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I have already mentioned his cousin Daphne’s poem ‘Another World’, where the ‘loathly keepers of the netherland’ have ‘cloven feet’ and there is a ‘horn that echoes from the further hill, Discordant, shrill’. Michael is commanding that it has to end. He is saying goodbye to Barrie’s boy-cult.

It was far from certain that Barrie was going to let him have his way.

O
N 9 SEPTEMBER
, while still in Scotland, Michael wrote to his tutor, Robert Dundas, presumably in case it hadn't filtered through to him, that he had given notice to the University:

Dear Mr Dundas.

 

Your emotions will not, I know, be violently stirred, when I say I am not going up to Oxford again; surprise, pity, or wrath, can scarcely have survived the thrashing of last term.

I feel very much the young fool; but wish to be obstinate into the
bargain, even if the first step I take for myself be into the deepest of deep ditches; it will at least be an experiment; and I am a little strengthened by Stevenson's Apology for my kind.

I shall always be sorry for not having taken Greats for Mods; and shall look out for the O's on judgement day.

 

Yours sincerely

Michael Ll. Davies

 

I do incidentally hope to quit education for some trade, so as to give Mr Stevenson's immorality some sort of standing.
61

The comment at the end is probably facetious. We must surely believe that Michael was still (in his mind) bound for the Sorbonne to study art.

At any rate no good honest work found him, and suddenly he did change his mind, writing to Dundas from rooms in the heart of old Oxford across the road from Christ Church at No. 84 St Aldates, a building full of character on the corner of Pembroke Street.

84 St Aldates.

Friday.

 

Dear Dundas (according to suggestion not since withdrawn) I'm sorry to be a bother; but should I possibly be allowed to creep into the House again in October, into some obscure corner? Of course it is
unprecedented. I am not in the least deserving; but reasons faintly sincere, these: if I stay in lodgings I should like to go with someone else after 2 terms of my own company; it would be rather foolish to go with natural non-Greats friends, and Marjoriebanks and I are not, in confidence, very good cohabitants. I know I could work if it were permitted. Now is the time arrangements are made, and the element of doubt which you must have about the use of me at Greats makes such rather more difficult. I'm sorry if this is at once trivial and impossible.

I dislike always bringing up the whole question of my existence before you.

Would you come to lunch here on, say, Friday, if I ask Charlie B-H? This is not a persuasive, nor a lenient, measure.

 

Yours,

Michael Davies

Edward Marjoribanks was an Old Etonian friend of Michael, later to become a Conservative politician. A telegram followed the letter some days later:

R H Dundas, Senior Common Room Christ Church Oxford

Have become moral and ask leave to return to work but is this possible as have opened no book this vacation. Query Collections and Verdict. Meanwhile starting to read.

By then Michael's address was Barrie's apartment off the Strand. These erratic missives will have done little to give Dundas confidence, but he was allowed to return to Oxford. A relation of his, Andrew Sellon, with an interest in the family tree, described Dundas as ‘a somewhat notorious Fellow, I believe he had the same rooms
that Lewis Carroll once had'. Carroll, or Charles Dodgson, became a lecturer in Mathematics there in 1855, publishing
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
in 1865.

It seems that Elizabeth Lucas had taken Michael aside and persuaded him at least to finish his degree before going to Paris. On 19 December, Barrie wrote to her:

It was nice of you to have that talk with Michael and I have no doubt that for the time at least it had a steadying effect. All sorts of things do set him ‘furiously to think' and they seem to burn out like a piece of paper. He is at present I think really working well at Oxford and has at any rate spasms of happiness out of it, but one never knows of the morrow. I think few have suffered from the loss of a mother as he has done.

Elizabeth Lucas was a warm friend to Michael, relieving him of the necessity of spending Christmas 1920 with Barrie by taking him to Paris.

Macnagthen wrote of this difficult period being turned around after he was allowed to return to Oxford: ‘Henceforward there was no wavering; he worked loyally and found increasing satisfaction in his work; he was at Eton for a day at the end of March (1921), full of quiet happiness.'

