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Conundrums for the Long Week-End

Page 34

by Robert Kuhn McGregor


  Simpson, Helen, 180, 182

  Simpson, Wallis, 195

  Sir John Magill’s Last Journey (Crofts), 128

  Soviet Club (London), 54, 161

  Soviet Union, aid to Franco’s opponents, 196

  Spain, and spread of fascism, 196

  Spectator, Wimsey short stories in, 201

  Spiritualism, 95–97

  Sport: values of, 28; in Wimsey novels, 25, 52–53

  Stereotypes, in Wimsey novels, 30–31, 68–69

  Stravinsky, Igor, 102

  Stream of consciousness, Sayers’s rejection of, 35

  Strong Poison: Bunter’s role in, 152; in chronology of stories, 86; Cremorna Garden in, 67; finances in, 82–83; importance of emotional reactions in, 132; lesbian relationship in, 69; Lord Peter’s relationship with Harriet Vane in, 105–6; mentions of other authors in, 126; mystery writing incorporated into, 122–23; Peter’s relationship with Harriet in, 173; reactions to modernism in, 5; Sayers’s focus on method of crime in, 204; Sayers’s love for John Cournos reflected in, 7; Sayers’s neglect of, 94; Sayers’s plans for Wimsey in, 87–88; woven together with The Five Red Herrings and The Nine Tailors, 91–92

  Submarines, in WWI, 15

  Suffrage, in England, 18–19, 41

  Sugg, Police Inspector, 21, 29, 37

  Swaffams, Lady, 34

  “Talboys” (unpublished short story), 202, 209

  Tales of Detection (anthology of mystery stories), 200

  Tallboy, Mr., 150

  Technology: at beginning of WWII, 196; and belief in speedy resolution to war, 13–15; effects in Sayers’s stories, 205; and German modernism, 5; Lord Peter’s familiarity with, 113; in postwar England, 30; in Wimsey novels, 6; in WWI, 16, 27

  Templeton, Robert, 135–36, 139

  Thoday, James, 115, 156

  Thoday, Mary, 115–16

  Thoday, William, 107, 115–16, 156

  Thorndyke, Doctor, 124

  Thorpe, Hilary, 93–94, 115–16

  Thorpe, Sir Henry, 93

  Thorpe family, in The Nine Tailors, 111–12

  “Thrones, Dominations” (unfinished novel), 197–99, 201

  Time: and attempts to form chronology of Sherlock Holmes stories, 85–86; Sayers weaving novels together with, 91; Sayers’s manipulation of Wimsey chronology, 85–87; and Sayers’s use of alibis, 128

  Totalitarianism: in Gaudy Night, 162, 165; rise of, 158–61; Sayers’s opposition to, 163, 201; spread of, 207. See also Fascism

  Trenches, as characteristic of WWI, 14–15, 27–28

  Trent’s Last Case (Bentley), 123–24

  Tristan in Brittany, 90

  “Undignified Melodrama of the Bone of Contention, The” (Wimsey short story), 85

  United States, 5; stock market crash, 81–82; Wimsey novels in, 40, 47–48; in WWI, 15, 16

  Unnatural Death, 5, 58–66, 69, 86, 124, 189, 204

  Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club, The, 70, 125, 204; in chronology of stories, 86; compared to Whose Body? 74; effects of WWI in, 70–73; Lady Felicity Dormer in, 66–67; as transitional work, 78–79, 80

  Unwin, T. Fisher, publishers, 40, 48

  Urquhart, Norman, 82–83, 94–95

  Vacations: Harriet’s, 135–36; Peter’s, 91–93, 106, 129–30; Sayers’s, 90, 126

  Values: and definition of one’s job, 170; effects of war on, 28, 71–72; Sayers’s espousal of, 207–8; science’s lack of, 32; survival of English, 206–7

  Vane, Harriet, 4, 164, 166; character of, 141, 171–72, 75–76, 207; children of, 200, 202; friends of, 69, 104; and importance of jobs, 166–72; as investi-gative partner, 134–35, 138–40, 171, 188; marriage of, 184–87; as mystery writer, 122–23, 135–37, 203; relation-ship with Peter, 97–98, 105–8, 162–63, 172–75, 177–79, 208–9; similarity to Sayers, 98–99; as strong woman character, 158, 206; trial of, 91–93, 101, 105; as unappreciated genius, 104–5

  Vaughan, Ryland, 101

  Venables, Theodore and Agnes, 109–10, 113

  Veterans, WWI: avoidance of discussing war, 17, 28; Lord Peter Wimsey as, 70–72; understanding of war poets, 103

  Victorian era, 5, 23, 33; end of, 1–2; gender roles in, 62, 205–6; gender roles of, 62–68

