Country Life

The tale of Beatrix Potter

A fascinatin­g new biography shows Beatrix Potter to have been a pioneer of much else besides publishing best-selling books about bunnies, says Caroline Jackson

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Read no history: nothing but biography, for that is life without theory.’ So said Benjamin disraeli, twice Prime Minister and Leader of the Opposition between 1868 and 1881 and himself a successful novelist. It’s apt recommenda­tion for this fresh and incisive rendition of Beatrix Potter’s definitive­ly mid-victorian childhood and her intriguing evolution into both a pioneer conservati­onist and one of the nation’s most celebrated authors and illustrato­rs. Hers is a tale of earned success and society at a tipping point. As told by Matthew dennison, it is also a riveting exemplar of female emancipati­on.

Potter was born in London in 1866 and grew up in a large Kensington townhouse of ‘lugubrious respectabi­lity’. An only child until the birth of her brother Bertram when she was nearly six, the writer’s upbringing was one of material comfort and social propriety, albeit built on non-conformist Unitarian—hence notably rationalis­t—foundation­s.

each of her parents had inherited substantia­l wealth from fortunes made in the country’s northern textile industry. For her father, Rupert, it absolved him from gainful employment and funded his keen amateur interest in drawing, painting and photograph­y, that modish new hybrid of art and science. For his wife, Helen, it allowed ‘infinite leisure’ in which to pursue social advancemen­t. Their daughter, avowedly ‘matterof-fact’ and ‘old-fashioned’, but an innate ‘believer in breed’, deemed both parents ‘trying’.

Few baulk at the profitable appellatio­n ‘Beatrix Potter’s Lake district’. She is forever associated with the landscape depicted so exquisitel­y in her 23 ‘little books’ for children, the landscape in which she would eventually settle. It’s astonishin­g, therefore, to learn that Potter spent more than half her life in the capital and the majority of that time confined to a third-floor nursery. Her first Scottish nanny was a firm, and formative, believer in fairies. When Nurse Mckenzie was replaced by governesse­s, her stories and rhymes ceded to novels—walter Scott was a favourite—just as the girl’s only apparent friend and playmate, Bertram, was sent away to school.

Solitude is not, of course, synonymous with loneliness and can yield a handsome imaginativ­e dividend. Mr dennison admits both possibilit­ies and acknowledg­es that Rupert Potter undoubtedl­y cultivated his daughter’s artistic talent. despite annual extended holidays nationwide, Potter was 19 before she first saw Whitehall, the Strand or Monument.

Her diaries, written in code between the ages of 14 and 30, reveal an imaginary friend and detail, with what we now recognise as her inimitable blend of anthropomo­rphic fancy and unsentimen­tal realism, an extensive menagerie of small creatures. Most were drawn, many were dissected. Among the frogs, mice, rats and hedgehogs was a rabbit named Peter.

How she managed to become an expert mycologist is remarkable: in 1897, her novel observatio­ns on the process of fungal germinatio­n were presented, necessaril­y by proxy, to the all-male members of The Linnean Society. That Potter then propelled herself from selfpublis­hed to best-selling within a single year is confoundin­g. By the end of 1903, Frederick Warne & Co had sold 50,000 copies of the first ‘bunny book’; to date, The Tale of Peter Rabbit is estimated to have sold more than 40 million.

The revelation is not so much what came next as that anything did. despite the sudden loss of her fiancé and publisher, Norman Warne, in 1905, she establishe­d an unpreceden­ted career as a hill farmer and champion of the Herdwick sheep and, aged 47, began another, parallel life as Mrs William Heelis of Hawkshead. Thirty years later, she was to bequeath 14 farms and 4,000 acres of land to the National Trust.

One suspects that Potter would approve of the elegant subjectivi­ty of Mr dennison’s account as he recasts the constraint­s of her era and milieu as priceless fuel for personal reinventio­n. Capturing ‘the particular tip-tilt of her prose’ and winningly structured around those 23 ‘tales’, this beautifull­y produced biography unveils Potter as ahead of her time.

 ??  ?? Above: Beatrix Potter was 14 when her father photograph­ed her with Spot during a holiday in Scotland. Right: In her illustrati­ons
Above: Beatrix Potter was 14 when her father photograph­ed her with Spot during a holiday in Scotland. Right: In her illustrati­ons
 ??  ?? for The Tailor of Gloucester, Potter combined her love of old china and historic textiles with her fondness for mice
for The Tailor of Gloucester, Potter combined her love of old china and historic textiles with her fondness for mice

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