Barrie said much the same of Michael, writing to Elizabeth,

He is working hard and really enjoying his life at Oxford for the present at least. He has the oddest way of alternating between extraordinary reserve and surprising intimacy. No medium. In his room at Oxford lately he suddenly unburdened himself marvellously. One has to wait for those times, but they are worth while when they come.

The description is not a happy one on the face of it, suggestive of stress at the very least.

Returning to Oxford had meant of course that his relationship with Rupert would continue as before. No doubt the business with Dundas about Michael's lodgings in college was connected to his being closer to Rupert, as the gates of Christ Church closed at night.

On 13 February, Rupert wrote to his mother of new rooms in college. ‘My rooms are much better than they were: but as yet there are no pictures! … you must give advice on the question. Blue furniture and curtains and a red carpet are the dominant colours.'

The week before, he had written to his mother that ‘the Norway project is rather vague still, I'm sorry to say. Michael may not be able to go, in which case it will have to be given up.'

Whatever the Norway project was, it was evidently planned for the Easter holidays – Easter Day fell on 27 March – when Barrie had already planned to take Michael and Nico elsewhere. Reading between the lines, this looks like a further opportunity for disagreement between Barrie and Michael. In the event, Rupert and Michael spent Easter in Corfe Castle in Dorset, staying at a little inn by the sea. Barrie joined them for a few days at the end of it.

The next we hear is that Michael travelled to Oxford from London on 9 May, Barrie's sixty-first birthday. Nico to Eton, too, which suggests that Michael had been down for Nico's half term. Then, on 17 May, Barrie writes to Michael: ‘The Mill House sounds like a good place, and you had lovely weather for it.' We know no more than this, but it seems likely that Michael and Rupert have again been away together.

Two days later, Thursday 19 May, was a warm summer's day in Oxford, a day in Eights Week, the main University rowing event, a big festive occasion which takes place over four days.

Edward Marjoribanks saw Rupert that morning and Michael around midday. Michael said he was going to swim in Sandford pool that afternoon, and would not be able to watch the Eights. Buxton had not mentioned he was going out. The two young men left the city together shortly after two o'clock.

There was nothing unusual or foolhardy about swimming in Sandford Pool. Arthur Bryant, a friend and contemporary of Rupert at both Harrow and Oxford, wrote that the couple had been to Sandford together to swim several times before. While on the following day Thomas Ripon said, ‘There are bathers there almost every day in the summer, and I believe that Rupert was a good swimmer.'

The couple walked there through Christ Church Meadow, a spacious and beautiful pasture belonging to the college and a popular place for walking and picnicking during the day, when its wrought iron gates are open to all.

Moving southwards through the meadow, which is bounded on its west side by the Thames and on the east by the Cherwell, the couple approached the place where cattle graze and the two rivers converge. Here, on an island, the many college boathouses will have been busy, as this upstream stretch of the river is where the Eights Week rowing events occur.

The path, altogether the most lovely river walk in Oxford, leads past eights and fours and sculls, past river boats and flocks of grazing geese, and continues on its way south under a road bridge and a railway bridge, over Hinksey Stream by means of a footbridge and a further bridge over the weir stream, where a narrow path leaves the main one for Sandford lasher.

Here the river thunders through the weir into a large still pool, perhaps 100 metres across, by means of a series of sluice gates
between concrete piers, which support a railed pathway, which Rupert and Michael took across the river to the west bank on the other side.

It led them past a nineteenth-century obelisk, which in their day would have carried the names of only three Christ Church students who died here – Richard Phillimore and William Gaisford who drowned in 1843, and George Dasent in 1872.

For, ‘the pool under Sandford lasher, just behind the lock, is a very good place to drown yourself in', as du Maurier's great friend Jerome K. Jerome had written in
Three Men in a Boat
(1889).

Today, owing to these deaths and people's interest in an additional and more recent two, the railed pathway is barred and the single lifebelt by the obelisk is unobtainable. But it is still possible to find a way onto the side of the lasher where Rupert and Michael went that day by walking past Sandford Lock and through a field leading to the west bank.

