The following is a talk I gave at the International Lawrence Durrell Society conference at Victoria, British Columbia, in 2006. It explains how Durrell intended to write a single-volume work set in Alexandria and how it turned into a quartet.
My photograph taken in 1996 of the tower atop the Villa Ambron where Durrell wrote Prospero's Cell and the first few pages of The Alexandria Quartet. |
The Alexandria Quartet: From One Volume to Four
Lawrence Durrell made a number of corrections to Justine following its first publication early in 1957. Most famously there was the misprint on page 136 in this description of Melissa: ‘She will throw back her dress to unroll her stocking and show you the dark cicatrice above the tree, lodged between the twin dimples of the suspender’. ‘Tree’ was changed to ‘knee’ in October that year, but not before it had played havoc with the French translation of Justine.
By this time, November 1958, the first three volumes of The Alexandria Quartet had been published, and Narouz had emerged as a major figure. At the Carnival Ball, the climactic scene in Balthazar, it is Narouz who drives the hat pin into the skull of Toto de Brunel thinking he is murdering Justine. And in Mountolive the climactic scene is the death of Narouz. Yet until Durrell added the name Narouz to the Workpoints of Justine, there was no mention of him at all in the first volume of the Quartet.
In fact looking through Justine not only
will you find no mention of Nessim’s brother Narouz, but you will find no
mention either of Nessim’s mother Leila nor of Nessim’s father Faltaus nor of
Nessim’s family estate at Karm Abu Girg.
There is a good reason for this.
At the time Durrell was writing Justine he was not looking ahead to the
structure or the plot or the characters of the remaining volumes of the Quartet
for the simple reason that he had no intention of writing a quartet.
The first indication Durrell gave of wanting to write more than a single volume came a few months after Justine was accepted for publication when he wrote to Faber and Faber in mid-July 1956, ‘In the back of my mind I want to do a series, I don't know how many, of novels in the style of Justine about Alexandria, using the same people in different combinations'. Indeed up until at least a month before the publication of Justine in January 1957 Durrell’s ideas were so unformed that he wrote to Henry Miller saying he was thinking of writing five Alexandrian novels.
Coloured drawing by Greek artist Andrea Georgiadis of the Hotel Cecil on the Corniche. |
In the novel, of course, that factor is Balthazar, whose Interlinear reinterprets the events described by Darley in Justine. But in reality that single chance factor was Claude Vincendon who arrived in Durrell’s life with an Interlinear of her own.
Very little has been known or written about Claude Vincendon’s origins. In his biography of Durrell, Gordon Bowker says only that Claude was ‘the daughter of a French banker and a Jewish mother’, while Ian MacNiven, in his biography, does not go beyond saying that her mother was ‘a Menasce, a family prominent in Egyptian banking’. Even Durrell’s daughters and his closest friends, some of whom became close friends of Claude, knew next to nothing about her background. Neither Durrell nor Claude herself talked about her past; it remained something private between them.
Claude and Durrell met in the summer of 1955 when she applied for a position at the French section of the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation and was hired by Durrell, who was the Public Information Director. Durrell had fallen into 'a bad patch of distress and apathy' after the departure of his wife Eve and their daughter Sappho. But Claude inspired him not only to finish Justine but to expand what till then he had intended as only a single novel into a quartet, its span the interwar years and the Second World War in Alexandria, bringing something to it of her own memories of the city as well as characters and stories from her family history.
My photograph of the view from Athineos on the Corniche across the Eastern Harbour to Fort Kaitbey, site of Alexandria's ancient lighthouse the Pharos, one of the Seven Wonders of the World. |
Baron Yaqub Levi de Menasce |
The banking firm of J L Menasce passed to Yaqub's four grandsons, among them Claude’s grandfather Baron Felix de Menasce. The brothers were sent to Europe for their education and to manage the bank’s various overseas branches before returning to Alexandria. In Egypt they acquired extensive lands for the cultivation of sugar and cotton, and they constructed water works and railways – indeed together with three other Jewish families, the Menasces were responsible for building almost the entire railway system of Egypt.
Baron Felix de Menasce with his daughters Claire and Denise and his son Jean. |
Siegfried Sassoon, Lord David Cecil and Jean de Menasce in a snapshot taken by Lady Ottoline Morrell. |
After leaving Oxford Jean went to the Sorbonne to study oriental languages and under the influence of the philosopher Jacques Maritain converted to Roman Catholicism, became a Dominican, and published several valuable works on Persian inscriptions.
