The Seven Dials Mystery by Agatha Christie (1929)

‘I’m sorry, Bundle. Possibly the jolly old brain isn’t functioning as well as usual, but I haven’t the faintest idea what you’re talking about.’
(One of the Bertie Wooster soundalike young chaps in ‘The Seven Dials Mystery’, page 159)

‘The Seven Dials Mystery’ is a murder mystery comedy, full of comically posh English characters, dastardly foreigners, an imperturbably solid English policeman and suavely reliable butlers, all fed into a preposterous plot about foreign powers trying to get their hands on the secrets of a new military invention. It is ludicrous from start to finish and very entertaining.

Also it’s a sequel. It’s in the same setting (a country house named Chimneys) and features many of the same characters (such as Superintendent Battle and Lady Eileen ‘Bundle’ Brent) as her 1925 novel The Secret of Chimneys.

For a start, the entire tone of the narrative and the dialogue sound like Christie lampooning or pastiching P.G. Wodehouse:

‘I say, oughtn’t we to have some lethal weapons? Chaps usually do when they’re going on this sort of stunt.’

‘What about me?’ she asked.
‘Nothing doing. You go to bed and sleep.’
‘Oh!’ said Bundle. ‘That’s not very exciting.’
‘You never know,’ said Jimmy kindly. ‘You may be murdered in your sleep.’

‘You ought to have told him what you thought of him.’
‘Unfortunately modern civilization rules that out,’ said Lord Caterham regretfully.

‘I know you’re the most frightful sport, Bundle, but—’
‘Cut out the compliments. Let’s make plans.’

‘I hope we shan’t go and shoot the wrong person,’ said Bill with some anxiety.
‘That would be unfortunate,’ said Mr Thesiger gravely.

The opening 30 pages or so of this book have more laughs in it than any of the Noel Coward plays I’ve just been reading, with a cast of posh young chaps entertaining doddering old aunties. Lady Coote’s interactions with the intimidating Scottish head gardener at Chimneys, in fact with all her staff, are priceless.

Lady Coote was… a lonely woman. The principal relaxation of her early married life had been talking to ‘the girl’—and even when ‘the girl’ had been multiplied by three, conversation with her domestic staff had still been the principal distraction of Lady Coote’s day. Now, with a pack of housemaids, a butler like an archbishop, several footmen of imposing proportions, a bevy of scuttling kitchen and scullery maids, a terrifying foreign chef with a ‘temperament’ and a housekeeper of immense proportions who alternately creaked and rustled when she moved, Lady Coote was as one marooned on a desert island.

As is caricature Lord Coote’s passion for that very 1920s game, golf:

Loraine had been at Chimneys for nearly a week, and had earned the high opinion of her host [Lord Coote] mainly because of the charming readiness she had shown to be instructed in the science of the mashie shot.

The dialogue of the bright young things staying at the country house, Chimneys, is humorously exaggerated.

‘And then, of course, the poor chap was dead. Which made the whole thing rather beastly.’

‘Thank the Heavens above I’m an educated man and know nothing whatever upon any subject at all.’

Everyone has posh nicknames – Pongo, Bundle, Codders, Socks.

The critics didn’t like ‘The Seven Dials Mystery’ and thought it was a lamentable lapse from the ‘serious’ tone required of a proper murder mystery. But I don’t read Christie for the whodunnit element, which I find ridiculously complicated and contrived – I mostly read her for what I’ve discovered is her broad comedy and so I thoroughly enjoyed it.

I have been really surprised reading Agatha Christie to discover 1) what pulpy trash she wrote early in her career (The Big Four) and 2) that she’s an essentially comic writer. Poirot is a comic creation and by and large we see him through the eyes of dim-witted Captain Hastings, who is an even more comic creation. They are a comedy duo – something which sets them apart from the superficially similar Holmes and Watson.

Bookish

Christie’s books are bookish but not in any intellectual sense, in the sense that she is very well aware that she is copying tropes and clichés from a zillion previous cheap thrillers and shilling shockers. The text is drenched in this ironic self-awareness, which is somehow meant to defuse the accusation that she was dealing in the most howling clichés.

‘A damned funny crowd,’ said Bundle, vigorously massaging her arms and legs. ‘As a matter of fact, they’re the sort of crowd I always imagined until tonight only existed in books.’

‘It’s impossible,’ said Jimmy, following out his own train of thought. ‘The beautiful foreign adventuress, the international gang, the mysterious No. 7, whose identity nobody knows – I’ve read it all a hundred times in books.’
‘Of course you have. So have I. But it’s no reason why it shouldn’t really happen.’

‘There’s the woman, of course,’ continued Jimmy. ‘She ought to be easier. But then, you’re not likely to run across her. She’s probably putting in the dirty work being taken out to dinner by amorous Cabinet Ministers and getting State secrets out of them when they’ve had a couple. At least, that’s how it’s done in books.’

‘An automatic, sir?’
‘That’s it,’ said Jimmy. ‘An automatic. And I should like it to be a blue-nosed one – if you and the shopman know what that is. In American stories, the hero always takes his blue-nosed automatic from his hip pocket.’

‘I say, Bundle,’ said Jimmy anxiously, ‘you haven’t been reading too much sensational literature, have you?’

‘What do you think it is?’ asked Bundle.
‘A white crystalline powder, that’s what it is,’ said Jimmy. ‘And to any reader of detective fiction those words are both familiar and suggestive.’

But having your characters (repeatedly) insist that this is the kind of thing that only happens in crime novels and thrillers doesn’t get you off the hook for copying the outlandish plots and melodramatic scenarios of previous crime novels and thrillers – it only emphasises the fact.

‘About this society, for instance – I know it’s common enough in books – a secret organization of criminals with a mysterious super-criminal at the head of it whom no one ever sees…

Maybe that’s why the whole thing is done in the frivolous style of Wodehouse, because it’s a way of defusing or deflecting criticism of its contrivance. Or maybe the constant harping on about how the plot is as wild as any silly thriller is part of the comedy.

Contemporary reviews

The reviewer in the Times Literary Supplement of 4 April 1929 put his finger on it: ‘It is a great pity that Mrs Christie should in this, as in a previous book, have deserted the methodical procedure of inquiry into a single and circumscribed crime for the romance of universal conspiracy and international rogues. These Gothic romances are not to be despised but they are so different in kind from the story of strict detection that it is unlikely for anyone to be adept in both.’

In her autobiography, Christie wrote that this book was what she called ‘the light-hearted thriller type’. She went on to say that they were always easy to write as they didn’t require too much plotting or planning, presumably in contrast to the very-tightly planned detective stories.

‘Light-hearted’. So that’s her own definition or genre.

