THE ABINGTON ORCHID
ERNEST RANDOLPH REYNOLDS
Ph.D. (Cantab.), B.A. (Lond.)
(1910-1987)
‘Porcelain is perhaps the most entrancing of
all the branches of the Antique Tree.’
[‘Guide to European Antiques’. Chapter 2: I, Introduction.
Ernest R. Reynolds. 1963 (U.S. edition. 1964. p. 41)]
Ernest Randolph
Reynolds has become a forgotten author, a dusty curio, especially here in his
home-town of Northampton
where he should be remembered with deep gratitude and affection for he had such
love for the town which can be seen by anyone reading his ‘Northampton ’ series of books. Scholar, actor,
poet, playwright and collector, there seemed no end to his talents, interests
and enthusiasms and his humble home at number 43 Wantage Road, in Abington,
Northampton, a house on the perimeter of the county cricket ground, has long
stood without recognition; one would not know he lived there most of his life
until his death in 1987, for there is nothing to honour his presence there. Just
an ordinary, Victorian terrace house, originally three bedrooms, front parlour
and back room with a coal cellar; one would easily pass it by not knowing what
local distinguished person occupied it and who called it ‘home’ and appreciated
its architectural features: ‘even the cheapest Victorian terrace houses often
contain elaborate front-room fireplaces and a little plaster moulding in the
entrance passage or carved stonework outside.’ [‘Guide to European Antiques’.
Victoriana: IV, Furniture, Miscellaneous Trifles. Reynolds. 1963 (U.S. edition.
1964. p. 92-93)] In fact, reading his excellent volume on ‘European Antiques’
one is shown many illustrations of his collectibles and if one looks carefully
at the photographs in many the wallpaper is consistently the same and it is my
belief that these photographs of his collection were taken at his home at 43
Wantage Road.
Ernest Randolph
Reynolds was born on 13th
September 1910 in Northampton
and he was christened on 23rd October of that year.
I.
The Census for 1911
(notoriously inaccurate for its dates of birth and places of birth) shows the
Reynolds family are at 43 Wantage Road, Abington, Northampton: Head of the
household is Alfred Reynolds, 31 (born 1880, Northampton) whose occupation is
shown as ‘clicker’ (1); Alfred’s wife, Fanny Reynolds (nee Roddis), 26 (born
1885, Bucks Stoke Stratford) (2); there is an eight year old son, Alfred Thomas
Reynolds, (born 1902, Northampton and christened on 8th July 1902 in
Abington), Ernest, not yet one year old, born Northampton and a boarder, Jessie
Warren, 47 (born 1864, Northampton) living on ‘private means’.
Ernest’s father,
Alfred married Fanny Roddis (actually born 1884, Stony Stratford,
Northamptonshire) in the spring of 1902 in Northampton . According to the 1901 Census
taken on 31st March, Fanny was living with her family in Abington, Northampton ; she is 17
and works as a ‘Gold Stamper’. She lives with her father: Thomas Roddis, 48,
born 1853, Thrapston, Northamptonshire who is a ‘Jobbing Gardener’; her mother:
Mary, 45, born 1856, Newnham, Northamptonshire; sister: Helen, 24, born 1877,
Duston, Northamptonshire who is a ‘Boot Trimmer’ (3) and sister Annie, 22, born
1879, Duston, Northamptonshire who is a ‘Boot Machinist’ (4).
II.