  “Vindictive Story of the Footsteps that Ran, The” (Wimsey short story), 84

  Viscount St. George (Peter’s nephew), 85

  Von Moltke, Helmuthe, 13

  Von Schlieffen, Alfred, 13–14

  Vonderaa, Simone, 56

  Voting. See Suffrage

  Wallace, Edgar, 125–26, 135

  War, as ideal Victorian adventure, 65

  War memorials and services, 17–18, 52, 71

  Watson, Doctor, importance to Holmes stories, 120

  Weldon, Flora, 139, 141–42, 206

  Weldon, Henry, 139–42, 155–56

  Whelpton, Eric, 19–20, 21

  White, Bill, 46

  White, James, 81–82

  Whittaker, Clara, 66, 69

  Whittaker, Mary, 59–61, 68, 69

  Whose Body? 4–5, 29, 34, 46, 204; introduction of Lord Peter Wimsey in, 10, 23–25; Jewish stereotypes in, 30–31; narrative perspectives in, 33–35; other Wimsey novels compared to, 48, 74, 95; references to Sherlock Holmes in, 22, 123; Sayers’s writing style in, 33–34; significance of, 22, 36; Wimsey character in, 26, 189; writing of, 22, 40

  Wilson, Annie, 168–70

  Wimsey, Gerald. See Denver, Duke of (Wimsey’s brother Gerald)

  Wimsey, Lady Harriet Vane. See Vane, Harriet

  Wimsey, Lady Mary (Peter’s sister), 49, 60; and Parker, 56–57, 100, 151–52

  Wimsey, Lord Peter, 165; changing relationship with Parker, 78–79; character of, 23–26, 35–36, 55–56, 60–61, 71, 113, 132–33, 162, 191, 207; character shaped by era, 202, 209; children of, 200, 202; chronology of stories, 85–86; compared to Sherlock Holmes, 22–23; creation of, 1, 10; as Death Bredon, 145–46, 149–50; descriptions of, 20–21; directions for series, 180–81; effects of relationship with Harriet on, 99–100, 177–79; as embodiment of England, 184, 194–95; epitaph for, 201; family and friends of, 37–40, 49–50, 78–79, 181–82, 198–99; growth of character, 2–3, 21, 74, 80, 106, 117, 144, 176–77; Harriet as investigative partner for, 138–40, 171, 188; as intrepid, 84, 144–45, 148–49; introduced in Sayers’s Sexton Blake novel, 10, 20–21; introduction of, 23–25, 29; investigations of, 6, 79–80, 167; and marriage, 106–7, 184–87; play about, 21–22, 182–83; relationship with Harriet, 92–93, 97–98, 105–8, 138, 162–63, 172–75, 208–9; relationships with women, 56, 76–78, 80, 117, 181, 200; response to different settings, 54, 129–30, 151; responsibility for results of investigations, 25–26, 78, 115, 127, 131, 189–91; Sayers’s relationship with, 94, 138; Sayers’s weariness of, 87–88, 126, 193–94; in short stories, 83–87, 200; supporting characters for, 67–68, 78–79, 95, 138, 151; vulnerabilities of, 95, 141, 177–78, 189–91; as war veteran, 18, 70–73, 165; working alone, 78–79, 108, 113–14, 129

  Wimsey Family, The (Scott-Giles), 182

  Wimsey industry, 180–81, 184, 190, 192

  “Wimsey Papers, The,” 201

  Women, 166; among Bohemians, 101–4; education for, 11, 164–65, 167; effects of WWI on, 16–17; Harriet Vane as ideal, 97–98; jobs for, 168–71; rights for, 18–19, 41, 151–52, 157–59; roles in Wimsey stories, 4, 48–52, 59–61, 74–77, 117, 164–65, 205–6; Sayers’s characterizations of strong, 65–67, 108–10; as sleuths, 128; struggle for equality, 162, 173–75, 179–80; in Victorian era, 38, 62–68. See also Gender roles

  Woolf, Virginia, 35, 102, 104

  Wordsworth, William, 35

  Working class, 3, 19

  World War I, 9, 27, 73, 96; armistice, 16; casualties of, 11, 14–15, 17; causes of, 11–12; dismal morale during, 27–28; effects in Sayers’s stories, 4, 70–75, 204; effects of, 11, 16–17, 22, 89–90, 102–4; effects on Wimsey, 22, 191; and German modernism, 5; Peter’s shell shock in, 10, 26–27; strategies in, 27–28; technology of, 13–15;
Wimsey in, 3, 26–27, 181; Wimsey’s flashback to, 26, 34

  World War II, 194–95, 201–2

  Wright, Willard Huntington, 125

  Yeats, William Butler, 102, 103

  Yorkshire, 47, 52–53

  Zeal of thy House, The (play), 193

 

 

 


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