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Uppingham School, High St W, Uppingham, Oakham LE15, Regno Unito
Albany Mansions, 63 Albert Bridge Rd, London SW11 4QA, Regno Unito
Villa Tuoro, Via Tuoro, 80076 Capri NA, Italia
Cimitero acattolico di Capri, Via Marina Grande, 80073 Capri NA, Italia

Image result for Norman DouglasGeorge Norman Douglas[1] (8 December 1868 – 7 February 1952) was a British writer, now best known for his 1917 novel ''South Wind''. His travel books such as his 1915 ''Old Calabria'' were also appreciated for the quality of their writing. He is Duncan Maxwell in Vestal Fire (1927) by Compton Mackenzie.

Norman Douglas was born in Thüringen, Austria (his surname was registered at birth as ''Douglass'').[2] His mother was Vanda von Poellnitz. His father was John Sholto Douglas (1845–1874), manager of a cotton mill, who died in a climbing accident when Douglas was about six. He spent the first years of his life on the family estate, Villa Falkenhorst, in Thüringen.

Douglas was brought up mainly in Scotland at Tilquhillie, Deeside, his paternal home. He was educated at Yarlet Hall and Uppingham School in England, and then at a grammar school in Karlsruhe. Douglas's paternal grandfather was the 14th Laird of Tilquhillie. Douglas's maternal great-grandfather was General James Ochoncar Forbes, 17th Lord Forbes.

In March 1888, with his elder brother, Johnnie, he visited Italy and, after passing through Naples, crossed over from Sorrento to Capri ‘chiefly to procure the blue Faraglione lizard’.

He started in the diplomatic service in 1894 and from then until 1896 was based in St. Petersburg, but was placed on leave following a sexual scandal. In 1897 he bought a villa (Villa Maya) in Posillipo, a maritime suburb of Naples. The next year he married a cousin Elizabeth Louisa Theobaldina FitzGibbon (their mothers were sisters, daughters of Baron Ernst von Poellnitz). They had two children, Louis Archibald (Archie) and Robert Sholto (Robin),[3] but divorced in 1903 on grounds of Elizabeth's infidelity. Norman's first book publication, (''Unprofessional Tales'' (1901)) was written under the pseudonym ''Normyx'', in collaboration with Elizabeth.

File:Norman Douglas 1935.jpg - Wikipedia
by Carl Van Vechten

For a short time Douglas rented part of the Villa Monte San Michele from old Prince Caracciolo, who occupied only the ground floor of what was still a humble villa, ‘superintending his vines … and painting images of Madonnas and Saints for churches’.

He moved to Capri, spending time there (at the Villa Daphne) and in London, and became a more committed writer. Nepenthe, the fictional island setting of ''South Wind'', is Capri in light disguise. There he was friends with the eccentric community and opium addict Baron Jacques d'Adelswärd-Fersen. In 1912–1914 he worked for ''The English Review''. He met D. H. Lawrence through this connection. This led to a feud, after Lawrence in his 1922 novel, ''Aaron's Rod'' based a character on Douglas.[4] In late 1916 he jumped bail in London on a charge of indecent assault on a sixteen-year-old boy, and effectively then lived in exile. He himself wrote of this in self-exculpation: 'Norman Douglas of Capri, and of Naples and Florence, was formerly of England, which he fled during the war to avoid persecution for kissing a boy and giving him some cakes and a shilling'.

In the book ''Twentieth Century Authors'', Douglas stated he disliked Marxism, Puritanism, and "all kinds of set forms, including official Christianity"

Douglas choose to settle in Italy where he divided his time between Capri (he will be a friend of Baron Jacques d'Adelsward-Fersen), Naples and Florence. Douglas and his companion, the Florentine bookseller Pino Orioli, were behind the very first edition of D. H. Lawrence's The Lover of Lady Chatterley in 1928. Composed by Italian printers, who did not read English, the book, considered obscene, was thus able to escape the judgment of contemporaries. It should be remembered that D.H. Lawrence's novel could not be published in the United Kingdom until 1960 after a resounding trial

William Alexander Percy knew Norman Douglas, whom he visited in Capri, and in 1929 he composed a short foreword to Douglas' Birds and Beasts of the Greek Anthology.