Synopsis

Chimneys We are at an extended party at a posh country house, Chimneys, hosted by Sir Oswald and Lady Coote. Only a little into the book do we learn that Oswald is a self-made millionaire who made his fortune in steel, and who has rented Chimneys off its actual owner, Lord Caterham.

House guests The guests at the party are a bunch of posh young chaps – Gerry Wade, Jimmy Thesiger, Ronny Devereux, Bill Eversleigh, and Rupert ‘Pongo’ Bateman – along with some chapesses – Helen, Nancy and ‘Socks’.

The clock joke Wade has a habit of oversleeping so the others cook up a joke by motoring into the nearest town and buying eight alarm clocks which they place around his bedroom once he’s fast asleep.

Gerry dies The clocks go off, alright, everyone hears them, but no Gerry appears and next morning a footman finds Wade dead in his bed. There’s a bottle of chloral on his nightstand, so the more sensible guests, the police and then the coroner a few days later, conclude it was accidental overdose of this sleeping potion. But Thesiger notices that the alarm clocks they stashed around the room have all been neatly repositioned on the mantelpiece, and that one of them is missing. It is later found chucked out of the window into the hedge below. Why?

Lord Caterham returns A few days later the house party breaks up with most of the guests returning to London as the owner of the property, Lord Caterham and his daughter Lady Eileen ‘Bundle’ Brent, move back into Chimneys. In a comic Wodehousian way my Lord is disgruntled that someone had the bad manners to die in his house:

‘I don’t see why you’re so frightfully sensitive about it,’ said Bundle. ‘After all, people must die somewhere.’
‘They needn’t die in my house,’ said Lord Caterham.

The unfinished letter is a gung-ho type of chapess and she’s puzzled by aspects of Gerry’s death. She accidentally discovers a letter tucked away in the writing desk in the room where Wade was staying. It’s a draft of a letter he was writing to his half-sister, Loraine Wade, which contains the sinister sentence:

‘Look here, do forget what I said about that Seven Dials business. I thought it was going to be more or less of a joke, but it isn’t—anything but. I’m sorry I ever said anything about it—it’s not the kind of business kids like you ought to be mixed up in. So forget about it, see?’

What did he mean?

The young man who isn’t run over So Bundle decides to motor up to London to see Bill Eversleigh. She hasn’t got very far before a figure comes blundering out of the woods and, although she swerves, she thinks she’s run him over. Going back she realises she didn’t hit him but he is mortally wounded and expires anyway. Just before he dies he gasps out, ‘Seven Dials…’ and ‘Tell… Jimmy Thesiger’.

Bundle gets his body to a doctor who tells her that her car did not hit Devereux. He was shot.

George Lomax is having a party After handing the body over to the doctor, and answering some questions from the police, Bundle returns home. When she mentions ‘Seven Dials’ her father, Lord Caterham says that’s a funny coincidence. George Lomax, ‘His Majesty’s permanent Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs’, had popped in, saying he was planning to have a political party at his home, Wyvern Abbey, the following week, but had received a ‘warning letter’, warning him off. What?

Bundle goes see Jimmy Thesiger So Bundle sets off a second time to drive up to London, to visit Jimmy Thesiger and discovers Loraine Wade also there waiting to see the tardy young man (who is woken and tended to by his excellent manservant Stevens, who bears a remarkable similarity to Jeeves). To cut a long story short, the three of them discuss the two mysterious deaths, the references to Seven Dials, and coalesce into a gang who agree to investigate the mystery, separate from the police.

Mafia joke When they ask Loraine what Gerry was writing to ask her to forget, she explains that she recently opened a letter addressed to him by mistake. It contained a list of names and numbers. Apparently, Gerry joked about there being an English version of the Mafia, except not as picturesque.

Hypothesis Jimmy summarises that the Seven Dials is a secret society which Gerry discovered, started off treating as a joke but learned was serious. He told Ronny Devereux about it and so, after they’d bumped off Gerry, the same people tracked down and bumped off Ronny. (All this is discussed in a jolly kind of way, just as Stevens arrives to announce that luncheon is served.)

Gerry was a spy When Bundle mentions that George Lomax is having a party but has received some kind of threat, Jimmy jumps to the conclusion that something is going to happen at this party (which it indeed does). He also shares the startling news that instead of being the dim, lazybones Gerry Wade came over as to his friends, he was in fact in the British Secret Service and spent most of the First World War in Germany as a spy.

‘Then the thing’s bigger than we thought. This Seven Dials business isn’t merely criminal—it’s international. One thing’s certain, somebody has got to be at this house-party of Lomax’s.’

Jimmy will go So Jimmy will attend this party at Wyvern Abbey, and he’ll get Bundle an invite but they both agree it’s too dangerous for Loraine to attend, which she meekly accepts (or appears to).

Superintendent Battle After lunch Bundle motors round to Scotland Yard where she meets up with Superintendent Battle, who appeared along with her in the book’s prequel. She shares everything she knows about the Gerry Wade case and asks to be let in on the facts. Battle tells her Bill Eversleigh will be able to help.

Date with Bill So she phones and makes a date to see Bill Eversleigh the following evening. First of all he tells her the guest list at George Lomax’s party. Then he tells her there’s a Seven Dials club. She insists he take her there, so off they go, arriving at 14 Hunstanton Street. They go in and dance and eat some fish and chips (!). Bundle notices that one of the staff was until recently a servant at Chimneys. That’s a bit of a coincidence.

Back at Chimneys Bundle goes back to Chimneys where she quizzes the staff and discovers the footman who left has been replaced by a new chap with the surname Bauer i.e. foreign. Hmm. Then she goes to see her redoubtable aunt, Marcia, Marchioness of Caterham, to get more information about the guests at Lomax’s forthcoming party.

Bullying Alfred Then she motors back up to London. Here she slips into disguise and goes along to the Seven Dials Club. Here she confronts the ex-footman with the accusation that he was somehow bribed to leave Chimneys. He simply says he was made a cash offer he couldn’t refuse by a Mr Mosgorovsky, the owner of the club.

The meeting room Bundle then persuades Aldred to show her the secret rooms upstairs, where illicit gambling goes on. He shows her the room but then reveals there is a secret latch into another room, the Meeting Room of the Seven Dials Society. Off to one side is a pair of cupboards. Bundle gets Alfred to squeeze her into one of them and then lock her into it, and promise to come back in the early hours to release her.

The Seven Dials society Why? Because there is a meeting of the Seven Dials committee planned and she plans to spy on it. Sure enough, a couple of hours later, the members of the secret society start to arrive.

