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- BOOKS, Page 73Mortal Fools
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- DAUGHTERS OF ALBION
- By A.N. Wilson
- Viking; 287 pages; $21
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- In the past 15 years, Britain's A.N. Wilson has built a
- formidable reputation as a prolific man of letters -- 11 novels,
- three biographies, essays, journalism. He is brilliant, brisk,
- funny and morally exacting. Daughters of Albion is the last
- volume of a trilogy produced, with the author's characteristic
- vigor, a book a year.
-
- One suspects that a considerable understanding of the
- British intelligentsia is necessary for a true appreciation of
- these works. Just reading Iris Murdoch will not do. The story
- involves the Lampitt family, a large clan whose money springs
- from 18th century alehouses. "They're not really aristocrats,"
- a character observes, "they're the intellectual aristocracy of
- England . . . one of the best things this country has ever
- produced."
-
- Well, pity England. The Lampitts tend to be woolly
- leftists cultivating small gardens of scholarship and politics
- and dandling hangers-on like Julian Ramsay, the diffident
- narrator of all three books. In the first, Incline Our Hearts,
- Ramsay is a young man full of bright promise. In the second, A
- Bottle in the Smoke, reality, in the form of diminished hopes
- and a doomed marriage, sets in. By Daughters of Albion he is
- contemplating a book on -- guess who? -- the Lampitts.
-
- Roiling these backwaters are two powerful, charismatic
- figures, Raphael Hunter, an outright scoundrel, and Albion Pugh,
- who is more of a chronic liar and gifted fabulist. Both men are
- effortlessly successful with women: Ramsay loses his wife to
- Hunter and a beloved cousin to Pugh. He envies Pugh's "capacity
- to mythologise existence . . . his charm and his whatever it was
- he had instead of genius."
-
- It is a poignant confession of rue, and Ramsay would
- appear to be a classic sensitive narrator. But Wilson is up to
- something more, which gives the book considerable strength. Near
- the end, Ramsay betrays his best friend to, of all people,
- Raphael Hunter, with serious consequences. No one in the large
- cast escapes the author's stern moral gaze. Ramsay is last seen
- scheming, probably bootlessly, to pursue the latest young woman
- to fall in love with Albion Pugh.
-
- By Martha Duffy
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