Maurice Magnus

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Maurice Magnus
Born(1876-11-07)November 7, 1876
DiedNovember 4, 1920(1920-11-04) (aged 43)
Malta
NationalityAmerican
Notable work
Memoirs of the Foreign Legion

Maurice Magnus (7 November 1876 – 4 November 1920) was an American traveller and author of Memoirs of the Foreign Legion, which exposed the cruelty and depravity of life in that French army unit in 1916–17.[1]

Life and work[]

Magnus's memoirs, published after his death, were notable for igniting a long-running feud between two of the most distinguished expatriate English authors, D.H. Lawrence and Norman Douglas, who had been close friends of his. Both the book and the feud surrounding it touched on homosexuality and bisexuality in a way that could not legally be referenced at the time. More recent revelations have added new insights into Lawrence as the prophet of love.[2]

Magnus was reportedly the manager of the dancer Isadora Duncan.[3] ″Isadora later maintained that Magnus had been her secretary, not her manager.″[4] Magnus was also the manager of the English theater set designer Edward Gordon Craig.[5]

"Lawrence used Magnus as a model for his creation of the fictional character Mr. May, the theatrical agent in The Lost Girl."[6] Magnus is also "recognizable ... as the mischievously named Little Mee in Aaron's Rod (1922)."[7] Lawrence biographer Frances Wilson claims that Lawrence's poem The Mosquito is "a summing up of his relations with Magnus to date and a parody of his belief in a blood brotherhood."[8]

Just before his suicide (to avoid arrest for debt), Magnus had made Douglas his literary executor, but the memoirs in their original form were unpublishable. They duly appeared, in edited form, with a long introduction by Lawrence, whose name helped to sell the work. Douglas protested that Lawrence had maligned Magnus as an unprincipled spendthrift, and had exaggerated Lawrence's own generosity towards him.[9] Lawrence published a letter to the editor in reply.[10] As Lawrence seldom ventured into biography, Douglas said he detected the fiction-writer's touch in this introduction. An early draft of the introduction in manuscript, now in the possession of the University of Nottingham, shows that Lawrence had intended an even more savage denunciation of Magnus.[11]

Bibliography[]

  • Aldington, Richard (1941). Life for Life's Sake: A Book of Reminiscences. New York: The Viking Press. pp. 375–376. OCLC 1150225579. OL 6429419M.
  • Douglas, Norman (1946). Late Harvest. London: Lindsay Drummond. pp. 52–53.
  • Keath Fraser. "Norman Douglas and D.H. Lawrence: A Sideshow in Modern Memoirs", The D.H. Lawrence Review, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 283-295 (1976).
  • Lawrence, D.H. (1987). Keith Cushman (ed.). Memoir of Maurice Magnus. Black Sparrow Press. ISBN 978-0-87685-716-8. This book includes the unexpurgated version of Lawrence's introduction to Magnus's Memoirs of the Foreign Legion (Lawrence's discussion of Magnus's homosexuality had been cut in the original), as well as the Douglas pamphlet and the Lawrence letter listed below under ″References.″ It also includes two excerpts from the typescript of Magnus's Dregs: Experiences of an American in the Foreign Legion, which was Magnus's title of his book. The first excerpt had not been included in the 1924 and 1925 published editions of Memoirs of the Foreign Legion; the second excerpt had been.
  • D.H. Lawrence. "Accumulated Mail", in The Borzoi 1925: Being a sort of record of ten years of publishing (New York: Knopf, 1925), pp. 119-128; reprinted in D.H. Lawrence, Phoenix: The Posthumous Papers, 1936, pp. 799–805, and in D.H. Lawrence, Reflections on the Death of a Porcupine and Other Essays, Cambridge University Press, 1987, pp. 237–245. Two paragraphs in the essay, on pp. 120–121 in The Borzoi 1925, p. 800 in Phoenix, and p. 240 in Reflections, discuss Lawrence's Introduction to Memoirs of the Foreign Legion.
  • N.H. Reeve and John Worthen. 1921-1922: Maurice Magnus, in D.H. Lawrence, Introductions and Reviews, Cambridge University Press, 2005, pp. xl-li.
  • Frances Wilson. Burning Man: The Trials of D.H. Lawrence, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2021.
  • Louise E. Wright. Disputed Dregs: D.H. Lawrence and the Publication of Maurice Magnus' Memoirs of the Foreign Legion, The Journal of the D.H. Lawrence Society (1996), pp. 57–73.
  • Louise E. Wright. The Death of Maurice Magnus, in D.H. Lawrence, Introductions and Reviews, Cambridge University Press, 2005, pp. 419–428.
  • Louise E. Wright. Maurice Magnus: A Biography, Newcastle, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2007.