From her hidden vantage point Bundle sees it all and it sounds exactly like the meeting of any other secret international organisation of conspirators. They call each other Number 1, Number 2 etc. There’s a Russian, an American, a Frenchman etc. They all complain that Number 7 never attends the meetings. And they are all wearing masks to conceal their identities, masks painted with the face of a clock, the dial. Seven dials!

She overhears them discussing the mysterious series of events in detail: discussing the murder of Gerry Wade, how they intend to manage the post-mortem on Ronnie Devereux, then they go through the guest list for the big party at George Lomax’s house. Clearly it is the next stage in the mystery for they explain how at this country house ‘party’ a German scientist called Eberhard will offer a secret formula for sale to the British Air Minister.

Far-fetched Then they all leave and Bundle has to put up with a few hours of exquisite discomfort locked in the closet before Alfred returns to unlock it and set here free, telling her the club is now empty. Her reporting of the meeting she’s just seen prompts the first of several jokey references to the far-fetched nature of the story.

‘A damned funny crowd,’ said Bundle, vigorously massaging her arms and legs. ‘As a matter of fact, they’re the sort of crowd I always imagined until tonight only existed in books.’

Briefing Jimmy After a few hours rest she rings up Jimmy to confer further. As she describes what she heard he echoes the absurd similarity between it all and the cheapest spy thriller:

‘It’s impossible,’ said Jimmy, following out his own train of thought. ‘The beautiful foreign adventuress, the international gang, the mysterious No. 7, whose identity nobody knows—I’ve read it all a hundred times in books.’
‘Of course you have. So have I. But it’s no reason why it shouldn’t really happen.’

Improved hypothesis Together they sketch out the plot. A man called Eberhard is attending the party at George Lomax’s. He is a German inventor and has developed a new technique for making super-strong steel. Implausibly, the German government turned it down so he’s brought it to the British government. Lomax has asked Sir Oswald the steel expert to assess it, while another guest is scheduled to be Sir Stanley Digby the Air Minister. So this ‘party’ is by way of being an unofficial conference on the viability of Eberhard’s invention and what Bundle overheard in the Seven Dials club is that the Seven Dials organisation intend to steal the formula.

A gun So Jimmy tells Bundle he is definitely attending this party and expects trouble. He asks his man, Stevens, to go and buy him a pistol. Again Christie jokily signals how much like a cheap spy thriller this is:

‘An automatic, sir?’
‘That’s it,’ said Jimmy. ‘An automatic. And I should like it to be a blue-nosed one – if you and the shopman know what that is. In American stories, the hero always takes his blue-nosed automatic from his hip pocket.’

The party at Wyvern Abbey So Jimmy drives down to Wyvern Abbey the next day, where he meets and introduces Bundle to everyone. There’s half a dozen or more new characters for us to meet, and a lot of polite conversation as they all size each other up. In this respect it moves close to the classic Christie scenario of 8 or so suspects gathered in a country house where a crime is committed.

Bang in the night Long story short, after lots of banter and chat over dinner, all the guests go to bed. But Jimmy hears a noise in the library and goes downstairs. While here someone comes in and they have a fierce fight, which ends with shots being fired, one of them hitting Jimmy in the arm. but unbeknown to him, Bundle had also climbed out of her bedroom window and down the ivy and heard someone suspiciously creeping about on the terrace, when she turned a corner and blundered into who else by Superintendent Battle, being large and English and reassuring. After they’ve established why they are both there, Battle politely but firmly tells Bundle to go back to her bedroom. She’s just climbed back up the ivy when she hears shots from the library and goes running downstairs.

Loraine’s adventure Meanwhile the third member of this little gang of investigators, Loraine Wade, had been told not to attend the party at all but she disobeyed. That evening she dressed up in night adventure clothes and motored round to Wyvern Abbey. She has barely broken into the grounds and snuck up to the terrace when something lands, plop, at her feet. She picks it up. it is an envelope and a man is climbing out of a window above her.

Battle and bangs Loraine runs round the corner of the terrace smack into the arms of Superintendent Battle. He’s just asking her what she’s doing there when they both hear the shots and go running back to the french windows into the library.

Scene in the library Here they discover Jimmy unconscious, shot in the arm but alive. They tourniquet his arm then open the (locked) library door to let in all the other guests. They make several discoveries: first of all the assistant to the Air Minister, Terence O’Rourke, is found to have been drugged and the papers, which were in his keeping, to have been stolen. Next Sir Oswald comes in. He claims to have been out walking in the night air and seen someone running away across the lawn and, retracing their steps, to have found a small gun, which he now presents for everyone to see. Third, Loraine is produced, explains how she snuck into the grounds (against Jimmy’s advice) and caught the bundle which was thrown down to her, before she ran round the corner and bumped into Battle. Fourth, after all this exposition has taken a while, they discover behind a screen the unconscious body of one of the grandest guests, the Countess Radzky.

Countess Radzky’s version She has to be revived (comically) with a cocktail and proceeds to tell her account of the events i.e. she’s an insomniac, was in the library looking for a book when she heard the door slowly undo and so hid. She saw Jimmy come in and check everywhere out, then turn the lights off and sit down to see if anything happened, which it did an hour later when someone else came into the library and Jimmy leapt up to apprehend him, which turned into a fight, which led to shots being fired, Jimmy collapsing shot and the countess fainting.

Whodunnit This part, the centrepiece of the novel, is certainly like the classic country house whodunnit, with a number of clues and a variety of first-person accounts which clash or overlap and raise all kinds of questions.

Questions Who drugged Tommy O’Rourke and stole the papers? The same man who was climbing out the window when Loraine appeared? And why did he throw the bundle down to her? And why did he throw away his gun just where Sir Oswald could find it? And what was Sir Oswald doing prowling round the grounds in the early hours?

Next morning Superintendent Battle, George Lomax, Sir Oswald Coote and Jimmy Thesiger are joined by Bundle after breakfast at Wyverne Abbey and work through a variety of scenarios and hypotheses and that – as the narrative has arrived at a more convention country house whodunnit – is where I shall end my synopsis. If you want to find out what happens next, whodunnit and whether they get away with it, the entire text is easily available online, see link below. But I can hint at a happy ending:

‘Don’t tell me that you’re suffering from galloping consumption or a weak heart or anything like that, because I simply don’t believe it.’
‘It’s not death, said Bundle. ‘It’s marriage.’
‘Very nearly as bad,’ said Lord Caterham.

The strain

‘Twelve o’clock,’ said Bundle. ‘Good. I shall be here, if I’m still alive.’
‘Have you any reason to anticipate not being alive?’
‘One never knows,’ said Bundle. ‘The strain of modern life – as the newspapers say.’

