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Classics in Short No.131 Brian Alderson Companions for Alice in The Runa


wy a


Clarice Clavering, fifteen years old,


is


walking ruminatively in the garden of her substantial country home on the edge of London. Her mother is dead, her father is ‘something in the City’, whence he travels each day by train, and her chief companion is her governess, a pleasant enough lady but ‘of few original ideas, no fancies, a reserved manner, and a well regulated mind’.


As an ardent youth,


when we meet her, excited by Walter Scott’s Woodstock,


Clarice


is dissatisfied with her genteel life.


‘If only


anything would happen’ she thinks and, instantly on cue, there is a rustling in the shrubbery and something does happen as a beautiful, if tangled, little Olga emerges on the path:- ‘”My goodness” cried Clarice. “What is it?” “It’s me” said the girl, naturally ungrammatical at such a moment. “Oh do hide me; you will won’t you? Oh, please do”’


Thus begins


Clarice’s longed-for adventure, as she smuggles Olga into her bedroom and becomes complicit in her plan to escape to Scotland.


It seems that her parents


live in India, where her father is a colonel in a Highland regiment and, rather than stay with her grandmother, who lives in a castle in Scotland, she had been sent to a boarding school in Yorkshire.


It was not


quite Dotheboys Hall for girls, but she hated it and had run away, although, being a scatterbrain, she had got on the wrong train and had ended up hiding in the garden of Clarice’s suburban home down south.


Scatterbrain


does not fully summarize thirteen-year old Olga’s intrepid but


provocative


determination to do things her way and this story of her secret stay in the Clavering household amounts to a succession of crazy escapades – pretending to be a ghost, disguising herself as a schoolmarm, climbing on the roof – that put at risk Clarice’s comradely efforts to hide her.


At


the same time, Clarice’s trust in Olga’s tale is compromised when she learns that an


32 Books for Keeps No.232 September 2018 Illustration courtesy of The Raverat Archive, www.raverat.com


agony column in The Times is advertising a reward for the apprehension of a servant girl who has absconded with money and jewels from a school in Yorkshire, thieveries which may correspond to similar possessions in a bag that Olga is carrying. How can Clarice remain loyal to the girl for whom she has conceived a great affection while avoiding telling lies or denouncing her as a thief?


Irrepressible


and violently rejecting her reputed dishonesty,


Olga persists in madcap


exploits (“Of course I ought not to have done it” she remarks after one episode “One never ought to do fun – but it was delicious”). The reader comes to wonder at the ingenuity of her various contrivances and how Clarice’s dilemma may be resolved until, in a tremendous climax, which involves the almost simultaneous arrival of police (“This here go – though an uncommon rum go – is of no manner of use...”), a magistrate, and, in timely mode, Olga’s Papa. Wrapping it all up a telegraph boy brings news of the apprehension of the other runaway, the Yorkshire servant girl, for whom Olga has been mistaken


There are perhaps few readers of BfK


who have read The Runaway or know anything of its author, Mrs Elizabeth Anna Hart.


It was first published by Messrs


Macmillan in the year that they also published Through the Looking-Glass and what Alice Found There (1872) and,


as I hope may be seen by the above brief synopsis, it shares with that book a light- heartedness and an inventive delight in, as Olga puts it, “doing fun” which is wholly at odds with the reputation of Victorian writers for children as dealers in evangelism and doom. (An unworthy thought strikes that Mrs Hart may have been couching a lance against Charlotte Yonge.)


The craftsmanship of the story, its pacing,


its convincing household


scenes, the credibility and differentiation of its characters are such that one may also wonder why it fell from grace. Indeed, it may well still be entirely forgotten had it not been for the intervention of that great artist, Gwen Raverat, who had loved the book as a child and who was responsible for persuading Macmillan to bring out a new (very slightly altered) edition in 1936. This she illustrated herself with a plethora of superb wood engravings which place the book in the top rank of illustrated stories for children. Macmillan relinquished rights to it in 1953 when Duckworth were able to issue a new edition and Persephone brought it into the twenty-first century in 2002. It still remains though too little known.


The Runaway, by Elizabeth Anna Hart, with illustrations by Gwen Raverat is published by Persephone Books Ltd. 978-1903155264 £14.99


Brian Alderson is founder of the Children’s Books History Society and a former Children’s Books Editor for The Times. His book The Ladybird Story: Children’s Books for Everyone, The British Library, 978-0712357289, £25.00 hbk, is out now.


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