Claire de Menasce in costume for a 1931 review. |
In fact Durrell had had a glimpse of Claude’s world. Though they never met in Alexandria, he would sometimes go to the Menasce house to attend the renowned open-house musical afternoons put on every Sunday and Tuesday during the war by her uncle George de Menasce, each attended by as many as two hundred soldiers and other guests, followed by a lavish tea with pastries from Baudrot or Pastroudis. Indeed the Menasce house was only a five minute walk away from the Villa Ambron where Durrell lived and had his tower.
Aldo Ambron was an architect, an engineer and a financier who sat as a director on several companies along with other captains of Alexandria’s thriving business community and who for the most part were members of the city’s most prominent Jewish dynasties, among them Baron Felix de Menasce. In fact it was Aldo Ambron Abramo Isaac, to give him his full name, who in a eulogy in the press led the tributes to Felix de Menasce when died in 1943 after paralysis had confined him for nearly a decade to a wheelchair in the great house just along the Rue Rasafa.
Aldo Ambron on the left. |
Among the people Durrell got to know in Alexandria was Gaston Zananiri, a man of letters and a champion of cosmopolitanism. Zananiri also gave lectures on Cavafy, whom he first met when he was just twenty-two in 1926. Cavafy and Zananiri would frequent the tavernas and the cabarets. ‘He used to go spend the nights there and look at the young lads. And when he returned home he used to scribble notes about his impressions. You will see in some of his poems where he says old men lean on their memories'.
Zananiri may well have been a partial model for Durrell’s Balthazar, whom he described as a 'close friend of the old poet, and of him he spoke with such warmth and penetration that what he had to say always moved me', a description fitting Zananiri, also the observation that Balthazar 'spoke as if a different sort of time obtained here'. And when Durrell wrote in Justine of the boys who stir and turn to watch every stranger 'in those little cafés where Balthazar went so often with the old poet of the city', Durrell was clearly recollecting Zananiri's stories of his nighttime adventures with Cavafy.
I spent three days talking with Gaston Zananiri in Paris in 1996 shortly before his death, all of it captured on tape. Zananiri was a friend of Durrell's and Cavafy's and of the Menasce family. |
The answer would be critical, as those excluded from the definition could eventually lose their political rights and possibly their property, their homes and their country too. Zananiri’s hope for Egypt's future, his cultural and his political hope, was that it should follow the diverse yet inclusive Mediterranean model of cosmopolitan Alexandria.
At first Durrell was enthusiastic, but he
also knew that in the salons and cafés of Alexandria almost everyone, Greeks,
Jews, Syro-Lebanese, had a story to tell of wanderings and survival, of
Byzantiums fallen, of Smyrnas doomed. 'Durrell suggested that I write a book’,
said Zananiri, ‘about the situation of the foreign communities who had brought
new life to Alexandria. He suggested a history, The Problems of Egypt.'
Throughout history, Zananiri wrote, Egyptians had played a role in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Near East and were themselves an essentially Mediterranean people, like the Syrians, Lebanese, Palestinians, Greeks, Italians and Maltese, many of whom – Muslims, Christians and Jews – had settled in Egypt.
Throughout history, Zananiri wrote, Egyptians had played a role in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Near East and were themselves an essentially Mediterranean people, like the Syrians, Lebanese, Palestinians, Greeks, Italians and Maltese, many of whom – Muslims, Christians and Jews – had settled in Egypt.
Durrell had Zananiri’s typescript of The Problems of Egypt sent to Curtis Brown, his literary agents in London. They passed it on to Faber and Faber who returned it to Zananiri in Alexandria. It was never published.
Meanwhile, recalled Durrell’s friend Gwyn Williams, who was head of the English department at Alexandria University, there was no mistaking that 'Alexandria during the years 1942-45 was a city of causes that were being lost, even though militarily it was successfully defended'. Instead of being linked to the Mediterranean it was being 'rolled towards the sea'. Seeing no future before them, many cosmopolitan Alexandrians left the city after the war. Durrell’s Jewish girlfriend Eve Cohen nearly did not make it: the Egyptian government told her that she was not a citizen and could not be granted a passport; no matter that her family had lived in Egypt for generations, she was declared a stateless person in her own country. Claude Vincendon had French nationality through her father and left Egypt in 1946. Gaston Zananiri abandoned his Mediterranean dream and in 1952 left the country which had been inhabited by his family for three hundred and fifty years.