Lord Caterham stared at him. It occurred to him that what was so often referred to as ‘the strain of modern life’ had begun to tell upon George.

Waster

Always thought the word ‘waster’ was a slang phrase referring to druggies from my boyhood in the 1970s. Surprised to find it being widely used in the 1920s (p.146).


Credit

‘The Seven Dials Mystery’ by Agatha Christie was published in 1929 by William Collins and Son. References are to the 1970 Fontana paperback edition.

Related links

Related reviews

The Secret of Chimneys by Agatha Christie (1925)

‘Oh, damn!’ cried Virginia, jamming down the receiver. It was horrible to be shut up with a dead body and to have no one to speak to.
(Virginia Revel, chapter 8)

‘I’m sorry it were a foreigner,’ said Johnson, with some regret. It made the murder seem less real. Foreigners, Johnson felt, were liable to be shot.
(Constable Johnson, chapter 10)

‘The whole thing’s horribly mysterious.’
(Virginia Revel, chapter 15)

‘I should like to tell you the story of my life,’ he remarked, ‘but it’s going to be rather a busy evening.’
(Anthony, chapter 9)

‘Do you talk?’ asked Bundle. ‘Or are you just strong and silent?’
(Bundle to Anthony, chapter 15)

‘We’ve never had a murder in the house before. Exciting, isn’t it? I’m sorry your character was so completely cleared this morning. I’ve always wanted to meet a murderer and see for myself if they’re as genial and charming as the Sunday papers always say they are.’
(Bundle to Anthony, chapter 15)

‘I find talking to foreigners particularly fatiguing. I think it’s because they’re so polite.’
(Lord Caterham, chapter 16)

Bundle looked at him with lifted eyebrows. ‘Crook stuff?’ she inquired.
(Chapter 22)

‘I never deny anything that amuses me.’
(Anthony, chapter 27)

‘Oh, Anthony,’ cried Virginia. ‘How perfectly screaming!’
(Chapter 30)

International conspiracies

I thought the ridiculous novel ‘The Big Four’ with its plot about a fiendish international crime organisation must be an aberration in Christie’s oeuvre, which I had been led to believe was all about country house murder mysteries but not a bit of it – ‘The Secret of Chimneys’ is also about international intrigue and secret organisations, centres on political events on the other side of Europe and an international criminal master of disguise, not to mention gold hunting in Africa and American undercover detectives, all leading up to an outrageous series of revelations and reversals. And it was followed by a sequel (‘The Seven Dials Mystery’) which is even more preposterous. So half her output in the 1920s has more in common with espionage fiction than sedate murder mysteries.

Synopsis

Anthony Cade’s two tasks

The story starts in faraway Rhodesia. Here a jolly good chap named Anthony Cade is making money as a tour guide for pasty Brits. He bumps into an old pal, James McGrath, who gives him two rather bizarre tasks which both require a bit of backstory.

Count Stylptitch Some time earlier, in Paris, he’d seen a man be set upon by a group of thugs and had gone to his rescue. the man turned out to be Count Stylptitch, a courtier in the court of King Nicholas IV of the fictional country of Herzoslovakia. This country is notorious for its assassinations, and seven years earlier King Nicholas had been assassinated and the country became a republic. Count Stylptitch went into exile in Paris where McGrath happened to save him from a beating.

McGrath forgot about it until a few weeks ago when he received a parcel. It contained the memoirs of this Count Stylptitch and a note to the effect that if he delivered the manuscript to a certain firm of publishers (Messrs. Balderson and Hodgkins) in London on or before October 13, he would receive £1,000. Now McGrath is just about to go on an expedition into the interior of Africa in search of fabled gold mines, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, so he asks Anthony a favour. Can he travel back to London, under the name James McGrath, hand over the manuscript to the publishers, and receive the £1,000. How about if he gives him 25%, £250. Anthony is sick of being a tour guide and so says yes.

Dutch Pedro But as if that wasn’t contorted and implausible enough, McGrath gives Anthony a second task. This is also related to a Good Samaritan intervention, for some time earlier, in Uganda, McGrath saw a man drowning in a river, dived in and saved him. Once rescued, this man (derogatorily referred to throughout simply as a ‘Dago’ [‘an insulting and contemptuous term for a person of Italian or Spanish birth or descent’]), although going under the name of Dutch Pedro, gives McGrath the most valuable thing he owns which turns out to be a bundle of love letters written by a married Englishwoman to someone not her husband. The D*** had been blackmailing her and now handed over the letters to McGrath so that he could blackmail her in his turn. The letters don’t contain an address but two clues: at one point they mention a place, a country house called Chimneys.

‘Chimneys?’ [Anthony] said. ‘That’s rather extraordinary.’
‘Why, do you know it?’
‘It’s one of the stately homes of England, my dear James. A place where Kings and Queens go for weekends, and diplomatists forgather and diplome.’

And one of the letters is signed with a name, Virginia Revel.

Right. So McGrath is tasking Anthony with taking both the memoirs and the letters back to England, handing over the memoirs to the nominated publisher, and tracking down and handing the letters back to this lady, Virginia Revel. Right. OK.

International intrigue

The second element in the setup and the reason all the action converges on this country house, Chimneys, is as follows. Oil has recently (and implausibly) been discovered in Herzoslovakia. At the same time the people have become disillusioned with their republican government and many hanker for a return of the monarchy. The British government is prepared to back the return of the nearest relative to the assassinated Nicholas IV to the throne, Prince Michael, in exchange for the new king and his government signing favourable oil concessions to a syndicate of British oil companies. These are represented by a Jewish businessman, Mr Herman Isaacstein (who is described with a wealth of antisemitic tropes and stereotypes).

The current Secretary of State, the permanently anxious and stressed George Lomax, who lives at a country pile named Wyvern Abbey, persuades his friend, the easy-going Lord Caterham, to host an informal meeting of all the people involved in this international plan, at his country house, Chimneys (seven miles from Wyvern). Here’s the tone of humorous Lord Caterham and his daughter:

‘Who wants to be a peer nowadays?’
‘Nobody,’ said Bundle. ‘They’d much rather keep a prosperous public house.’

They want to conceal the meeting’s true nature from a curious world (and the press) and so George asks Lord Caterham to invite other, ‘neutral’ guests to make it look like a genuine country house party. As George explains:

GEORGE: ‘One slip over this Herzoslovakian business and we’re done. It is most important that the Oil concessions should be granted to a British company. You must see that?’
LORD CATERHAM: ‘Of course, of course.’
GEORGE: ‘Prince Michael Obolovitch arrives the end of the week, and the whole thing can be carried through at Chimneys under the guise of a shooting party.’

