The Deemster

The Deemster

Spine title
Author Hall Caine
Country UK
Language English
Publisher Chatto & Windus
Publication date
1887
Media type Print (hardcover)
Pages 365 pp (1921 edition)

The Deemster is a novel by Hall Caine published in 1887, considered to be the first 'Manx novel'. It was Caine's third novel, the first to be set in the Isle of Man and it was his first great success. The plot revolves around the reckless actions of Dan Mylrea and the exile and atonement that follow.

Background

Early in his career, Hall Caine was acting as literary secretary to Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and it was he who suggested that he write a novel set on the Isle of Man.[1] However, it was not for another five years and a number of poorly received novels that Caine began to work on The Deemster. Having conceived of the plot outline, Caine wrote to Hugh Stowell Brown and then his brother, T. E. Brown, to get their opinions. On 3 October 1886 Caine wrote to the Manx poet:

I remember that your brother Hugh did something to dissuade me from tackling Manxland in any sort of work. He did not think the readers of novels would find the island at all interesting, and he was sure that the local atmosphere was not such as would attract them. I thought over this a good deal, and decided, I must say, against your brother's judgment. [...] In the first place, the island has excellent atmosphere. It has the sea, a fine coast on the west, fine moorland above; it has traditions, folk-talk, folk-lore, a ballad literature, and no end of superstition – and all these are very much its own.[2]

Brown's response on 14 October was blunt on the question of the novel's setting:

It could not possibly be placed in the Isle of Man, [...] the stage is inadequate for your romance; [...] [Your story] is strong and vital; but the Isle of Man sinks beneath it. [...] And as for an epic – just write the words, 'A Manx Epic' and behold the totally impossible at once![3]

Caine ignored their advice but did adapt the plot and characters to some of T.E. Brown's suggestions. He also sought the advice of two other Manxmen, A.W. Moore and Sir James Gell, particularly on the legal background of the novel.[4] Having assembled his materials, Caine wrote the novel at his house in Bexley in the space of only seven months,[4] a feat made possible by his recycling material from his 1885 novella, She's All The World To Me, in particular the central scene of Ewan's body floating back to shore.[5] Caine visited the Isle of Man for a week in August to check the locations of some scenes in the novel and by September the novel was ready to go to the publisher. In financial need, Caine sold the copyright to Chatto & Windus for £150, signing the contract on 27 September 1887.[5] Unfortunately for Caine, the terms of the contract meant that he did not gain the wealth of royalties when the book became a best-seller upon its release in November. Indeed, in 1921 when Caine wanted to release his Collected Works through a different publisher, he would have to pay £350 to Chatto & Windus for the rights to The Deemster.[6]

Plot

Childhood and Youth (I to XVI)

Bishop's Court Dan Mylrea's childhood home

Thorkell Mylrea buys himself into becoming a Deemster (or judge) on the Isle of Man. He then uses his influence to have his brother, Gilcrist, appointed Bishop, but Gilcrist disappoints him in being good, pious and beyond bribery. In contrast to their father, the Deemster's children, Ewan and Mona, grow up to become a conscientious and diligent priest and a caring and good woman. In contrast, without the strong hand to admonish him, the Bishop's son, Dan, grows up to become “thoughtless, brave, stubborn,”[7] likeable but unreliable. The cousins, Mona and Dan, come to fall in love.

Dan becomes a fisherman, his father funding the buying the boat. However, after only one season Dan is in debt due to the amount of time he has spent in the pub with his fishermen friends. Dan forges Ewan's name as surety on a loan. When he inevitably defaults on the payments, the Bishop comes to learn of the loan and, although Ewan tries to claim the signature as his, the Bishop father casts Dan out. Ewan determines that he can no longer accept Dan as a friend, and he asks him to not see his sister, Mona, any more. To cover over his shame and to try and hide from his failings, Dan again descends to his boisterous ways.

Crime (XVII to XX)

Dejected and depressed, Dan confounds the ban and goes to see Mona. The Deemster's maid, Kerry, has a vision of Dan in Mona's room, which the Deemster passes onto his son saying that Dan is having an affair with Mona. Ewan confronts Mona but, through a failure of communication, she “admits” that she has feelings for Dan. Understanding that Mona has been “compromised,” Ewan seeks out Dan to revenge her lost honour.

Ewan confronts Dan and they ascend Orris Head, a cliff top over the sea. On the summit, they ensure that neither can get away by tying their two belts buckled together around their waists. They fight with knives until Dan eventually cuts the belt and Ewan falls backwards over the cliff. Ewan dies on the rocks below.

Conviction (XXI to XXXVI)

After collecting Ewan's body and taking it to his fisherman's hut, Dan goes to confess to Mona. She cannot hold the murder of her brother against him, because she loves him. She tells Dan that he must hand himself to make atonement for his crime. However, upon returning to the hut, he finds that the crew of his fishing boat have found the body there. In shock he allows himself to be taken with them as they take the body out to sea to dispose of it. However, when they throw the body into the sea, it miraculously escapes its weighted sheet floats back to shore. This Dan takes as a sign of God's will and so he steers the ship back to shore. But, once on land and taking a shortcut to the Deemster's house to hand himself in, Dan falls down a mineshaft, from which he is unable to escape until the next morning.