During Douglas's years in Florence, he was associated with the publisher and bookseller Pino Orioli, who published in Italy in his 'Lungarno' series a number of Douglas's books and also works by other English authors. Douglas probably had a major hand in writing Orioli's autobiography, ''Adventures of a Bookseller''. Douglas' 1920 novel ''They Went'' is a fantasy based on Breton folklore.

Further scandals led to Douglas leaving Italy for the south of France in 1937. Following the collapse of France in 1940 Douglas left the Riviera, and on a circuitous journey to London, where he lived from 1942 to 1946, he published the first edition of his 'Almanac' in a tiny edition in Lisbon. He returned to Capri in 1946 and was made a citizen of the island. His circle of acquaintances included the writer Graham Greene, the composer Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji and the food writer Elizabeth David.

He died in Capri, apparently deliberately overdosing himself on drugs after a long illness. (see ''Impossible Woman: Memoirs of Dottoressa Moore'', ed. by Greene). His last words are reputed to have been: "Get those fucking nuns away from me."[5] The Latin inscription on his tombstone, from an ode by Horace, reads: ''Omnes eodem cogimur'', "We are all driven to the same end" (i.e., death).[6]

H.M. Tomlinson, a contemporary of Douglas's, concluded his 1931 biography by saying that Douglas's kind of prose "is at present out of fashion". He compared the writing to that of great English essayists and novelists: to Jonathan Swift's irony and Laurence Sterne's warmth.[7]

Peter Ackroyd describes Douglas's ''London Street Games'' as "a vivid memorial to the inventiveness and energy of London children, and an implicit testimony to the streets which harboured and protected their play."[8]

John Sutherland reports that "Douglas's Mediterranean travel writing chimed with the public taste", and that "there was a time when, in smart literary conversations, Norman Douglas was regarded as one of the smartest things going. Part of that smartness was his keeping, for the whole of his long depraved life, one jump ahead of the law."[9]

In "The Grand Tour and Beyond: British and American Travellers in Southern Italy, 1545–1960", Edward Chaney, wrote that "the true heir to the great tradition of the 'pedestrian tour' in our own [20th] century has been 'pagan-to-the-core' Norman Douglas. Having first visited the south of Italy with his brother in 1888, before he was 30 he had abandoned his pregnant Russian mistress and his job at the British Embassy in St Petersburg and purchased a villa at Posillipo. By then he had also published his first piece on the subject of southern Italy.." [10]

Douglas's most famous work ''South Wind'' is a fictionalised account of life in Capri, with controversial references to moral and sexual issues. It has been frequently reprinted.[11]

His travel books also combine erudition, insight, whimsicality, and some fine prose. These works include ''Siren Land'' (1911), ''Fountains in the Sand'', described as 'rambles amongst the oases of Tunisia' (1912), ''Old Calabria'' (1915), ''Together'' (Austria) (1923) and ''Alone'' (Italy) (1921).[12] Reviewing Douglas's work in ''Italian Americana'', John Paul Russo wrote: Douglas .. published three travel books of his walking tours of Italy: ''Siren Land'', ... ''Old Calabria'' ... and ''Alone'' ... Scholars prefer the first; Douglas and his afficionados, the third; but the common reader has decided upon the middle work as the masterpiece.

Douglas's early pamphlets on Capri were revised in ''Capri'' (privately published, 1930). His last published work was ''A Footnote on Capri'' (1952).

In 1928, Douglas published ''Some Limericks'', an anthology of more-or-less obscene limericks with a mock-scholarly critical apparatus. This classic (of its kind) has been frequently republished, often without acknowledgment in pirate editions. A definitive edition has now been published.[13]


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