Reginald Farrer |
There’s something rather
reminiscent of Monty Python in the writings of the intrepid ‘plant hunter’,
Reginald Farrer – the elevated absurdity of hunting
flowers, as he describes it, always
gets me grinning with glee:
“As
I drew near my anxiety and the beating of my heart grew almost painful. Despair
seized me when I remembered previous failures, the open situation, the
devastating hailstorms of these later days. Panting I at last scrambled up
beneath the cliff, and ascended to the neck where, among the moss and tiny
Rhododendrons, the Primula had dappled that whole saddle with sparks of blue
fire. And now, of those hundreds of flowers, there survived only some three or
four capsules, standing grim and lonely on their elongated stalks above the
minute scrub. And every one of them was white and empty as an ancient skull. I
cursed the plant’s exaggerated and giraffe-like throat, that prevents more than
about one per cent. of the blossoms from setting seed. Then in my gloom I
turned to climb down again, wanly remembering a certain long ledge of rock on
the cliff-face below where there had been some fine specimens. Was it worth
while to have a look on chance of seed remaining? Capsules, indeed, I soon saw
from afar, four or five of them standing sturdily up in a line under the
boulder. Empty, of course. I hardly cared or dared go nearer. At a second
glance, however, I stood stricken, stock-still, and almost afraid to breathe;
for there in the cup of each, discapsuled, loose, and at the mercy of a
moment’s flaw of wind, there still lay seed. Pavid and incredulous I crept
nearer with utmost caution, moving with Agag-like delicacy for fear I might
shake the mountain, and spreading myself out as wide as possible to intercept
the breeze. I reached the pods, and with agonised firm precision I nipped them
off between finger and thumb, in anguish lest a single grain should drop; and
so, with sweat upon my brow, and a great sigh heaved, I pocketed up the
Grand-Violet in a special pouch, and relapsed into the ecstasy of achievement.”
There’s also something very
Proustian in his style of writing too. Farrer’s circuitous prose ambulates from
one idle or acid philosophical reflection to another. Gossiping about the
personality traits of flowers. His florid and lyrical sentences seem to wander,
and his books are peppered with whimsical, wry and witty observations – rather
like Jerome K. Jerome. Little surprise then that Farrer was a self-confessed fan of Jane Austen. His books and articles combine a mix of horticultural treatise
with travelogues of his journeys through Asia or the mountain regions of Europe.
They were immensely popular in their time. Yet reading them now I can’t help
but hear them narrated in the comic voice of Michael Palin and his ‘Ripping
Yarns’. There’s an almost pooterish mix of the tediously mundane with the genuinely
intrepid in his writings – travelling through regions haunted by bandits and
brigands in search of the most fragile of little flowers – all of which is
deftly enlivened by the sheer panache of his most purple prose. Reading On the Eaves of the World, for instance,
can be quite a giggle.
Farrer was a Yorkshireman born in 1880
in Marylebone, London to a well-to-do family, related to the Sitwells. He grew
up in Ingleborough, the family home, in Clapham in the North Riding of
Yorkshire, where he nurtured an early interest in the local flora of the
surrounding limestone hills. Aged fourteen he redesigned the estate’s alpine
garden and published a note on the local endemic sandwort, Arenaria gothica. He had a harelip (which he later obscured under a
handsome waxed moustache) and possibly a cleft palate, which meant he spent much of his
childhood undergoing operations and medical treatments. Hence in his early
years he was schooled at home, but later on he followed in the family tradition,
studying at Balliol College, Oxford, where he graduated in 1902.
Euan H. M. Cox (Glendoick) |
Also born in 1880, William Purdom
was a professionally trained plant hunter. He began his botanical career
working for the nurseries of Low & Sons in Enfield, and later for Veitch
& Sons, before joining the staff and continuing his studies with the Royal
Botanical Gardens at Kew. In 1909 he was recruited by the Arnold Arboretum,
attached to Harvard University in the USA, and sent to China. Purdom’s
1909-1912 expedition to the Kansu region was not as productive as had been hoped,
largely due to the local difficulties Purdom encountered in the form of
‘brigandage’ and political unrest. So Purdom joined forces with Farrer in 1914.
Describing Purdom as “an excellent
traveller”, Euan Cox thought “he was
always shy and retiring, quite overshadowed by Farrer’s personality. Purdom,
however, was a perfect companion who knew Chinese well and was much liked by
them in return.” As with Ernest Henry Wilson, Purdom’s interests were not
simply limited to botany, he also showed a keen and perceptive interest in
anthropology. Like Wilson, he was also highly adept with a glass-plate camera,
particularly portraiture. By this means he created a rich ethnographic record
of the communities he encountered in the borderlands and many of these images
have been preserved in the Arnold Arboretum archives (see here). After
completing Farrer’s expedition in 1916 Purdom joined the Chinese Forestry Service
where he became a division chief, supervising a system of tree planting as part
of the construction of the Chinese Railway system. He too died young, passing
away at the French hospital in Peking (Beijing) after a short illness in
November 1921, just over a year after his friend, Farrer.