Durrell and Claude in Provence in 1957 where he writes what he first calls Justine II which becomes Balthazar, the second volume of the Quartet. |
Delivering her Interlinear, Claude told
Durrell how in March 1918, four months after the Balfour Declaration, Chaim
Weizmann, leader of the World Zionist Organisation and the eventual first
president of Israel, sailed into Alexandria harbour and was cheered through the
streets by a large and enthusiastic crowd of Jewish refugees who had been
thrown out of Palestine by the Turks and Germans, and how he was greeted by
numbers of Alexandrian notables led by Baron Felix de Menasce. Weizmann and his wife became lifelong friends
of Felix and Rosette, and whenever Weizmann returned to Alexandria he
invariably was their guest.
Felix de Menasce went to Jerusalem that summer where he was present as Weizmann laid the foundation stone for the Hebrew University, while back in Alexandria he helped found and became the first chairman of the Alexandria Pro-Palestina Committee whose purpose was to encourage and finance settlement in Palestine. He made large donations to the Jerusalem hospital, bought land atop Mount Carmel, represented Egypt at the London Zionist conference in 1920 and at the Twelfth Zionist Congress in 1921 at Carlsbad, and became a member of the council of the Jewish Agency, which succeeded the Zionist Commission and acted as a kind of autonomous Jewish government for Palestine.
Felix’s sons pursued his interests. Jean de Menasce, in addition to his published work on Persian inscriptions, wrote a book on Hassidism whose teachings originally were a popularised form of the Jewish mystical tradition known as the cabala, was an active Zionist both before and after his conversion to Catholicism, and worked for Weizmann at the Zionist Organisation’s Geneva bureau.
Felix de Menasce went to Jerusalem that summer where he was present as Weizmann laid the foundation stone for the Hebrew University, while back in Alexandria he helped found and became the first chairman of the Alexandria Pro-Palestina Committee whose purpose was to encourage and finance settlement in Palestine. He made large donations to the Jerusalem hospital, bought land atop Mount Carmel, represented Egypt at the London Zionist conference in 1920 and at the Twelfth Zionist Congress in 1921 at Carlsbad, and became a member of the council of the Jewish Agency, which succeeded the Zionist Commission and acted as a kind of autonomous Jewish government for Palestine.
Felix’s sons pursued his interests. Jean de Menasce, in addition to his published work on Persian inscriptions, wrote a book on Hassidism whose teachings originally were a popularised form of the Jewish mystical tradition known as the cabala, was an active Zionist both before and after his conversion to Catholicism, and worked for Weizmann at the Zionist Organisation’s Geneva bureau.
But at the very time that Durrell was attending the musical afternoons at the Menasce house in Alexandria, George de Menasce was secretly raising money from a select list of Alexandrian Jewish millionaires on behalf of Mossad Le'Aliya, the underground organisation responsible for illegal immigration into Palestine. This was in contrast to the appeal to the Jewish community in Alexandria in December 1942 to donate funds care of Robert Rolo, the non-Zionist president of the community, to further the British war effort as the surest way of delivering the world from Hitler's tyranny.
Associated with illegal immigration was the gathering of intelligence about the British and the Egyptians, and the theft from British warehouses of weapons and munitions confiscated from the retreating Germans which were then smuggled across Sinai to be used against the British and the Arabs in Palestine. British intelligence was watching George de Menasce, but they failed to pick up his activities at the time, and indeed for his open-house musical afternoons and other generous services to the troops he was awarded an OBE.
The smashed-up entrance to the Villa Ambron. |
This was a nod towards the Quartet, in which Durrell was now drawing on Claude's knowledge of the city as he wrote about the Coptic Hosnani family — the crippled father, the beautiful mother, and the two Hosnani sons, one a financier, the other a religious mystic — and the cause in which their lives became involved, a Jewish Palestine that would stand as an ally with the Copts against growing Muslim power in Egypt. Except that inside Durrell's mind the models for the Hosnanis were not Copts: they were the brilliant flowering of cosmopolitan Alexandria; they were Jewish and their name was Menasce.
For more information on cosmopolitan Alexandria see my books Alexandria: City of Memory and Vintage Alexandria.