So all converging on this lovely stately home are:

  • Lord Caterham – owner of Chimneys and reluctant host
  • Lady Eileen ‘Bundle’ Brent – eldest daughter of Lord Caterham
  • The Honourable George Lomax – Foreign Office
  • Bill Eversleigh – Lomax’s secretary
  • Herman Isaacstein – financier of the British oil syndicate
  • Prince Michael Obolovitch of Herzoslovakia –
  • Captain Andrassy – his equerry
  • Hiram P. Fish – collector of first editions, invited to the house party by Lord Caterham
  • Virginia Revel – cousin of George Lomax, daughter of a peer, society beauty and young widow of…
  • Timothy Revel, former British envoy to Herzoslovakia i.e. is familiar with the country and its politics
  • Tredwell – the grey-haired old butler

More about Chimneys:

Clement Edward Alistair Brent, ninth Marquis of Caterham, was a small gentleman, shabbily dressed, and entirely unlike the popular conception of a Marquis. He had faded blue eyes, a thin melancholy nose, and a vague but courteous manner. At one time Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, he had always bulked largely in the counsels of the Empire, and his country seat, Chimneys, was famous for its hospitality. Ably seconded by his wife, a daughter of the Duke of Perth, history had been made and unmade at informal week-end parties at Chimneys, and there was hardly anyone of note in England—or indeed in Europe—who had not, at one time or another, stayed there.

In London

But before we get to Chimneys, there are some important and ‘exciting’ scenes in London, some to do with Count Stylptitch’s memoirs, some to do with the blackmail letters of Virginia Revel.

The memoirs The thing about the Count’s memoirs is they may contain compromising information or stories about the assassinated king and his court which will wreck the Royalists’ plan of getting back into power. So on his first day back in London, Anthony he is approached by two different Herzoslovakian men who both try to acquire the manuscript. The first is a Count who supports the Royalist faction and offers to outbid the publisher in order to suppress any embarrassing information it might contain. Cade politely but firmly refuses. The second is a member of a revolutionary group, the Comrades of the Red Hand (‘They’re very fond of executing traitors. It has a picturesque element which seems to appeal to them’), who demands that Anthony hand it over at gunpoint. But Anthony is not only frightfully posh (Eton and Oxford) but because of his time in Africa, is lean, fit and can handle himself. So he disarms the man and sends him away.

The publisher McGrath mentioned phones Cade the next day, telling him that a) the situation has become very dangerous, with people contacting them and threatening them against publishing it and b) promising to send their employee, Mr Holmes, to pick up the memoir, which he duly does, takes delivery of the manuscript and hands over a cheque for £1,000. So Anthony thinks he has concluded one of his two tasks successfully.

So he carries out the next stage in his plan, which is to ditch the alias of James McGrath which he has used up to this point in order to get the £1,000 from the publishers. So he checks out of the posh Blitz Hotel where’s he’s been staying (and with that ‘James’ McGrath’ disappears from public records) and gets a taxi to a much cheaper hotel where he checks in under his own name, Anthony Cade.

However, just before he left the Blitz, he received a message brought by a messenger boy. This was written by George Lomax, who says he has only just learned of McGrath’s arrival in Britain with the fateful memoirs, and was begging James McGrath not to hand them over to the publishers until he (McGrath) comes to see him (Lomax) at a country house party being held this weekend at Chimneys.

Well, thinks Anthony laconically, it’s too late to prevent the handing over of the memoirs, and he is no longer ‘James McGrath’, but all this fuss about Chimneys doesn’t half tempt him to travel down to the place and gatecrash this weekend party.

The letters As to the blackmail letters, to go back a bit, the night before he checked out of the Blitz, Anthony awakens to discover one of the hotel waiters he recognises, Giuseppe, has broken into his room and is rummaging through his luggage. They have a fight, which is long enough for Anthony to see his face and hear his Italian accent, but the waiter breaks away and escapes and Anthony then discovers he has taken the packet of letters with him. Anthony suspects the man had been hired by one of the Herzoslovakian factions and took the letters by mistake, imagining a bunch of documents tied up in a bundle must be the famous memoirs.

So on one level this is a tale of two manuscripts, which get mixed up.

Virginia Revel

During these exciting two days Anthony had been trying to track down the ‘Virginia Revel’ mentioned in the letters. He had discovered from the telephone directory that there were six Virginia Revels in the London area and had begun the process of visiting them to identify the correct one.

Now we cut to the experiences of the Virginia Revel who the story is going to increasingly feature. But the important thing to bear in mind is that she is not the Virginia Revel of the letters. She never wrote the letters, she’s got nothing to do with them. She is the wrong Virginia Revel.

But the Italian waiter who stole the bundle from Anthony’s hotel room, having realised their blackmail potential, makes the same mistake as everyone else and approaches her, the wrong Virginia Revel, with a sample letter. He turns up at Virginia’s home and, unaware that she did not write the letters and that her husband is dead, he attempts to blackmail her.

Now here’s the thing about this book, its characters, plot and tone: Virginia immediately realises that she is not the Virginia Revel who wrote the letters but she decides to humour the blackmailer and pretend that she is! Why? For the lolz. For the gagz. To see what it feels like to be blackmailed.

Exactly like Anthony Cade, this Virginia Revel is so confident of her place in English society and the English class system (cousin of George Lomax, daughter of a peer, society beauty and widow of an ambassador) that she treats everything that happens in her life with droll, upper-class confidence, as endless sources of potential amusement. Later, it is said of her that:

Her position was so assured and unassailable that anyone for whom she vouched was accepted as a matter of course. (Chapter 13)

To use the modern phrase, both Virginia and Anthony positively reek of upper class privilege, and it is their cheerful, indomitable, ironic handling of all the aspects of a traditional murder mystery (international intrigue, disguises, dead bodies) which make the book such fun to read.

So on this frivolous impulse Virginia plays the part of a blackmail victim, hands over the petty cash she has in the house and promises to pay him more tomorrow at 6 o’clock. But when she arrives home the next day, after playing tennis (one of the new 1920s sporting fads, along with golf – see The Murder on the Links) she finds this same blackmailer shot dead in her house.

Virginia has a maid, Élise, who she tells to go out on a chore while she ponders what to do next, just as who turns up on her doorstep? The tall confident hero of the book, Anthony Wade. At this point he hasn’t revealed his name and is posing as a member of the unemployed because he’s still sussing out whether Virginia is the Virginia. But she pulls him inside and says she’s got a job for him. Immediately they hit it off with a shared sense of upper class savoir faire and a certain amount of physical attraction, too.