Ernest attended the Northampton Town and County Grammar School ,
Billing Road ,
from 1921-1928 and taught at Stimpson
Avenue School ,
Abington, Northampton
from 1927-1928. On 1st October 1929 Reynolds applied to the University of Nottingham for a one year course of
study: 1929-1930: Intermediate B.A. Oxford Senior Locals – English. While at Nottingham University he wrote his first published
poem, ‘Tristram and Iseult’, published in 1930. In the preface to the poem,
Reynolds calls it ‘pictorial poetry’ and goes on to say that ‘what respect I
have preserved for the sequence of events is largely drawn from Wagnerian
treatment of the legend’. (‘Tristram and Iseult’. Preface. p. iii. Nottingham . 1930) The poem is divided into four parts:
‘The Prelude’, ‘The Love Dawn’, ‘Red Poppies’ and Liebestod’ which are each
divided into eight line stanzas (sixty-five stanzas in total) each describing
in flower and gem imagery, particular scenes from the story; each part is
preceded by a short passage in French from ‘Tristan’ by Beroul. The main themes
of the volume are the slaying of Marhault, the love potion which brings
Tristram and Iseult together, the love affair between them and Tristram’s
death. The poem was awarded the Kirke White Prize for poetry from Nottingham University for the year 1929-30.
Reynolds was an
authority on several subjects including theatre history and his ‘Early
Victorian Drama: 1830-1870’ published in 1936 is a brilliant introduction and
analysis of the Theatre and its various styles of the Victorian period: ‘in the
age of Shakespeare the current philosophy was really of a pagan kind.’ (p. 4)
Reynolds was also a sometime actor with the Northampton Repertory Players (in
1976 Reynolds published his twenty-page, ‘Northampton Repertory Theatre’ which
was commissioned by the Players to mark their Golden Jubilee: 1927-1977). His
expertise in theatre study made Reynolds an excellent critic and historian of
the dramatic arts (his articles were often published in ‘The Stage’ such as
Reynolds’ piece ‘Twenty-Five Years of Repertory at Northampton’ which appeared
in ‘The Stage’ on Thursday 17 July 1952) and his keen impressions of the modern
stage built on the foundations of the early Victorians, are often quite
enlightening: ‘it is interesting to trace the influence of the new dance-dramas
of Yeats on the similar experiments of Terence Gray… and the subsequent great
revival of ballet in England… And if modern ballet could somehow link itself
with poetry again and re-establish the partnership of dance-drama on a large
scale, then the pioneer ideas of Yeats would indeed have a splendid apotheosis
on the modern stage.’ [‘Modern English Drama: A Survey of the Theatre from
1900-1950’. Reynolds. 1949. p. 53-4] Yet he was aware that the theatre did not
have the same power as literature when it came to society ‘the building of
Utopias has to be left to the novelist and the romantic poet.’ (‘Early
Victorian Drama: 1830-1870. Reynolds. 1936. p. 4)
Reynolds was also a
great authority on porcelain and collecting antiques – the ‘term ‘porcelain’
has been very loosely used in the past and applied to many types of paste which
are not porcelain in the true sense at all.’ [‘Collecting Victorian Porcelain’.
Preface. Reynolds.1966 (1968 edition. p. 13)] He spent his whole life learning
and memorising various pottery marks (the Chinese marks he found difficult to
remember) and he was under no illusion as to the difficulty of becoming
proficient: ‘the neophyte who embarks on the great Ceramic Pilgrimage must
certainly be prepared for some hard study’. [‘Guide to European Antiques’.
Chapter 2: I, Introduction. Reynolds.1963 (U.S. edition. 1964. p. 42)]
V.
Apart from porcelain
and antiques his knowledge also encompassed many forms of the world of art
including painting and furniture along with some knowledge of architecture: ‘anyone
who looks without prejudice at, say, Millais’ famous picture of the drowned
Ophelia, or at some of the charming Tudor-style country railway stations along
many English branch lines, or at a fine pair of Victorian Minton or Copeland
vases, will have to admit t5hat they have a strong character of their own. The
models of the past have merely acted as a spur to the artists, not as a
stranglehold crushing liveliness or adaptability to the needs of a fresh age.’
