59 The Romantic William Boyd
There' are good books which give a temporary fix and then there are the rare exceptional ones that stay in the mind long after finishing them, so much so, there's often the desire to read them all over again. The Romantic will be one of those for me, it's hard to put into words how much I loved it..
The story of Cashel Greville Ross born illegitimately in 1799 to an Anglo Irish landowning father, Sir Guy Stillwell and a Scottish mother, Elspeth Souter. Cashel's life plays out to reflect pivotal junctures of the 19th century as William Boyd has cleverly inserted his protagonist into some of the defining moments of that century.
In early childhood Cashel and his mother leave Ireland for England, his father having set them up in a comfortable house in Oxford, there Elspeth is to assume the name of Mrs Pelham Ross to give her an air of respectability and at a later stage twin brothers will follow when Cashel is well into his teens. Discovering the true nature of his birth and in a fit of pique, Cashel leaves his school mid teens where he is destined for Oxford University, and signs up with the British Army having added a year or two to his actual age. Only later to find himself in the Battlefields of Waterloo. Returning to England in the aftermath, an esteemed young veteran of that famous battle, his father then buys him a commission in the East Indian Army. When on secondment in Ceylon, Cashel finds himself questioning the authority of a commanding officer relating to a moral dilemma. Discharged from the army or insubordination but escaping being court marshalled and on half pay he moves to mainland Europe and whilst in Pisa he finds himself a guest of Romantic poets Byron and Shelley. It is also in Italy he meets and loses the love of his life, a woman to haunt his longing and dreams until the end of his days.. His life is to follow a roller coaster of unfolding successes and disasters in various guises, author, debtor during a spell in Marchelsea Prison. Farmer in the US where he marries and has children. That doesn't end well, his wife's increasing descent into madness leads him to fall out with his in-laws and return to England, but not for long. A chance meeting with an old army colleague convinces him that a proposed expedition into central Africa in seeking to be the first men to discover the source of the Nile will lead them to fame and fortune which he will use to return to America and reclaim his children who are in the clutches of his father in law. Life never goes to plan though. More twists and turns follow as Cashel moves towards his older years and the opportunity of being offered the highly improbable position of Consul to NIcaragua based in Trieste through one of his shady previous acquaintances. Lucrative it turns out to be, but also merely a front for some illegal pilfering of antiquities from the ancient world being sent abroad.. It is in Italy that he is to meet his first love who he has continually held a flame for throughout most of his adult life and finding her a widow he hopes the opportunity to rekindle their lost love will come to fruition, although they are both now in the Autumn of their years and Cashel is to to find his life in danger when he exposes the criminal activities that are emanating from the consulate in Trieste.
The first part of the book had shades of Thackeray's Vanity Fair/Barry Lydon nevertheless, I think William Boyd has created his own masterpiece in this book, definitely the best of his I've read so far. 5 big stars. Wonderful!