In Search of an Author: On the Track of Agatha Christie
In a hot, airless little room in
Bulawayo, an elderly man rummages through disintegrating brown envelopes and
rusty files. Faint labels carry captions
such as: ‘Railway Staff 1932-33’ and ‘Wages March 1952’. There are dusty black and white photographs
on the wall of men in dark suits and hats.
Unsmiling, they all look alarmingly similar with their handle-bar
moustaches and their arms crossed resolutely across their chests.
‘No. I thought I might have something, but no.’ He
reluctantly admits defeat, so convinced was he that he might be able to help me
in my search. I am in the archives of the Railway Museum in Bulawayo. The buildings themselves are run down and we
are surrounded by the great hulks of rusting train carcasses. The museum, now a
separate entity from the National Railways of Zimbabwe, is run by a couple of
train enthusiasts, who are extremely knowledgeable and very anxious to answer
any questions, but lack of money has meant that the upkeep has become too much
to keep up with.
I came here to
look for the visitors’ book of the Victoria Falls Hotel for 1922. It’s a tall order I admit and frankly I am
not surprised that my search has once more yielded nothing. ‘What about the Empire Exhibition?’ I
ask. ‘Do you have anything on that?’
‘The Empire
Exhibition? Yes, of course!’ He leaps up, and extracts a large piece of
thin off-white card from a drawer in a filing cabinet with such ease it’s as
though I had asked to see that day’s newspaper. The item in question is a
participation certificate awarded to Beira and Mashonaland and Rhodesia Railways for taking part in the
Empire Exhibition of 1924. I study it
for a couple of minutes and take a photograph.
At this moment in time it is the closest I have come to tracking one of
my favourite authors, Agatha Christie.
There is a
great delight to be felt in being able to replicate the journeys of a favourite
or admired author. It is interesting to
see where they got their ideas from and to see how places have changed – and
stayed the same – since those journeys were taken. It is more than a simple ‘oh, I’ve been
there!’ impulse; it is a something shared with the author which makes the
book‘s appeal more of a personal one. As an ardent Agatha Christie fan living
in Southern Africa, I was quite delighted to discover that one of her books was
set in Rhodesia.
Agatha
Christie based her third novel, The Man
in the Brown Suit on her travels to South Africa and Rhodesia in 1922. She accompanied her husband, Archibald
Christie, on the Empire Tour, the object of which was to get as many companies
and businesses in the colonies as possible to exhibit at the Empire Exhibition
of 1924. They travelled to South Africa,
Rhodesia, New Zealand, Australia, Hawaii and Canada in all, the trip taking a
year to complete. The man who organised the tour and who invited the Christies
to accompany him was one Major Belcher. He challenged Agatha to include him in a
novel and said he wanted to be the murderer.
As he was a fairly cantankerous man and quite difficult to get on with,
I can only think it wasn’t difficult to include him in the writing of the novel
and it’s a wonder he didn’t find himself the victim, rather than the culprit!
The book is an
ambitious one, beginning as it does in London and ending in Rhodesia with
numerous sea voyages and train trips in between. In her autobiography, Christie describes very
briefly her trip to Rhodesia: the Matopos was ‘exciting’ and they ‘had a
pleasant time in Salisbury’. Agatha
arrived in Bulawayo on the train from Johannesburg in March of 1922. In a letter to her mother, she described the
town as ‘not very attractive, flat and sandy and a dirty Hotel full of
smells.’ The hotel in question is the
Grand Hotel, but not the same one you will find if you go to Bulawayo
today. The original hotel had been open
for twenty three years when Christie stayed there and was considered quite the
height of luxury as some rooms had their own baths and the chefs employed there
came from the Savoy and Carlton Hotels in London. Why Christie found it so disappointing is not
quite clear. After her long, hot and
dusty train trip one would have thought she would have found it a veritable
oasis.