[‘Collecting Victorian Porcelain’. Introduction. Reynolds.1966 (1968 edition.
p. 20)]
Reynolds made some
excellent antique purchases in his time, many of which are mentioned in his
‘Collecting Victorian Porcelain’ (1966) and his ‘Guide to European Antiques’
(1963); in the latter he mentions a Fuseli painting of 1792 which was one of
‘three large Shakespearean scenes’ – ‘the other two are a delightfully
vivacious Angelica Kauffmann work – the last scene of The Two Gentlemen of
Verona where the main characters are assembled in a wood, and an unsigned but
very well done episode from the Comedy of Errors against a background of
classical architecture’ (‘Guide to European Antiques’. Reynolds. 1963 (U.S.
edition. 1964. p. 158) among others which are shown in photographs obviously
taken at his home in Wantage Road, Abington, although he does say that ‘no one
should want to turn his house into an uninhabitable museum where at every step
his visitor knocks against a warming-pan, or curse under their breath as they
bump into the seventeenth or eighteenth china cabinet.’ [‘Guide to European
Antiques’. Preface. Reynolds.1963 (U.S. edition. 1964. p. 10)]
In the 1939 Register
Ernest, his father Alfred and mother Fanny are at 43 Wantage Road , Abington, Northampton . Between 1940
and 1944, Reynolds was in Baghdad
and Lisbon as a
British Council Lecturer before returning to England to lecture on English at
the University of
Birmingham , from
1946-1955. In 1941, probably while abroad, he began writing his ‘fantastic
symphony in seven movements’, a long poem in seventeen sections:
‘Mephistopheles and the Golden Apples’ which was published two years later in
1943. In the poem, Mephistopheles tempts Guntram, a don, with the promise of
unlimited knowledge; Mephistopheles and Guntram go to Tintagel in section six
where they are welcomed by Merlin; in the next section we meet Galahad, Lavaine
and Bedivere who each speak in turn. In section nine the story of Tristram and
Iseult is sang by the siren and in section twelve several other Arthurian
references are mentioned by the ghost of Dante Gabriel Rossetti!
During September 1952,
his play ‘Candlemas Night’, a ‘fantastic comedy’ was performed at London ’s Royal Court
Theatre . The play shows
the attempts of Miss Spanheim (Lucifer’s minister in Oxford ) in her seduction of three Oxford dons – Dr.
Tancred, Dr. Osmund and Dr. Adamastor. The dons are shown how to use cards to
conjure the Goddess of Wisdom, the Queen of Spades (Pallas Athene) with the
intention of imprisoning her; but she is too clever for them and strikes them
dumb. The don’s wives: Sigismunda Tancred, Agatha Osmund and Ines Adamastor try
to conjure the Queen of Spades to plead with her for their husbands’ voices to
return but they do the conjuration wrong and evoke instead the Knave of
Diamonds (Hector of Troy). The play was transformed into a ‘radio play’ for the
B.B.C. and on Monday 26
December 1955 , on the Third Programme at3 p.m. there was a radio
performance of ‘Candlemas Night’. The music is by the composer Malcolm Arnold,
conducted by Lionel Salter, and the play was produced by Frederick Bradnum. The
radio play is performed again on Friday 30 December 1955 (The Third Programme, 8.55 p.m. ) and there is a repeat
performance on the Third Programme on 26 February 1956 .
VIII.
IX.
X.
Dr. Ernest Reynolds
gets a mention on p. 179 of Lou Warwick’s 1960 publication ‘Death of the
Theatre: A History of the New Theatre, Northampton ’
and in October 1964 an article on Reynolds appeared in the ‘Northampton
Independent’: ‘Ernest Reynolds: Strange Facts’ by the journalist Ian Mayes
(Northampton Independent. October. 1964. p. 57).
In the Summer of 1987
Ernest Randolph Reynolds died. He was still living at 43 Wantage Road , Abington, Northampton . According to
Anthony Meredith in his book ‘A-Z of Northampton :
Places-People-History’ (2017) Reynolds, in his later years, ‘rarely strayed
from his home, an ‘Aladdin’s Cave’. Weeks later the house was broken into and
his valuable china figurines, porcelain and priceless antiques were stolen.