‘This isn’t regular work you’re offering me, I hope?’
A smile hovered for a moment on her lips.
‘It’s very irregular.’
‘Good,’ said the young man in a tone of satisfaction.
(Chapter 8)

Virginia tells him about the body which they both treat with upper-class confidence.

‘There’s a dead man in the next room,’ said Virginia. ‘He’s been murdered, and I don’t know what to do about it.’
She blurted out the words as simply as a child might have done. The young man went up enormously in her estimation by the way he accepted her statement. He might have been used to hearing a similar announcement made every day of his life.
‘Excellent,’ he said, with a trace of enthusiasm. ‘I’ve always wanted to do a bit of amateur detective work.’
(Chapter 8)

When he inspects the corpse, Anthony realises it’s the same waiter who broke into his room at the Blitz and stole the letters. He promises to get rid of the corpse. After all, he’s never disposed of a dead body before and is quite thrilled at the idea, just as Virginia had never been blackmailed before and was up for the lolz.

‘I’ve always wanted to see if I couldn’t conceal a crime with the necessary cunning, but have had a squeamish objection to shedding blood.’
(Chapter 9)

And:

Virginia: ‘It’s really dreadful of me saddling a perfect stranger with a dead body like this.’
‘I like it,’ returned Anthony nonchalantly. ‘If one of my friends, Jimmy McGrath, were here, he’d tell you that anything of this kind suits me down to the ground.’
(Chapter 9)

So Anthony puts the body into one of Virginia’s trunk, then there’s a lot of fol-de-rol about her taking it to a train station and leaving it in left luggage, Anthony collecting it, putting it in his car and driving out of London. Way out in the sticks he dumps the body along a stretch of empty road (on ‘the long stretch of road mid-way between Hounslow and Staines’, not so quiet and unfrequented now!).

Oh yes, there’s an aspect of the murder which puzzled our two posh amateur sleuths which is that the gun which shot the blackmailer was left by his body. Why? And a bigger question: the little gun was engraved with the name of ‘Virginia’!! Had she seen it before? No, she insists. Then what? Why? And of course the bigger question, Who shot him in the first place, and why?

Something else I haven’t mentioned yet, which is that when Virginia first got home from tennis, she discovered that all her servants including the devoted butler, all except Élise the maid, had gone down to Datchet (a small town outside Windsor). What? Turns out she owns a little country place there and from time to time asks her servants to go there and prepare it for her. But not today. Someone else sent the household a telegram to be out, someone who knows all about her household arrangements and habits. But who? And why?

And I also haven’t had space to explain yet, but all this happens on the very afternoon of the day she’s due to go down to Chimneys, for what she thinks, at this stage, will be a jolly country house party. Now when Anthony read the blackmail letters back in Africa, one of the few clues in them was mention of this same country house, Chimneys. And when Anthony rifled through the dead man’s pockets, in the lining of his coat he found a scrap of paper with a fragment of text on it, reading ‘Chimneys 11.45 Thursday.’

The letters mention Chimneys. This scrap of paper mentions Chimneys. Virginia has been invited to Chimneys. So as the pair confer they become increasingly certain that something is going to happen at this place, Chimneys, and during this supposed country house party. But what?

So after disposing of the corpse, as described, Anthony gets back in his ‘battered second-hand Morris Cowley’ and drives north till he comes to the wall surrounding the Chimneys estate. A wall isn’t going to stop out hero, so he climbs over it, walks across the wet grounds, and is just approaching the house itself when he hears a short ring out!

Oh no! Is he too late? Has someone been murdered? Who? And Why? Is Virginia safe? Will Anthony find himself suspected of the murder?

I’ve summarised about the first third of the story. At this point I think that, in the spirit of the thing, I’ll stop my summary. If you want to enjoy the further complications, red herrings and improbable explanations which Christie cooks up in profusion, the entire novel is freely available to read online. Clue:

‘How frightfully exciting,’ commented Bundle. ‘You don’t usually get a murder and a burglary crowded into one week-end.’

The only thing I will say is that, when there is trouble at Chimneys on the fateful weekend (as the reader, by now, strongly expects there will be) it triggers the introduction of the bluff, imperturbable Superintendent Battle of Scotland Yard:

… a squarely built middle-aged man with a face so singularly devoid of expression as to be quite remarkable.
(Chapter 11)

who was to go on and become a recurring character in Christie’s work, appearing in a further four novels. Everyone realises how canny he is in his quiet unassuming way:

But at that moment, the moment when Battle apparently admitted Anthony’s complete absence of complicity in the crime, Anthony felt more than ever the need of being upon his guard. Superintendent Battle was a very astute officer. It would not do to make any slip with Superintendent Battle about.
(Chapter 12)

Antisemitism

I’ve noticed the presence of antisemitic animus on a number of authors of this period, including Saki, D.H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf. In this novel the antisemitic tropes gather around the figure of the Jewish financier, Mr Herman Isaacstein.

There was one other person in the room, a big man sitting in a chair by the fireplace. He was dressed in very correct English shooting clothes which nevertheless sat strangely upon him. He had a fat yellow face, and black eyes, as impenetrable as those of a cobra. There was a generous curve to the big nose and power in the square lines of the vast jaw.

Earlier Lord Caterham, otherwise a genial old cove, refers to Isaacstein as ‘Mr Ikey Hermanstein’ and then as ‘Nosystein’ (with reference to his big hooked pantomime Jew’s nose) and later to ‘Fat Iky’.

The cobra simile stated in the passage above is repeated later:

His [Isaacstein’s] black eyes were bent upon the detective. More than ever, he reminded Battle of a hooded cobra.

Later:

VIRGINIA: ‘Isaacstein looks foreign enough, Heaven knows.’

The lazy antisemitic tropes surrounding him are unpleasant.

Black

If we’re pointing out slurs, there’s a race-related moment right at the novel’s conclusion when, for a moment, his friends panic that Anthony might have married a black woman!

The Baron retreated a step or two. Dismay overspread his countenance. ‘Something wrong I knew there would be,’ he boomed. ‘Merciful God in Heaven! He has married a black woman in Africa!’
‘Come, come, it’s not so bad as all that,’ said Anthony, laughing. ‘She’s white enough—white all through, bless her.’

The more you reflect on this little exchange, the worse it becomes.

Balkans business

To a very large extent the text is made up of clichés, I think Christie’s claim to novelty at the time must surely have been not so much the subject matter or behaviour of the characters so much as the extraordinary complexity of the twists and turns of the narrative, the laying of countless false clues, and then the dazzling revelations at the end which come as a complete surprise (as they do in this novel).