Bill Purdom disguised as a Chinese 'Coolie' in order to secretly collect plants on a sacred mountain, where he was mistaken for a brigand |
Purdom published little, so it is
harder to gauge a sense of what he was like, but we get glimpses of the man in
other writer’s descriptions, such as that given above by Cox. Farrer makes
frequent mention of him in On the Eaves
of the World, but again these descriptions often tend to be short – yet
they give fleeting hints as to his personality. For instance, when Purdom and
Farrer were invited to a lavish banquet hosted by a local Chinese dignitary,
Farrer quips: “Dear Purdom, whose
facility in getting on with the Chinese is only equalled by his depression
before any prospect of having to do so, manifested no enthusiasm on the
occasion; but for me my first Chinese feast was a matter of some excitement and
flutter.”
It seems Purdom was well respected
amongst his peers. Opinions on Farrer were rather more qualified. Frank Kingdon
Ward noted his shortcomings, but also had praise for Farrer too, saying: “He had a wonderful eye for a good plant,
and an almost uncanny knowledge of how to preserve seed. His specimens were
always beautifully preserved and described, his seeds always germinated. As an
all-round plant collector he probably had no equal.” Euan Cox, who
accompanied Farrer on his second and final expedition to China, agreed with
Kingdon Ward but also noted somewhat more critically that: “His prowess as a plant introducer more than outweighed his care as a
botanical collector, for he abhorred weeds, and would not collect herbarium
material unless he proposed collecting the seed of the plant afterwards. Thus
from a botanical standpoint, where everything in a strange land is worthy of
inclusion in the vasculum, he was slipshod in his methods. This is proved by
the fact that during his two expeditions, one through an extremely rich area,
he only collected about 1,920 specimens.”
Much like fellow botanist, Joseph Rock, Farrer often liked to dress up in flamboyant Chinese costume |
Frank Kingdon Ward |
Words may have been more his forte
than surveying. This was something which both Cox and Kingdon Ward were agreed
upon. Cox esteemed Farrer’s use of language as magical: “… the writings of Reginald Farrer [managed] to titillate the
imagination of budding gardeners and to weave a kind of spell over the whole
process of plant collecting in the East.” Kingdon Ward similarly found a
virtue in his faults: “[Farrer] wrote a
great deal, and though he was guilty of hyperbole and extravagant language,
though he paid scant heed to the formulae of Chinese nomenclature, or to the
exact requirements of latitude and longitude, yet he succeeded in drawing
attention to an aspect of geography too often neglected – the sheer beauty of
scenery and the refining influence of vegetation on it.”
Vide: – Farrer giving a lyrical
vignette of his travels: “Steeply the
little woodcutters’ track now mounts on the coppiced hillside, where tall
Lady-slippers of buttery-yellow compete with swollen cousins whose petals are
striped with vinous purple, and whose enormous rounded bag is of richest
crimson maroon. One winds upwards thence to the alpine woodland, deep between
vast pinnacle mountains of limestone, mere prickles on the flanks of the Min
S’an ridge, but clothed with cool forest in a fashion very heartening after the
drought and torridness of the valley regions and the lower gorges. The path,
almost unguessable now, wanders through the woodland in the shade, in and out
of the stream-bed. Beneath the shade of the trees, in the solemn stillness, the
Wood-nymph Primula recurs, amid strange Solomon’ seals, and Arums with
fantastic tails and spotted evil faces.” – Reading lines like these it’s
almost as if Farrer has wandered the length of the Guermantes Way and kept
going, wandering all the way to Asia!
Whether Proustian or Python-esque,
Reginald Farrer’s writings are genuinely entertaining romps which manage to
transform plant hunting into something rather more sublime than the usual
catalogue of staid old colonial tropes more commonly found in such contemporary
travelogues, even if his books are still firmly rooted in that soil from which
the myth of the lone white explorer first germinated. It’s easy to see why his
writings had such popular appeal amongst the armchair explorers back home in
Blighty.
Yet inside he was a conflicted
individual, seen by many of his contemporaries as crotchety and cantankerous.
Writing to Osbert Sitwell from Burma in the year that he died Farrer summed up
his own foibles thus: “I hate lies and
humbug, journalism, Christianity, domesticity, dullness, and European
civilisation in general with a fury that, if I let it, makes me feel quite
ill.” All explorers, to varying degrees, by their very natures are
outsiders, seeking an escape from the norm. What I find most interesting though
is how such a singular character as Farrer’s diversifies the range of eccentric
personalities which were all drawn to transcend the boundaries of their
backgrounds, all seemingly seeking to lose themselves in these borderlands
where they might perhaps have felt more at home or at ease within themselves. Farrer
is one of the few who never made it back, and in a sense he remains an outsider
to this day as he lies buried on a hillside in Burma, at a place called
Kawngglanghpu. Yet he lives on through his many books, and also by means of the
beautiful plants he collected so intrepidly which now grace so many English
gardens; flowers so fully integrated into a cultivated and contrived English
idyll as to be almost unseen, the backstories behind their foreign origins now
sadly so little known. The foreign made familiar – I can’t help wondering if
that fact might have made Farrer smile or curse were he to know it today?