Kirk Michael, where Ewan Mylrea comes to be buried

Ewan's body comes ashore and is buried within hours at the Deemster's superstitious bidding. The Bishop is brought various pieces of evidence that show for certain that his son is the perpetrator. The fishermen have meanwhile returned home but, under suspicion from the coroner, they flee into the mountains.

Having climbed out of the mineshaft, Dan hands himself into the Deemster in the Ramsey courthouse, from where he is taken to Peel Castle to await trial. Imprisoned in the castle, Dan refuses his father's offer of escape. However, while sleeping, Dan is abducted by the fishermen, who fear that he will give evidence against their part in the disposal of Ewan's body. They take Dan to a deserted mine in the mountains where they try Dan and find him guilty of endangering their lives. They sentence Dan to death.

Meanwhile, the Deemster's maid, Kerry, has another vision, of Dan in danger on the mountain. The vision is transferred to Mona and she then sets off with the Deemster's men to the site of the vision. They arrive just in time to save Dan from being shot by the fishermen.

At the trial which follows, the fishermen are set free since there isn't enough evidence against them. As a resident of the Bishop's Barony, Dan is then tried by his own father. The sentence is for Dan to be "cut off from the land of the living,”[8] condemned to exile within the island:

“Henceforth let him have no name among us, nor family, nor kin. […] When his death shall come, let no man bury him. Alone let him live, alone let him die, and among the beasts of the field let him hide his unburied bones.”[9]

Exile (XXXVII to XLIII)

The view from the Chasms, the site of Dan's home during his exile

Dan travels to the very south of the island, where he takes up a life of hunting, fishing and farming. He progresses through stages of bitterness and loneliness, trying and failing to flee from the sentence through activity and even an attempt to emigrate to Ireland. He makes his home in a hut near Cregneash, and comes to be thought dead by the rest of the island as two men mistake a homeless person's dead body as his own. Dan becomes increasingly close to nature and to retain his humanity he takes up speaking again, in the only way that would not endanger his sanity; by repeating the one prayer he remembers, at sunrise and sunset each day on the hill overlooking the homes of Cregneash.

Shortly after a period of heavy rain followed by strong sun, there are signs of distress on the island: fishing boats do not put out to sea, carts do not go to market, people are ascending to the mountains. Then a storm causes a shipwreck and a survivor seeks refuge in Dan’s hut. As he comes in and out of consciousness, the man tells Dan the story of how he is a priest from Ireland come to help stop the “sweating sickness” which grips the island. Before the priest dies, Dan promises that he will take the priest's place and go to the Bishop's to instruct the people how to halt the sickness.

Atonement (XLIV to XLV)

Dan, taken for the Irish priest, directs the people of the West and North of the island in how to drive out the dampness that causes the sickness. Dan is called to his dying uncle's bedside, where the Deemster admits his sin of having driven Ewan to the confrontation with Dan, only after which he realises Dan's true identity. He goes to meet his father and they are reconciled. With the sickness defeated, Dan returns to his hut near Cregneash without having seen Mona, preferring solitude to the new-found adulation of the Manx people. However, by this time he has fallen ill and is close to death when Mona arrives, having followed him south with the official invitation to become Deemster. At last they are reunited and she is able to spend his last few minutes with him as he says his prayer once more, with her help, ending by asking God to "deliver us from evil, Amen.”[10]

Publication and reception

The novel became an enormous success upon its release in November 1887, so much so that Punch Magazine was soon to dub it 'The Boomster'.[5] There were to be more than 50 editions of the book in English, as well as translations into French, German, Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Russian, Spanish, Finnish and Czech.[5]

The book was well received in the press, being praised for attributes such as its "childlike purity, in its passionate simplicity.”[3] Upon Caine's first visit to America in 1895, the American press was to comment on the novel that "By its setting in the Isle of Man it opened up a new domain in literature as surely as Scott, Dickens and Thackeray had in their day.”[11]

After an initial period of apparent ignorance of the novel, the Manx audience became aware of it and was in “uproar.”[4] The tone of this is perhaps shown by the former Bishop of the island's noting that, with regards to this and Caine's next novel, The Manxman, "my soul revolts from such a travesty of Island life.”[12] In contrast, T. E. Brown, having previously advised Caine against setting the novel on the island, came to refer to the book as "little short of a masterpiece”:[13]

Your story fits the Isle of Man like a lid to a box. [...] I have but to lift the alabaster box of precious ointment, and up leaps the genuine Manx perfume, so that the house is filled with the savour thereof. [...] Whether it's the blood in you, or the poet and diviner, you know all about it, you need not that any should tell you concerning Man. for you know what is Man, and that in two senses.
[...] 'The Deemster' will live in the literature of the English nation, their own descendants abashed and wondering, and asking what their fathers meant by an indifference so stupid and so unaccountable. Of course I can see that the year 1887 must always be an epoch in Manx history, the year 'The Deemster’ was published.[14]