It is an idyllic spot, the pools, high and low, separated by the weir, are quite beautiful and tranquil in summer. Hither the boys came, ‘either wildly gay or very serious' (as Barrie wrote to Rupert's mother afterwards), gazing over their gloomy grave, sensing the gentle motion of the leaves on the trees, the grass springing under their feet and the soft thunder of the lasher in the distance.

Later it was reported that one of the men swam over to the weir and sat on it basking in the sun. It would have been the poor swimmer Michael left alone on the bank, gazing at the pool where two universes met.

Did he turn to Shelley, dreaming that he could somehow lose himself in the otherworld of the pool, wet and remote – ‘What am I that I should linger here? – Vision and Love – Sleep and death Shall not divide us long'? Or, as he watched the muscular Rupert
drop his clothes beside him and swim strongly out towards the weir, did Michael not know that death was on him?

When on the threshold of the green recess

The wanderer's footsteps fell, he knew that death

Was on him. Yet a little, ere it fled,

Did he resign his high and holy soul

To images of the majestic past,

That paused within his passive being now,

Like winds that bear sweet music, when they breathe

Through some dim latticed chamber. He did place

His pale lean hand upon the rugged trunk

Of the old pine; upon an ivied stone

Reclined his languid head; his limbs did rest,

Diffused and motionless, on the smooth brink

Of that obscurest chasm;– and thus he lay,

Surrendering to their final impulses

The hovering powers of life. Hope and Despair,

The torturers, slept; no mortal pain or fear

Marred his repose; the influxes of sense

And his own being, unalloyed by pain,

Yet feebler and more feeble, calmly fed

The stream of thought, till he lay breathing there

At peace, and faintly smiling…
62

61
The comment about taking up a trade refers to Robert Louis Stevenson's ‘An Apology for Idlers' (1877), which Stevenson said was written with himself in mind. Only a year later he was able to write to his mother: ‘It was well I wrote my “Idlers” when I did; for I am now the busiest gent in Christendom.'

62
From Shelley's poem, which foretold his own drowning, ‘Alastor'.

T
HERE WERE TWO
eye-witnesses to the drowning, Charles Henry Beecham, engineer’s assistant at the nearby Sandford Paper Mills and his assistant Matthew Gaskell, both of whom testified that the pool was ‘as still as a mill-pond’.

They gave their evidence on Saturday 21 May to a Coroner’s Inquest, which was conducted by F. E. Marshall, described as ‘one of the University’s coroners’, at the Settling Room, Gloucester Green, in the city.

Beecham said that when he went up to the weir with Gaskell to regulate the water which fed the paper mill, he was standing on the Oxford side [the east side].

Marshall: Did you hear a shout?

Beecham: Yes, I heard a shout. I looked in the direction and saw two men bathing in the pool in difficulties.

Marshall: Did they appear to be struggling – or what were they doing?

Beecham: I only just saw their heads above water.

Marshall: What did you do?

Beecham: I immediately ran across the bridge to get the lifebelt, and Gaskell followed. Gaskell held the line while I threw the belt, but the men had already disappeared.

Marshall: What did you do then?

Beecham: I left Gaskell at the weir and ran to Radley College boathouse for assistance. Some of the Radley students were bathing, but some of them came back with me and others brought a boat.

Marshall: How far is the boathouse from the pool?

Beecham: It would take about ten minutes to bring a boat from there to the pool. I ran to the weir but saw no sign of the deceased.

Marshall: Then what did you do?

Beecham: I pointed out to one of the Radley students where the men went down. We returned to the mill about a quarter of an hour afterwards. The accident had already been reported to the police in Oxford by telephone. I can swim very little. The pool I believe at the spot is between twenty and thirty feet deep. There are at present no weeds likely to cause danger and the water is unusually low at this time of year, and is still. I should say there is no backwash.

Marshall: Was there any sign of either of the men clinging to the other?