From reading his published works on porcelain and antiques we know some of the
exquisite items he owned, such as the three Victorian Worcester plates
(1862-70), a Crown Staffordshire hexagonal vase, a Coalport Rose Pompadour
plate, a set of Booth’s ‘scale-blue and exotic birds’, a walnut veneered
arch-dial long-case clock (circa 1720’s), a ‘patch period’ Derby plate, a
French Ormolu clock (circa 1830), a French silver-plated coffee pot and of
course the Fuseli painting of 1792, to name a few items of his precious
collection. If the thieves were in possession of his volume the ‘Guide to
European Antiques’ they would have a quite accurate inventory of his valuable
pieces! He was a man who adored beauty and had a distinct appreciation for
aesthetic and charming pieces of art: ‘hideous things were undoubtedly produced
(is the present age, however, in any position to cast stones in that
direction?)’ [‘Collecting Victorian Porcelain’. Introduction. Reynolds.1966
(1968 edition. p. 24)]
Perhaps some day he
shall receive the recognition he deserves!
Published works:
Tristram and Iseult. Nottingham . (1930) Winner of the Kirke White Poetry Prize
1929-30, Nottingham
University .
Garin Le Loherain: A
Poem. (1935)
Early Victorian Drama:
1830-1870. (1936)
Modern English
Literature, 1798-1935, with the addition of three chapters by E. R. Reynolds.
Alfred John Wyatt. (1936)
Mephistopheles and the
Golden Apples: Fantastic Symphony in Verse. Cambridge . (1943) [written in 1941]
Ines de Castro:
Verse-Drama in One Act. (1943)
King Sebastian:
Verse-Drama in a Prologue and Three Episodes. Lisbon. (1944)
Pedro and Francisca:
Verse-Drama in a Prologue and Four Episodes. Lisbon. (1944)
Vasco de Gama:
Verse-Drama in Three Episodes. Lisbon. (1944)
Modern English Drama:
Survey of the Theatre from 1900. (1949)
The Plain Man’s Guide
to Antique Collecting. (1963)
Guide to European
Antiques. (1964)
The Plain Man’s Guide
to Opera. (1964)
Collecting Victorian
Porcelain. (1966)
Northamptonshire
Treasures. (1972)
Northampton Repertory
Theatre. (1976)
PHOTOGRAPHS taken from
the ‘Guide to European Antiques’ by Ernest Reynolds, 1963 (all page numbers refer
to U.S.
edition. 1964) showing pieces from his collection and taken, I believe, at 43 Wantage Road ,
Abington, Northampton :
I.
Blue and
white Chinese Vase on carved wooden stand, decorated with birds and flowers. K’ang
Hsi mark. Finely carved Chinese wooden figure of a sage. (between pages 32-33)
II.
Italian
water-colour in gilt frame with black surround showing a seated woman, c. 1860.
(Between pages 72-73)
III.
‘Victorian
Corner’ with a Majolica Jardinierre decorated in blue, yellow, green, pink and brown.
Also notice Mr. Reynolds’ sofa, books and cushions! (between pages 72-73)
IV.
Eighteenth-century
Long Case Clock, arch dial, walnut veneer with marquetry motif, elaborately
chased cherubs and dolphin enrichments in arch and spandrels, c. 1720. (between
pages 72-73)
V.
French
eighteenth-century Silver-Plate Coffee Pot. Circular Silver alms-dish with
lion-head and rococo-style chasing. (page 88)
VI.
Heavy
carved oak seventeenth-century Firescreen with panel of crimson floral damask.
(Bought at the Sotheby Sale, Ecton Hall, 1955). (Between pages 96-97)
VII.
Georgian
Bowfronted Mahogany 5 ft.
Sideboard , c. 1780.
(Between pages 136-137)
VIII.
Rare
Mahogany Patience Table, c. 1780; Silver Tea Pot, hall marked 1787; Oval
Satinwood Tea Caddy, c. 1790; Regency Mahogany metal-mounted Chair, c. 1810;
Sheraton Mahogany Self-Locking Cellarette, c. 1790; Silver carved Tankard by
John Swift, hall marked 1775. (Between pages 136-137)
IX.
Hepplewhite
Mahogany Dining Chairs in their original leather, c. 1780. (Between pages
136-147)
X.