The novel also brought adoration and endorsement from the leading writers and public figures of the day. Bram Stoker, for instance, was to write an introduction to a later edition of the novel.[4] In August 1902 King Edward VII made an unannounced visit to the Isle of Man to have Hall Caine show him the locations of the novel, such as Bishopscourt.[15]

Critical concerns about the novel, when expressed, tended to concentrate on the perceived negativity or dark side of the novel.[3] This is shown in a letter written to Caine by Wilkie Collins on 15 March 1888:

For a long time past, I have read nothing in contemporary fiction that approaches what you have done here. [...] When you next take up your pen, will you consider a little whether your tendency to dwell on what is grotesque and violent in human character does not require some discipline? [...] your power as a writer sometimes misleads you, as I think, into forgetting the value of contrast. The grand picture which your story presents of terror and grief wants relief. Individually and collectively, there is variety in the human lot. We are no more continuously wretched than we are continuously happy. Next time, I want more humour, [...] More breaks of sunshine in your splendid cloudy sky will be a truer picture of nature-and will certainly enlarge the number of your admiring readers.[3]

Locations

The beach near Orrisdale Head, the apparent summit where Ewan Mylrea falls to his death on the rocks

Quotes

Adaptations

Hall Caine adapted the novel for the stage with Wilson Barrett, who was to play the lead role of Dan. The play was entitled Ben-my-Chree (“Girl of my heart" in Manx), the name of Dan's boat in the novel, and it was Caine's first foray into writing for the stage. It opened at the Princess's Theatre on Oxford Street, London, on 17 May 1888, and despite initially dubious reviews it proved to be a great success.[16] The adaptation made substantial changes to the novel, particularly at the ending, which many concessions for the sake of melodrama:

The play ends with Mona protesting her innocence on a charge of immoral conduct when Dan appears unbidden. He corroborates the maiden's oath but by speaking, he sacrifices his own life, having been sentenced to life-long silence on pain of death if he breaks it. Mona dies of shock, the Governor is handed over to the police for laying false evidence and Dan throws himself across his sweetheart's body while waiting for the hangman.[16]

After falling out with Barrett, eventually leading to legal action, Caine came to rewrite another version of the novel for the stage, now entitled, The Bishop's Son. It was taken on tour in 1910, including a performance in Douglas, the capital of the Isle of Man, on 15 August, at which Caine delivered a rapturously-received pre-performance speech. The play eventually opened in London at the Garrick Theatre on 28 September 1910, with Bransby Williams in the lead role.[17]

The novel was made into a silent film by the Arrow Film Corporation in America in 1917. Hall Caine's son, Derwent Hall Caine, and Marian Swayne were cast in the lead roles.[18] The film was released in England in March 1918, when Hall Caine organised "a stellar first night audience" for the screening in aid of war charities.[19] Caine had invited the Prime Minister, Lloyd George, but he politely declined the invitation.[19]

Trivia

Bishop Wilson, the model for Gilcrist Mylrea

References

  1. Hall Caine: Portrait of a Victorian Romancer, by Vivian Allen, Sheffield Academic Press, Sheffield, 1997, p. 187
  2. Hall Caine: The Man and the Novelist by C. Fred Kenyon,, Greening and Co., London, 1901, available on www.isle-of-man.com/manxnotebook
  3. 1 2 3 4 Kenyon
  4. 1 2 3 4 Allen, p. 187
  5. 1 2 3 4 Allen, p. 188
  6. Allen, p. 379
  7. The Deemster, Chapter XXI, p. 153 – Mona's description of Dan
  8. The Deemster, Chapter XXXVI, p.282
  9. The Deemster, Chapter XXXVI, p. 283
  10. The Deemster, Chapter XLV, p. 365
  11. Allen, p. 243
  12. Preface to Mannin, Vol. I, by Dr. Drury, Lord Bishop of Ripon and Former Bishop of Sodor and Man, 1913, available on www.isle-of-man.com/manxnotebook
  13. Letter from T. E. Brown to A. M. Worthington, 1 January 1888, in Letters of T. E. Brown by Sidney T. Irwin, Archibald Constable and Co., London, 1900, available on www.isle-of-man.com/manxnotebook
  14. T.E. Brown's letter to Hall Caine, quoted in My Story by Hall Caine, Heinemann, London, 1908, pp. 314–318
  15. Allen, pp. 287–88
  16. 1 2 Allen, p. 189
  17. Allen, p. 345
  18. The Deemster (1917) on IMDb
  19. 1 2 Allen, p. 369
  20. Mylrea's of Dollough from 'Manx Families’ by A.W.Moore, 1889, available on http://www.isle-of-man.com/manxnotebook
  21. Notes to The Deemster available on www.isle-of-man.com/manxnotebook
  22. T. E. Brown's letter to Hall Caine, dated 14 October 1886, in Kenyon
  23. 1 2 Notes to The Deemster
  24. ‘Historical and Statistical Account of the Isle of Man From the Earliest Times to the Present Date’ by Joseph Train, Douglas, Mary Quiggan, 1845
  25. Caine, My Story, pp. 319–320
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