A Last Sheaf

A Last Sheaf
First edition
AuthorDenton Welch
LanguageEnglish
GenreShort story collection
PublisherJohn Lehmann
Publication date
1951
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint (Hardback)
Preceded byA Voice Through a Cloud 
Followed byThe Denton Welch Journals 

A Last Sheaf is the title given to the second posthumous publication of works by the writer and painter Denton Welch. Published in 1951 by John Lehmann, it followed A Voice Through a Cloud, issued by Lehmann the previous year.

The collection was assembled by Welch's partner, Eric Oliver, with assistance from Lehmann and Welch's friend, Francis Streeten.[1] It consists of five stories appearing for the first time, four previously-published stories and two stories published in full[2] for the first time. Also included are sixty-seven short poems and nine monochrome reproductions of Welch's paintings, at least one of which ("The Coffin House") had previously accompanied the publication of a short story. Contained in the text are a number of Welch's "decorations", as he called them. The dustjacket states that it is "adapted" from a drawing by Welch, but the overall design is not his; nor are the endpaper illustrations.[3]

Contents

Part One

  • Sickert at St. Peter's (first published in Horizon magazine, Vol. VI, No. 32, 1942)[4]
  • The Earth's Crust (first published in Contact magazine, Sept-Oct 1950, along with a reproduction of "The Coffin House")
  • Memories of a Vanished Period
  • A Fragment of a Life Story (first published in Horizon magazine, No. 117, 1949)
  • A Party
  • Evergreen Seaton-Leverett (first published in Orpheus II, John Lehmann 1949)
  • A Picture in the Snow
  • Ghosts
  • The Hateful Word
  • The Diamond Badge (first published in part as "The Visit" in Penguin New Writing 38, 1949)

Part Two

Part Three

  • Poems (67 poems, of which 15 had previously been published in magazines and journals including Abinger Chronicle, Penguin New Writing, The Adelphi and The Spectator)

Part Four

  • Nine Paintings by Denton Welch

Critical response

Response to the collection was mainly positive, focusing heavily on the Sickert piece[6] and considering the book to be a memorial to its author.[7] Robert Phillips, writing over 20 years later, characterised the collection as "a mixed bag", although this seems to describe the mix of genres in the book rather than a qualitative assessment.[8] Overall, however, Phillips reflects that A Last Sheaf did not enhance Welch's critical reputation in the way that the preceding publications did, and publication of the journals would subsequently do.[9]

The only detailed analysis of the poems in A Last Sheaf also comes from Phillips. This also remains the only substantial analysis of Welch's poetry, and even here it is restricted to those in this selection.[10] Phillips finds Welch's poems to be generally quite poor, ranking with his art (which he does not rate very highly either[11]). He finds in some of them sub-Housman allusion,[12] an excess of adverbs and adjectives,[13] and sometimes ill-judged use of rhyme.[14] Ironically, for Phillips, Welch's most "poetic" language is in fact to be found in his prose.[15] Nonetheless, despite their inferior status, Phillips does find in them redeeming features: vivid gothick imagery, often shocking juxtapositions (as in "Jane Allen",[16] Welch's most-reprinted poem) and a keener awareness of the war raging around him than in his prose.[17]

Phillips' views on Welch's poems in the book have not been universally shared, however. Not long after they were published, the English composer Howard Ferguson set five of Welch's poems from A Last Sheaf for voice and piano. The work, entitled Discovery, was a favourite concert piece of Kathleen Ferrier, who went on to record it.[citation needed]

Thirteen of Welch's poems were included in the text of his Journals, published the year after A Last Sheaf. It would be almost twenty-five years before any more of his poetry appeared in print again, in the 1976 anthology, Dumb Instrument.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Oliver, Eric (1951) Introduction to A Last Sheaf, London: John Lehmann, p. 8
  2. ^ As with all Welch's posthumously-published works, 'in full' does not necessary mean 'completed'.
  3. ^ Methuen-Campbell, James (2002) Denton Welch: Writer and Artist, Carlton-in-Coverdale: Tartarus Press ISBN 1872621600, p. 258
  4. ^ In subsequent reprints of this story there are a number of differences to the original text as it appeared in Horizon. Whilst these are mainly around punctuation, in every subsequent reprint of the story an exclamation mark appears after the sentence "One entered through what at one time had been the 'cloakroom'." It does not appear in the original, and this rather more muted, exclamation-less reaction intuitively sounds more Welchean. In his journal entry for 21 July 1942, Welch stated that he "read and re-read" the proofs of the article and there had only been "two mistakes". It's not clear if these include the glaring one at the head of the article, mis-spelling his surname (as 'Welsh', according to Michael De-la-Noy's footnote in the 1984 edition).
  5. ^ Either the compilers were unaware of this or it was simply forgotten about, as it is not mentioned in the publishing credits.
  6. ^ Bloomfield, Paul (1951) Review, The Guardian, 25 May 1951
  7. ^ Anonymous review in The Age (Melbourne), 21 July 1951
  8. ^ Phillips, Robert S. (1974) Denton Welch, New York: Twayne, ISBN 0805715673, p. 117
  9. ^ Phillips (1974) p. 146
  10. ^ Rather curiously, Phillips thinks that all the poems in this collection are reprinted. (p. 146)
  11. ^ Phillips (1974), p. 146
  12. ^ Phillips (1974), pp. 139-40
  13. ^ Phillips (1974), p. 140
  14. ^ Phillips (1974), p. 144
  15. ^ Phillips (1974), p. 138
  16. ^ Phillips (1974), p. 143
  17. ^ Phillips (1974), p. 145