“The Firbank Beneath My Foot”
A Tribute to Ronnie Firbank
In an illustrated talk by William Cross, FSA Scot
Arthur Annesley Ronald Firbank 1886-1926
“A teller of fairy tales for grown up people”
Ronnie Firbank was born in London in
1886, but his passport recorded an address of St Julians, Newport,
Monmouthshire. His paternal grandfather
Joseph Firbank ( 1819-86) made his pile from the railways and lived at St
Julians House,
Ronnie
was educated at Uppingham School, Rutland, and tutored privately, notably by Rollo St Clair Talboys (1877-1953). He learned several languages, travelled abroad and later attended Trinity
College, Cambridge from 1906-9, where he was a contemporary of the war poet
Rupert Brooke and Oscar Wilde’s son, Vyvyan Holland. The family homes were at
There were two brothers, but Ronnie’s closest kin was a younger sister, Heather. Both of them shared a bizzaire shyness, strange foibles and eccentricities.
Known by his family as “Arthur” ( Artie) he was a sickly child, spoilt by his mother, he converted to Roman Catholic in 1907.
In adulthood Firbank
“cut a figure as a rich, shy
and utterly fastidious dandy”. He frequented the Café Royal and the
Ronnie’s books were published at his own expense from 1915-1926. They are “long sustained and complex epigrams..”. This is a list of his main titles & dates published: 1905: Odette d’ Antrevernes ; 1915: Vainglory; 1916 : Inclinations; 1917 : Caprice; 1919: Valmouth; 1920 :The Princess Zoubaroff; 1921: Santal; 1923: The Flower Beneath the Foot; 1924: Prancing Nigger (aka Sorrow in Sunlight); 1926: Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli.
His “
Letters to His Mother”, Dearest Baba, are also in print.
Some Opinions on Firbank
“ I always think of Ronald Firbank as an unhappy
man who luckily for him, had the power of expressing himself through his
books”. Vyvyan Holland.
“ He was like a
dipping strand of willow with a nerve of steel, and that “ something” floating
bending but unbreakable in him is, of course, the integrity of the good
artist.” Nancy Cunard
Ifan Kyrle Fletcher had
Newport links
with Firbank. He wrote an early Memoir
of him . “ While others thought of vice and virtue, he ( Firbank) was concerned
about vulgarity and elegance.”
“ …..the reclusive dandy-novelist Ronald
Firbank, a man so consumed by shyness that he once spent a dinner party hiding
under the table.” D J Taylor ( 2009)
Ronnie travelled extensively to write, with much of
his work compiled in France, North Africa, Italy ( in particular
Firbank is buried in Campo Verano,
“RIP : PRAY FOR THE SOUL OF ARTHUR ANNESLEY RONALD FIRBANK WHO ENTERED INTO REST ON 21ST MAY 1926 FAR FROM HIS COUNTRY”
AND THEREBY HANGS A TALE REVEALED IN THE TALK
Ronnie's Grave in Campo Verano, Rome, by Monty Dart
Blue Plaque for Ronnie 33, Curzon Street Mayfair, London
For more information, please contact William Cross, FSA Scot
Thanks to Monty & the late Tom Dart, Tony Friend & Ian Burge, Alan Smith, Digory Firbank & Ronnie Firbank
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