Four
Chairs: (left to right): Country-Sheraton Fruitwood Chair, c. 1780; Early
nineteenth-century solid Yew-wood Carved Chair, c. 1830; Chippendale Mahogany
Chair, c. 1755; Late Georgian Mahogany Chair, c. 1810. (Between pages 136-137)
XI.
Pair of
Prints in Black and Gilt frames with the legends ‘I Vanderbank pinxt. 1729’ and
‘G. Kneller pinxt. 1735’ (sold by I. Faber at Ye Golden Head in Bloomsbury Square ).
(Between pages 152-153)
XII.
‘The
Division of Lear’s Kingdom’ (King Lear, Act 1) by Henri Fuseli. (Between pages
152-153)
NOTES:
1.
Alfred
Reynolds was born in Northampton
in 1878 (and probably died there in 1942); he is recorded on the 1881 Census as
a two year old ‘scholar’ living at Inkerman Terrace in Northampton . In the 1891 Census the Reynolds
family are living at Margaret Street, Northampton and the family members are as
follows: William Henry Reynolds, aged 42 (born 1849, Daventry, Northampton);
his occupation is ‘shoe maker’; Harriet Reynolds, wife of William, aged 42
(born Birmingham, Warwickshire); their children: Henry, 22, shoe maker; Emily,
20, shoe hand; William, 18, born Yorkshire, shoe maker; David, 16, born
‘England’, solicitor’s clerk; Alfred, 13, born Northampton, scholar; Alice, 10,
born Northampton, scholar; Nellie, 8, born ‘England’; Fred, 6, born ‘England’
and Florrie, 3, born ‘England’. In the 1901 Census the Reynolds are still in
Northampton: William Henry is 52 – ‘Boot Maker’, Harriet is 51, William is 28,
(born ‘Leeds’) – ‘Clicker Boot Trade’, David, 26 – Solicitor’s Clerk, Alfred,
22 – ‘Clicker Shoe Trade’, Fred, 16 – Ledger Clerk, Alice, 20 – ‘Boot Machinist’,
Nellie, 18 – ‘Boot Fitter’ and Florrie, 13 – ‘Cardboard Box Maker’. As we know
Alfred married Fanny Roddis in 1902, but the Reynolds family are still in
Northampton during the 1911 Census and William Henry, aged 63 gives his
occupation as ‘Licensed Victualer’; Harriet is 63, Fred is 26 and single –
‘Clerk Bedding Company’; Nellie is 28 and single – ‘Machinist Boot Factory’;
Florence, 23 and single – ‘Barmaid’; Edith Julia Reynolds, Granddaughter aged
12, born Northampton – ‘Scholar’ (actually: Julia Edith Reynolds, born 1899,
Northampton, daughter of Henry Reynolds and Elizabeth Ann).
2.
The Roddis
family can be seen on the 1881 Census living in Duston village,
Northamptonshire. Fanny Roddis (who probably died in Brixworth,
Northamptonshire in 1966) is not born until 1884 but her parents and elder
siblings are as shown: Thomas Roddis (father) aged 28, born 1853, Thrapston,
Northamptonshire, occupation: ‘Gardener and Domestic Servant’; Mary Roddis (mother)
aged 25, born 1856, Newnham, Northamptonshire; Mary Helen Roddis (sister) aged
4, born 1877, Duston, Northamptonshire; Annie Elizabeth Roddis (sister) aged 2,
born 1897, Duston, Northamptonshire; also at the address is Anthony J. Speight,
a single lodger aged 24, born 1857, Kendle, Westmorland who is a schoolmaster.
3.
Helen,
actually born Mary Helen Roddis, 1877, Duston, Northamptonshire. She married a
Londoner named Thomas Edward Debnam in Northampton ,
1904 and they lived in Duston. ‘Helen’ died in Northampton in 1973.
4.
Annie
Elizabeth Roddis was born in 1897, Duston, Northamptonshire. She married Arthur
Johnson in Northampton
in 1902.