Beecham: I could not see that.

Gaskell was then called and corroborated the evidence of Beecham. Asked if he would like to add anything, he said: ‘I think not.’

Answering a question from the Dean of Christ Church, the Very Reverend Dr H. J. Wright, he said that it had taken less than a minute from the time he heard the shout to get the lifebelt. Gaskell was then asked whether he could say whether the men were clinging to each other as though one was trying to help the other.

Gaskell: Their heads were close together.

Juror: You could not see anything else?

Gaskell: They appeared as though they were just standing in the water with their heads above the surface.

Another juror: Was there anything to suggest that one was supporting the other?

Gaskell: I could not say. It was a very quick affair.

Thomas Frederick Carter, of 34 Nelson Street, Oxford, employed by the Thames Conservancy, then said he was in the depot at Osney, when, just before five o’clock, he received a call to go to Sandford Pool. The superintendent sent him to commence dragging in the pool for two undergraduates who had been reported drowned. When he got to the pool, dragging operations were commenced. With two other assistants, operations were continued, and up to dark neither of the bodies had been recovered. At seven o’clock the next morning dragging was recommenced. One body was recovered shortly after two o’clock about thirty yards from the weir, in about twenty feet of water.

Carter: As I was hauling the body up I noticed something drop off when within about 8 ft. from the surface. At first I thought it was a limb of a tree, but have now come to the conclusion that it must have been one body dropping from the other.

One body was taken to the hotel while they dragged for the other, which was recovered an hour later.

Marshall: Where?

Carter: At the same spot I found the first.

Marshall: Which body was first recovered?

Carter: I do not know the gentleman’s name, but he would be about 6 ft. 2 in. [Rupert Buxton].

Juror: Did you form the impression that the bodies were clasped?

Carter: Yes, that was my impression.

Juror: And you thought they became separated when you were drawing them up?

Carter: Yes.

Dean: I suppose as you were pulling them up the weight suddenly became lighter?

Carter: Yes.

Summing up for the jury, the Dean said,

The deceased were seen bathing in Sandford Pool, and one of them swam to the weir and sat on one of the stones, and in a few minutes his friend proceeded to swim across to him. When he got half way across he appeared to be in difficulties and his friend at once dived off the stone on which he was sitting [and went] to his friend’s assistance. He reached him but apparently he no sooner got to him than they both disappeared and were not seen alive again. In the ordinary way there was a great deal of water tumbling over the weir, which caused a suction towards the weir, and there were certain eddies which, unless a man was a strong swimmer were very dangerous, but the water just now was low.

The view of the jury was that Michael had accidentally drowned while bathing, and that Rupert lost his life trying to rescue him. As the Dean gave the jury’s verdict, he was reported to have been overcome with emotion and burst into tears.

After the same verdict was reached in the case of Alastair Grahame a year earlier, this should come as no surprise. Oxford, and Christ Church in particular, did not want these deaths to look like suicide.

It was never likely that there would be a verdict of suicide for a number of reasons, not least that the court could not claim to be unprejudiced.

The coroner was connected to the University. The coroner for the Oxfordshire area at this time was one Harold Galpin. Mr Marshall was described as a ‘University coroner’. It is not clear whether the University had sufficiently frequent cases of accident and suicide actually to run its own coroner’s office, or whether Marshall had been drafted in from outside. Either way, Marshall was in the employ of the University.

The Foreman of the Jury was the Dean of Christ Church College, and according to a nephew of Barrington-Ward, who knew all of them, of the six other jurors four at least were dons at Christ Church – J. G. Barrington-Ward, the Reverend A. E. Rawlinson, J. C. Masterman and Theo Chaundy.

Further, there are clear discrepancies between the evidence of the witnesses and what the Dean, as Foreman of the Jury, said in his summing up about one of the deceased (Michael) getting into difficulties. On the day in question as both witnesses – Beecham and Gaskell – gave evidence, the water was calm and still, and Gaskell said that the water was low, free of reeds, and there was no backwash. Moreover, the Coroner pointed out that there could have been no suction towards the weir at the time, neither were there any eddies.

