of depraved goings-on, from the orgies of the Emperor Tiberius at Villa Jovis to the shenanigans of Baron Krupp in the first decade of the twentieth century. Douglas’s long scandal-dogged life of boys, booze and books had included numerous brushes with the law. He liked, according to Lyons, the “squawks and squeaks” deaf-mutes made in orgasm. Bryher describes his entourage: “and then there were the ‘crocodiles’ as we called the dark-haired, mischievous urchins with Renaissance names who ran errands and ate, as reward, plates of pasta like miniature mountains”. Douglas’s dying words were “get these fucking nuns away from me”.

Much is left unsaid in Bryher’s The Heart to Artemis, chief among the elisions being money. Money greased the introductions, the travel, and is the unmentioned small print of her two marriages: she was the original trust fund baby. She was generous, nonetheless, both with herself and her funds. History gives a deceptive tidiness to their lives. What was it drew Bryher to H.D. so that their relationship endured despite absences and Bryher’s marriage to Macpherson? Was Macpherson, by all accounts a debonair cultivated man, in it for the money? When he met Lyons after the war, what was the spark that ignited the love of his life?

Gracie Fields, the lass from Rochdale. Photo by Islay Lyons

Islay Lyons’ camera eye recorded them all under the midday sun. With the passage of time, his photos have taken on a bittersweet backward glance that recalls Auden’s valediction to the sunny south, ‘Goodbye to the Mezzogiorno’:

                       The Greeks used to call the Sun

He-who-smites-from-afar, and from here, where

Shadows are dagger-edged, the daily ocean blue,

I can see what they meant: his unwinking

Outrageous eye laughs to scorn any notion

Of change or escape, and a silent

Ex-volcano, without a stream or a bird,

Echoes that laugh.

These striking portraits date from the postwar period when la dolce vita had become fashionable in Hollywood and the Marshall Plan was pouring dollars into Europe’s reconstruction. Capri was an escape from the North, for Lancashire-born singer and entertainer Gracie Fields; an escape from Puritanism and the law for homosexuals on the lookout for amore (“better down South and much cheaper”). They are celebrity photos away from the limelight. The pinched saurian face of Somerset Maugham smiles for once above a clutter of tea things – the original “shit in the shuttered château” of Larkin’s poem.

American writer Mary McCarthy, photo by Islay Lyons

Norman Douglas, author of South Wind, is never far from a smudged brandy glass, clad in the crumpled linen of the old roué, still sporting the centre parting he affected when he was twelve, in Karlsruhe Gymnasium, in another century. Mannish Bryher, her swept back hair lightly oiled, Prussian features classically severe, doesn’t quite meet the photographer’s lens.

Charlton Heston on the set of Ben Hur. Photo by Islay Lyons

All the shiny people on terraces, under pergolas, caught congregating in the noonday sun like lizards: gimlet-eyed Nancy Cunard, bangled and ringed, a flapper gone to seed and looking ruefully at the world. And dancers and choreographers who for now have all their hair, cheekbones and musculature in place.

Nancy Cunard, still flapping. Photo by Islay Lyons

                                                      If we try

To ‘go southern’, we spoil in no time, we grow

Flabbily, dingily lecherous, and

Forget to pay bills

These are not so much the bright young things but what the bright young things become after a world war, too much money and sun. A pensive Graham Greene weighed down by the knowledge of sin; debonair, limp-wristed Noel Coward in good ducks, painting with one hand in his pocket.

Swimming pool at the Foro Italico, Rome. Photo by Islay Lyons

In this photograph taken in 1958 of the swimming pool at Foro Italico (originally called the Foro Mussolini) in Rome, the lines create an off-centre perspective. The fascist-era athletes in mosaic on the wall play off against the lounging boys on the bleachers.

On Macpherson’s death in 1971, Islay Lyons inherited what remained of the Ellerman shipping fortune that had come down through the morganatic female line via Bryher. The term ‘morganatic’ derives from ‘marriage with a morning gift’, itself a priceless comment on relations between the sexes. Lyons also inherited Douglas’s papers, his signed first editions, volumes on the history of Calabria and Capri, much of which has ended up in the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale. It was this movement of inherited wealth that I first heard about twenty-five years ago on the banks of the Chao Phraya. Algernon Islay de Courcy Lyons died in Chiang Mai, in northern Thailand, in 1993. His adopted Thai son, Manop Charoensuk, inherited what was left of his good fortune.

Unidentified boy, photo by Islay Lyons

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