History of Ruritania

The fictional country of Ruritania is first mentioned in The Prisoner of Zenda. According to the Wikipedia article ‘Nowadays, the term connotes a quaint minor European country’ associated with kings and princes with preposterous names, colourful costumes, in a state of permanent political unrest. The same idea – of the Balkans as the home of a particular type of comic political intrigue – is found all over early 20th century fiction, in various Sherlock Holmes stories, Arnold Bennett’s preposterous comedy thriller the Grand Hotel Babylon, in John Buchan thrillers, through to Tintin whose 1938 adventure ‘King Ottokar’s Sceptre’ is set in the fictional Balkan (i.e. Ruritanian) country of Syldavia, complete with fragile kings and plotting courtiers etc etc.

My point is that The Secret of Chimneys can be added to the list of fictions which use the clichés and tropes of the embattled royal family of a fictional Balkan state to manufacture a popular thriller narrative.

Christie’s bookishness

Not literary references, the opposite: I’m referring to her compulsive need to have the narrator or characters make regular comparisons to the clichés and stereotypes of the cheap thrillers and thousands of other detective novels which clearly infested the world, even by the early 1920s.

About the same height as Mr. Cade, but thickset and not nearly so good-looking. The sort of man one read about in books, who probably kept a saloon.
(Narrator)

‘As they say in books. Guile, George, lots of guile.’
(Virginia)

‘First a blackmailer, and then George in diplomatic difficulties. Will he tell all to the beautiful woman who asks for his confidence so pathetically? No, he will reveal nothing until the last chapter.’
(Virginia)

‘Good heavens!’ cried Virginia. ‘Is this Sherlock Holmes?’
‘No,’ said Anthony regretfully. ‘I’m afraid it’s just plain or garden cheating.’

‘And whatever you may imagine from reading detective stories, doctors aren’t such magicians that they can tell you exactly how many hours a man has been dead.’
(Anthony)

‘I take it that you didn’t meet the murdered man?’
‘No. To put it like a book, he “retired to his own apartments immediately on arrival.”‘
(Anthony and Virginia)

‘Why did you seem so surprised when I mentioned the name of Jimmy McGrath to you yesterday at Pont Street? Had you heard it before?’
‘I had, Sherlock Holmes.’
(Anthony and Virginia, chapter 15)

‘I suspected the French governess, Battle. A: Upon the grounds of her being the most unlikely person, according to the canons of the best fiction
(Anthony, chapter 18)

‘Do you really think this Arsène Lupin fellow is actually among the household now?’ asked Bill, his eyes sparkling. [a reference to the fictional gentleman thief and master of disguise created in 1905 by French writer Maurice Leblanc.] (Chapter 18)

And Christie has Battle deliver a little lecture on the subject.

‘In the meantime,’ said Anthony, ‘I am still the amateur assistant?’
‘That’s it, Mr. Cade.’
‘Watson to your Sherlock, in fact?’
‘Detective stories are mostly bunkum,’ said Battle unemotionally. ‘But they amuse people,’ he added, as an afterthought. ‘And they’re useful sometimes.’
‘In what way?’ asked Anthony curiously.
‘They encourage the universal idea that the police are stupid. When we get an amateur crime, such as a murder, that’s very useful indeed.’

As I’ve said elsewhere, keeping on mentioning how your story is different from cheap thrillers doesn’t really differentiate it, but only signposts the similarities.

That said, maybe I’m missing the point and all these references are in fact just a type of joke – it’s a comedy stopgap to have the characters constantly referring to the clichés of crime novels and detective movies, self consciously mocking their own bravery or actions.

He wriggled into a lurid silk dressing-gown, and picked up a poker. ‘The orthodox weapon,’ he observed. (Bill Eversleigh, chapter 17)

And:

‘What’s this I hear about Virginia bolting off in the middle of the night? She’s not been kidnapped, has she?’
‘Oh, no,’ said Bundle. ‘She left a note pinned to the pincushion in the orthodox fashion.’ (Chapter 27)

And:

‘And don’t scream or faint or anything. I won’t let anyone hurt you.’
‘My hero!’ murmured Virginia.

And:

‘The plot thickens,’ said Anthony lightly.

Comedy

Or just jokes:

‘There’s an extraordinary lot of character in ears, Mr. Cade.’
‘Don’t look so hard at mine, Battle,’ complained Anthony. ‘You make me quite nervous.’

The book is stuffed with comic repartee:

‘I say, Virginia, I do love you so awfully—’
‘Not this morning, Bill. I’m not strong enough. Anyway, I’ve always told you the best people don’t propose before lunch.’

Or:

‘I can’t think,’ said Lord Caterham, ‘why nobody nowadays ever sits still after a meal. It’s a lost art.’

Agatha Christie is by far a more comic writer than Noel Coward ever was. Coward’s plays overflow with rancorous bickering but contain pitifully few really funny bits of repartee. Whereas Christie’s novels overflow with good-humoured comedy everywhere.

‘Half a second,’ said Anthony. “I’ve got a confession to make to you, Virginia. Something that everyone else knows, but that I haven’t yet told you.’
‘I don’t mind how many strange women you’ve loved so long as you don’t tell me about them.’
‘Women!’ said Anthony, with a virtuous air. ‘Women indeed? You ask James here what kind of women I was going about with last time he saw me.’
‘Frumps,’ said Jimmy solemnly. ‘Utter frumps. Not one a day under forty-five.’
‘Thank you, Jimmy,’ said Anthony, ‘you’re a true friend.’

‘I’m taking the Panhard up to town after lunch,’ she remarked. ‘Anyone want a lift? Wouldn’t you like to come, Mr. Cade? We’ll be back by dinner-time.’
‘No, thanks,’ said Anthony. ‘I’m quite happy and busy down here.’
‘The man fears me,’ said Bundle. ‘Either my driving or my fatal fascination! Which is it?’
‘The latter,’ said Anthony. ‘Every time.’

Women’s roles

Besides beauty, she possessed courage and brains.

Noel Coward gets credit for the unabashed modernity of his women characters, who have short hair, wear short skirts, smoke and drink and openly talk about shocking subjects – yet I find exactly the same behaviour in Christie’s young 1920s women. Both Virginia and Bundle are no-nonsense, go-for-it young women who regard old chauvinist attitudes of the fuddy-duddy men around them as ludicrous.

‘Listen to me, Virginia,’ said Bill. ‘This is man’s work—’
‘Don’t be an idiot, Bill.’

They have to put up with no end of sexist generalisations which justify Virginia Woolf’s accusations in her feminist masterpiece Three Guineas.