References[]

  1. ^ Maurice Magnus. Memoirs of the Foreign Legion (Martin Secker, 1924; Alfred A. Knopf, 1925), introduction by D.H. Lawrence. Introduction reprinted in Phoenix II: Uncollected, Unpublished, and Other Prose Works by D.H. Lawrence (The Viking Press, Inc. 1970); in Cushman (see "Bibliography," above); in Introduction and Reviews in The Cambridge Edition of the Works of D.H. Lawrence (2004); and in Life With a Capital L (also published as The Bad Side of Books), essays by D.H. Lawrence chosen and introduced by Geoff Dyer (2019).
  2. ^ Brenda Maddox. The Married Man: A Life of D.H. Lawrence, published by Sinclair-Stevenson (1994) and by Minerva (1995); published as D.H. Lawrence: The Story of a Marriage by Simon & Schuster (1994) and by W.W. Norton and Company (1996).
  3. ^ D.H. Lawrence, Memoir of Maurice Magnus, edited by Keith Cushman (Santa Rosa, California: Black Sparrow Press, 1987), p. 9.
  4. ^ Harriet Cooper. Lawrence, Magnus, and Monte Cassino, D.H. Lawrence Review, vol. 26, No. 1/3 (1995-1996), pp. 149-165, n.3, citing Stokes, Sewell, Isadora Duncan: An Intimate Portrait, p. 14 (London: Brentano's, 1928).
  5. ^ Harriet Cooper. Lawrence, Magnus, and Monte Cassino, D.H. Lawrence Review, vol. 26, No. 1/3 (1995-1996), p. 150. Also noted in D.H. Lawrence, Memoir of Maurice Magnus, edited by Keith Cushman (Santa Rosa, California: Black Sparrow Press, 1987), p. 9.
  6. ^ Harriet Cooper. Lawrence, Magnus, and Monte Cassino, D.H. Lawrence Review, vol. 26, No. 1/3 (1995-1996), p. 150. Also noted in Brenda Maddox, D.H. Lawrence: The Story of a Marriage, p. 268.
  7. ^ Paul Dean, "D.H. Lawrence the adventurer: A review of Burning Man by Frances Wilson," The New Criterion, vol. 30, no. 1 (September 2021)
  8. ^ Burning Man, p. 231.
  9. ^ Norman Douglas. D.H. Lawrence and Maurice Magnus: A Plea for Better Manners, privately printed pamphlet (1924); reprinted (with changes) in Norman Douglas, Experiments, London: Chapman & Hall (1925), and New York: Robert M. McBride & Company (1925), pp. 223-264. Among the changes in the version in Experiments was the omission of the (substantive) footnote on pp. 38-39, and the addition of five (substantive) footnotes. Cushman (listed above under ″Bibliography″) reproduces the first edition of the pamphlet, with technical edits.
  10. ^ D.H. Lawrence. The Late Mr Maurice Magnus: A Letter. New Statesman, 20 February 1926. Reprinted in Phoenix: The Posthumous Papers, 1936, pp. 806-807; in Selected Essays, Penguin Books, 1950, pp. 349-351; in The Letters of D.H. Lawrence, Volume V, 1924-1927, Cambridge University Press, 1989, pp. 395-397, and in Cushman (listed above under ″Bibliography″).
  11. ^ "Friend and critic - The University of Nottingham".
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