ROSIE
RINGS A BELL
con't
from page 2
And indeed he was,
no ifs or buts about it.
I used above the word "awful". This needs explanation.
So let me now read you what Lawrence had to say about the eponymous
subject of his eighth major novel, written in Thirroul in June-July
1922 (Kangaroo is Cooley/Rosenthal, and Somers the Lawrence figure).
You can judge for yourself:
...Kangaroo's face had gone like an angry wax mask...an angry
wax mask of mortification, haughty...with two little near-set
holes for eyes, behind glass pince-nez...He had become hideous,
with a long yellowish face and black eyes close together, and
a cold, mindless, dangerous hulk of his shoulders. For a moment,
Somers was afraid of him, as of some great ugly idol that might
strike. He felt the intense hatred of the man coming at him in
cold waves. He stood up in a kind of horror in front of the great,
close-eyed, horrible thing that was now Kangaroo. Yes, a thing,
not a whole man. A great Thing, a horror.

Major-General
Sir Charles Rosenthal (note his eyes - "two little
near-set holes for eyes")
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Not a description
of oneself that anyone would like to have preserved forever, like
a fly trapped in amber, in a major work of "fiction"
in the upper echelons of the canon of western literature.
And, yet, it happened,
it happened..
...for when Lawrence
arrived in Sydney at the end of May 1922, on his way from Europe
to America, he ran across a real, not fictional, secret army,
which he then portrayed - in a full-length portrait - in his Australian
novel, Kangaroo (called by one critic "the most important
book ever written about Australia").
Its leader was indeed
Rosenthal, and he is the main Australian character in the novel
- Benjamin Cooley, nicknamed "Kangaroo", the head of
the secret army of "Maggies", which is plotting to take
over Australia in a fascist coup.
In fact, the novel
Kangaroo turns out to be a thinly-fictionalised diary of
what happened to Lawrence in the few short weeks he had in Sydney
and Thirroul in mid-1922. (How can it be otherwise? Lawrence could
not have made up, in a matter of weeks, the accurate picture he
draws of what it is now generally agreed by historians to be an
actual secret army, formed in Sydney in July 1920 - not 1921 -
as a response to the election of a radical left-wing Labor government
a few months previously.)
How did Lawrence run across this momentous secret? By the sheerest
accident. He met someone on a boat to Sydney who had a holiday
house at
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Collaroy. Lawrence was in need of cheap accommodation. This fellow-passenger
invited him up to Collaroy to view possible holiday houses. There
was an afternoon tea-party. At the party was someone who knew
of a cheap, holiday house that had just become vacant in Thirroul.
Next day this person took Lawrence and Frieda down to Thirroul
and installed them there.
But this man also
knew some figures in the secret army. These figures may have been
looking for someone to contribute to the journal of their "cover"
organisation, a patriotic body called the King and Empire Alliance
(called in the novel "The Diggers"), of which Major
MJR Scott was the treasurer, and Rosenthal the secretary. Lawrence
was introduced to Scott, who introduced him to Rosenthal. The
rest is literary history.
How did I run across
all this? The sheerest accident. My wife Sandra wrote a biography
of a famous English literary hostess, Lady Ottoline Morrell. We
did the research in Austin Texas in 1972. The head of the library
there was Lawrence's bibliographer. He suggested that after we
returned to Australia we look into Lawrence's time there, as nothing
had been done on that. We returned in 1975 and started the research.
We quickly came across a lot of parallels between the novel and
what was happening in Sydney at the time.
At an Australia Day party in January 1976 I was sitting next to
someone who had written an article about Lawrence in Thirroul
some years previously. I told him that I was beginning to suspect
that there could have been a real secret army in Sydney in 1922.
"Strange you should say that," he responded. "I
interviewed Eric Campbell before he died. He asked me if I knew
why his 1930-32 civilian para-military organisation had been called
The New Guard. Then he added: 'Because there was an Old Guard.'"
I discovered that
the "Old Guard" had been the name given - somewhat derisorily
- to the organisation that Rosenthal and Scott had founded in
1920, and which Lawrence describes in Kangaroo so accurately,
and so extensively, that the novel remains the best description
we have of secret army activity in Australia between the wars.
Interestingly, Kangaroo
is not the only novel in which Lawrence portrayed Rosenthal and
Scott. (Lawrence was almost incapable of invention, and used real
people and places over and over again throughout his literary
works.) He portrayed Scott - the creepy Jack Callcott in Kangaroo
- in the second version of Lady Chatterley's Lover as the
impotent secret army aficionado Jack Strangeways (Scott, who indeed
had some very strange ways, was impotent, due to wartime trauma).
Rosenthal he portrayed
again in The Virgin and the Gipsy as the powerfully-built
Danish artillery officer, Major Charles Eastwood, whose face is
"like a mask". (The surname is a typical Lawrentian
literary pun - Rosenthal is a village in the middle of the Black
Forest in Germany, east of the Rhine, near where Lawrence stayed
in 1912 - it was "an east wood".)
(Neither of these
novels were published in Lawrence's lifetime, and when Lawrence
re-wrote the second version of Lady Chatterley into the
third version that was banned for so long, and which he knew would
be published, he downgraded Strangeways into a minor character,
removing all reference to his fascism and impotence.)
This week, however,
happens to be national architecture week. And it is this aspect
of the life and work of Sir Charles Rosenthal that we are here
today to note, and with it Marrickville's connection to a prominent
Australian soldier-architect.
Rosie left his mark here - and that is nothing to sneeze at.
- Robert Darroch
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