  • MCGRATH: ‘Like all women, she’d put no date and no address on most of the letters.’
  • LOMAX: ‘Not that I approve of women in politics—St. Stephen’s is ruined, absolutely ruined, nowadays. But woman in her own sphere can do wonders…’

Even that nice Mr Anthony:

‘You’re a very unusual woman,’ said Anthony suddenly, turning and looking at her.
‘Why?’
‘You can refrain from asking questions.’

And are aware that the world they operate in, the culture they move in, is drenched with sexist put-downs:

VIRGINIA: ‘We women are usually supposed to be cats, but at any rate I’d done another woman a good turn this afternoon.’

‘I know,’ said Virginia. ‘Women are so indiscreet! I’ve often heard George say so.’

And Virginia is asked by Lomax to ‘Delilah’ the memoirs out of this man McGrath i.e. to sweet-talk or seduce them out of him – a suggestion she rejects with disgust.

Thus Christie depicts the world of sexist assumptions which her independent women have to operate in. And yet they not only reject sexist generalisations or suggestions to the speaker’s face, more importantly they act with a fearlessness and freedom which completely contradicts the sexist slurs. And they drive like demons, witness Bundle’s crazy driving which sometimes hits the reckless speed of fifty miles an hour!

‘I shouldn’t recommend driving with you as a tonic for nervous old ladies, but personally I’ve enjoyed it. The last time I was in equal danger was when I was charged by a herd of wild elephants.’

‘Tim Revel was bowled over by Virginia—he was Irish, you know, and most attractive, with a genius for expressing himself well. Virginia was quite young—eighteen. She couldn’t go anywhere without seeing Tim in a state of picturesque misery, vowing he’d shoot himself or take to drink if she didn’t marry him. Girls believe these things—or used to—we’ve advanced a lot in the last eight years.’

Class

Of course the fearlessness of the two posh young women, Virginia and Bundle, stems in large part because of their upper-class provenance. Their superb confidence derives from their fearless upbringing. At one point Christie has Superintendent Battle give this definitive formulation:

‘Well, you see, Mr. Cade, most of my work has lain amongst these people. What they call the upper classes, I mean. You see, the majority of people are always wondering what the neighbours will think. But tramps and aristocrats don’t—they just do the first thing that comes into their heads, and they don’t bother to think what anyone thinks of them. I’m not meaning just the idle rich, the people who give big parties, and so on, I mean those that have had it born and bred in them for generations that nobody else’s opinion counts but their own. I’ve always found the upper classes the same—fearless, truthful and sometimes extraordinarily foolish.’

Battle’s methods

Battle’s procedure:

‘It’s rather too soon to have ideas, Mr Isaacstein. I’ve not got beyond asking myself the first question.’
‘What is that?’
‘Oh, it’s always the same. Motive. Who benefits by the death of Prince Michael?’
(Chapter 15)

And:

‘I’m glad of that,’ said Anthony. ‘I’ve a feeling that ever since I met you you’ve been laying little traps for me. On the whole I’ve managed to avoid falling into them, but the strain has been acute.’
Battle smiled grimly.
‘That’s how you get a crook in the end, sir. Keep him on the run, to and fro, turning and twisting. Sooner or later, his nerve goes, and you’ve got him.’

And humour:

‘You’ve got a plan, eh?’
‘I wouldn’t go so far as to say I’ve got a plan. But I’ve got an idea. It’s a very useful thing sometimes, an idea.’

Heightism

A symptom of the pulpy, silly, tongue-in-cheek feel of the whole thing is how many people are commandingly tall:

The hero:

They all admired Mr Cade so much, his tall lean figure, his sun-tanned face, the light-hearted manner with which he settled disputes and cajoled them all into good temper.

And the heroine:

Virginia Revel was just twenty-seven. She was tall and of an exquisite slimness—indeed, a poem might have been written to her slimness, it was so exquisitely proportioned.

And the other heroine:

The door opened and a girl came into the room. She was tall, slim and dark, with an attractive boyish face, and a very determined manner. This was Lady Eileen Brent, commonly known as Bundle, Lord Caterham’s eldest daughter.

The blackmailer:

Anthony observed him more closely. He was a tall man, supple like all waiters, with a clean-shaven, mobile face. An Italian, Anthony thought, not a Frenchman.

The police inspector:

A tall portly man, Inspector Badgworthy, with a heavy regulation tread. Inclined to breathe hard in moments of professional strain.

The American:

On the threshold stood a tall man with black hair neatly parted in the middle, china blue eyes with a particularly innocent expression, and a large placid face.

The dead prince’s aide-de-camp:

He returned shortly accompanied by a tall fair man with high cheek-bones, and very deep-set blue eyes, and an impassivity of countenance which almost rivalled Battle’s.

It is a Photoshopped world of fine physical specimens.

Phrases

revenons à nos moutons = French for ‘Let’s get back to the subject at hand’

A ‘cat’ is, from the context, a gossipy bitch.

Even women like her because she isn’t a bit of a cat.

I think characters in Coward use the word in the same sense and, as we will see, Christie uses it freely in virtually all her early novels.

Marrows

When Anthony talks about retiring the first image that comes into his mind is retiring to a nice place in the country and ‘growing vegetable marrows’. Now this was precisely Poirot’s activity in The Murder of Roger Ackroyd where he threw one of his marrows over the fence of his rented cottage and accidentally hit his neighbour, Dr Sheppard, the extremely unreliable narrator of that story.

The Tube

Couldn’t help laughing out loud when Anthony has a little speech explaining why the single thing which undermined his lifelong belief in equality and democracy was getting on the London Tube.

‘You see, when I was very young, I had democratic ideas. Believed in the purity of ideals, and the equality of all men. I especially disbelieved in Kings and Princes.’
‘And since then?’ asked Battle shrewdly.
‘Oh, since then, I’ve travelled and seen the world. There’s damned little equality going about. Mind you, I still believe in democracy. But you’ve got to force it on people with a strong hand—ram it down their throats. Men don’t want to be brothers—they may some day, but they don’t now. My final belief in the Brotherhood of Man died the day I arrived in London last week, when I observed the people standing in a Tube train resolutely refuse to move up and make room for those who entered. You won’t turn people into angels by appealing to their better natures just yet awhile—but by judicious force you can coerce them into behaving more or less decently to one another to go on with. I still believe in the Brotherhood of Man, but it’s not coming yet awhile. Say another ten thousand years or so. It’s no good being impatient. Evolution is a slow process.’

Well, it’s a hundred years later and the situation is, if anything, worse. The company I work for are forcing us to come back to the office because they apparently think that spending an hour with your face in someone else’s armpit, in hundred degree heat on the Northern Line, twice a day, will miraculously increase their employees’ productivity and creativity.


Credit

‘The Secret of Chimneys’ by Agatha Christie was published in 1925 by William Collins and Son.

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