Beecham could not report any struggling to substantiate his statement that they two men were in difficulties. On the contrary, all that he had seen was ‘their heads close together’. Gaskell had stated that the two men appeared as though they were just standing in the water with their heads above the surface.

Bedevilling any attempt to pick at the case in more detail is the disappearance of the transcript of the Inquest. Neither the Oxford University Archive, nor the Oxfordshire Record Office, the Christ Church College Archive, or the separately administered department of Bodleian Special Collections, has a copy of it.

Being a University court there should be a record in the University archive or in the Bodleian Library. The Oxfordshire Record Office is the most likely other source, but while they hold all the city Coroner’s Inquest files for 1921, including some undertaken at the Settling Room, all of them in chronological and in numerical order (which would indicate if any was missing), there is no sign of the Llewelyn Davies–Buxton case. One is reliant on newspaper records.

Then, of course, there is the state of mind of the deceased, which was never a matter of analysis at the Inquest, even though when Rupert was lodging at the Deanery he was observed to have been depressed.

Much was made of Michael’s ineptitude as a swimmer. But flatmate Edward Marjoribanks gave evidence that while ‘Mr Davies could not swim very well … It was his pride, however, to swim about twenty yards.’ And again, as Peter Llewelyn Davies, a sober man who visited the site as I did, wrote to Dolly: ‘The place is too calm, and the distance from bank to bank too small, for the question of swimming capacity to enter into it at all.’

Perhaps an open verdict would have been the better one.

On the evening of 19 May, Barrie was at home in the Adelphi
writing his daily letter to Michael. In it he wrote that he hoped he would be able to come down for the opening performance of their play,
Shall We Join the Ladies?
, now only a one-act play – he had been unable to take it further and decided to let the audience work it out – which starred Gerald du Maurier as Dolphin, a butler.

At eleven o’clock, with the intention of posting the letter, he walked out of the flat and took the lift to the ground floor. As he opened the gate of the lift and moved into the hallway, he was approached by a stranger who raised his hat, said he was from a newspaper and asked if Sir James could oblige him with a few words on the incident. Barrie asked what he was talking about. It was in this way that he learned of Michael’s drowning.

He turned around and went back into the lift. In a daze, he telephoned Gerald and Peter first, and then his secretary Cynthia Asquith, who recalled that he spoke ‘in a voice she hardly recognised’: ‘I have had the most terrible news. Michael has been drowned.’

When Cynthia arrived at the flat, Gerald and Peter were already there. They tried to persuade Barrie to go to bed, but he would not. Eventually they left for their own beds, and when Cynthia arrived the following morning, Barrie had still not slept. He had been pacing up and down the length of the study floor all night long.

Nico was playing cricket at Eton while Michael drowned, and in the evening sang at a Musical Society concert. He was told of his death after lights out, at around 10 p.m. by Macnaghten, but had gone to sleep not really believing it. The full import of the event only hit him when Peter arrived at his bedside the following morning, and Macnaghten, himself a suicide in later years, made it worse by coming in, kneeling by his bed and holding both their hands. The boys then drove to Slough for breakfast and on to Adelphi Terrace. Nico recalled, ‘Uncle Jim’s immediate reaction on seeing
me was “Oh – take him away!” Strangely I don’t remember feeling hurt at this.’

Nico was given the responsibility of telling Nanny, who was working as a midwife at Queen Charlotte’s Hospital. He was excused from the funeral and went to stay at Cannon Hall with the du Mauriers. In the 1970s, in interview with Andrew Birkin, he concluded that suicide was likely: ‘I’ve always had something of a hunch that Michael’s drowning was suicide – he was in a way the “type” i.e. exceptionally clever, with varying moods.’

When D. H. Lawrence heard about it, he wrote from Hotel Krone, Ebersteinberg, Baden Baden to Mary Ansell: ‘My dear Mary, we had your note after your second trip to England. No, I hadn’t heard of the boy’s drowning. What was he doing to get drowned? J. M. Barrie has a fatal touch for those he loves. They die.’

Two of Lawrence’s master-ideas were that possessive love is a deathly force, and that ‘accidents’ harbour a deep intentionality in both perpetrators and victims.

For Boothby and Michael’s close friends his death was devastating and a watershed. Boothby spoke to Andrew Birkin of the many ‘desperate, hysterical letters … I can see Roger Senhouse being led up the High in Oxford, sobbing.’

In the wake of the tragedy we can begin to see what Michael meant to his friends, and how different their lives might have been had he been released to carry the real Peter Pan into his own and their lives. Nico said that Roger Senhouse used to tell him that ‘for quite a long period after Michael was drowned, Boothby would say, looking upwards! – “I think you’ll be pleased with what I did there, Michael!”’ Boothby himself said that had Michael not died, he would not have gone off the rails as he did, that Edward Marjoribanks, who ‘was devoted to Michael’, would not have committed
suicide after he got into Parliament. He said that Michael’s death ‘altered the whole course of Roger Senhouse’s life’, referring to his affair with Lytton Strachey, and Clive Burt, he believed, would have done far more with Michael still there as muse.

It was an extraordinary tribute, particularly that he might have made Boothby’s life different to how it turned out. That would have been quite an achievement. After Michael died Boothby, who would enter Parliament in 1924, earned the nickname ‘the Palladium’ at Magdalen for his ‘twice nightly’ appetite for homosexual sex. In 1963, five years after he gave up his seat and was raised to the peerage, he began an affair with East End cat burglar Leslie Holt, who introduced him to the gangster Ronald Kray, one of the twins foremost in organised crime in London in the 1950s and ’60s. Kray supplied Boothby with young men and arranged orgies in exchange for personal favours. When the
Sunday Mirror
broke the story in 1964 and the German magazine
Stern
named the parties, Boothby denied the story and threatened to sue the
Mirror
, and because senior Labour MP Tom Driberg was also involved the Labour-backed
Mirror
backed down, sacked its editor, apologised and paid Boothby £40,000 in an out-of-court settlement.

According to Peter Llewelyn Davies in a letter to Dolly Ponsonby, Barrie bore Michael’s death ‘somehow, with wonderful composure, and physically at least with better success than could have been expected’.

On 31 May, Barrie wrote to Rupert’s mother:

Dear Lady Buxton,

 

I have just read your very kind letter, but I have been thinking a great deal about you since the 19th and feeling sorrowful for you. I am very glad that you have a daughter. Michael was son and daughter to me, and all I have been doing of any account in the last ten years was
trying to be father and mother to him. I cared for him a great deal too much but the circumstances of our two lives perhaps excused it. I should like by and by to be allowed to see Rupert’s sister, with the hope that she might come in time to look upon me as a friend.

I suppose I knew Rupert more intimately than you knew Michael. There is not any subject I can pretend to know much about, but I know more about boys than any other, and one of my grand ambitions for Michael was that he should form a deep friendship for someone who was worthy of him. This was slow in coming, for though there were a few at Eton for whom he had a warm attachment, continued at Oxford and elsewhere, Rupert was the one great friend of his life. [Michael] has often talked to me about this, sometimes for hours, far into the night, reappearing to do it after he had gone to bed, and the last letter I had from him, on the day they died, was largely about your boy. Rupert treated me quite differently from any other of my various boys’ friends. They were always polite and edged away from me, as of a different generation, but he took for granted that Michael’s friend should be mine also. Michael knew me and my ways as no other person did, and he was more amused than words can tell by the way Rupert took me in hand. I shall never forget the glee with which he told me one day that Rupert was going to ask me to dinner all alone, and how I hoped Rupert would, and how he did and also came to me. I was very proud of his treating me in that way, and Michael knew I liked it, and I daresay the two of them chuckled over it, for they could both be very gay tho’ neither was facing life lightly.

They were either wildly gay or very serious as they walked together to Sandford…

 

Yours sincerely,

J. M. Barrie

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