It is of
Victoria Falls that she writes the most: ‘Great trees, soft mists of rain, its
rainbow colouring, wandering through the forest with Archie, and every now and
then the rainbow mist parting to show you for one tantalising second the Falls
in all their glory pouring down. Yes, I
put that as one of my seven wonders
of the world.’ At that time the hotel
and the railway station were the only two buildings at the Falls. ‘No road, only paths, just the Hotel, and
primeval woods for miles and miles stretching into blueness.’ Christie wrote of
her surroundings. It was an ideal
setting for a thriller cum romance novel. At that point, in 1922, Africa was
still relatively unknown and the idea of the colonies was a romantic one to the
reader in Britain. ‘The Man from the
Colonies’ appears in a number of guises in Christie’s novels. He represents mystery, adventure and, quite often,
misadventure. He was the man who had
gone to the colonies either to get rich or to get away, or both. Sometimes he is the ill-treated younger
brother who went off to seek his fortune by himself; at other times he is the
black sheep of the family who was sent away for some sort of misdemeanour and
to save the family name.
Many of the
events in The Man in the Brown Suit,
are actually based on real life happenings as recorded by Christie in her diary. So close are her thoughts on the trip to
those of the narrator, Anne Beddingfield, that it is possible to draw great
similarities between the two. I think
when one thinks of Agatha Christie, it is of a middle-aged or elderly woman and
an established author. One of the great
things about The Man in the Brown Suit
is that its events correlate so much with events in Christie’s own life that
one gets a glimpse of a person – a young, excited woman on a trip of a life
time and one who was very much in love with life. Just four years later, Christie would hit the
headlines for her mysterious disappearance when she apparently lost her memory
of who she was and ended up in a hotel in Harrogate, registered under a
different name. Her marriage was in
ruins, her mother had recently died and she is assumed to have suffered some
sort of mental breakdown. The spunky, adventurous Anne Beddingfield had sadly
disappeared.
The Victoria Falls Hotel today |
The railway station at Victoria Falls, once the only building besides the hotel |
My investigation into Agatha’s
trip to Rhodesia began here at the beginning of the year. I had been travelling
through Victoria Falls on my way home to Zambia and had gone into the hotel to
ask if they kept any old visitors’ books, but was told that anything like that
would be kept at the hotel’s head office in Harare. The hotel buildings are still owned by the
Railways, although they are leased to Sun International and the Meikles
Group.
A couple of
months later I was back in Zimbabwe attending a Caine Prize writing workshop. On the last day, we were treated to lunch at
The Meikles Hotel in Harare and it was here that I met the owner of the Meikles
Group, John Moxon and his wife, Jeanne.
I explained to them my interest in researching Agatha Christie’s stay in
Rhodesia and asked them what sort of archival material they had. As it turns out, the Meikles Group have only
leased the hotel since 1998 and the previous lessees had not kept very
substantial records. Finding anything
like a visitors’ book from 1922 would be an extremely tall order.
My
research took me to the National Archives of Zimbabwe in Bulawayo, a rather
cold, unfeeling place. It was easy to
get hold of copies of The Chronicle from March of 1922, but I was very
disappointed to find nothing of Christie’s visit. Although she wasn’t then the world famous
writer she was later to become, I thought there may be some mention of her stay
in Bulawayo. I also looked for mention
of the Empire Tour, but my search yielded nothing. However, I was very excited to find mention
of Archibald Christie in The Herald, the Salisbury based newspaper.
The
stories I discovered in the newspapers gave me an insight into the times in which
Christie lived. Every week, the
newspaper published a piece about who was in town visiting and where they were
staying. ‘The Countess of Cathcart passed through
Bulawayo yesterday on her way from Northern Rhodesia to the Cape,' one such
piece announces, and another: ‘The Earl and Countess of Lonsdale
and the Earl
and Countess of Mar and Kellie return from Salisbury today, on their way to the
Falls. While in Bulawayo they are
staying at The Grand Hotel.’ Another
article declares that a coroner’s report recorded a verdict of accidental death
in the case of a Lord Harcourt found dead by his valet with an unfinished novel
on his bedside table and his reading lamp on.
It made me wonder how easy it would be to come
to Africa, feign position and wealth and run up a string of debts, but in
reality be a nobody form nowhere?
An extract from an article in The Herald describing Colonel Christie's arrival in Salisbury and the upcoming Empire Exhibition |
The Man in the Brown Suit ends in a characteristically happy way. Anne
marries the man she loves and ends up living on an island in the Zambezi with
him. How possible that would actually
have been, even in 1922, is questionable, but it certainly wouldn’t be possible
nowadays. The world is a much smaller
place since the Christies went on their journey. Zimbabwe is barely recognisable as the place
the Countess of Cathcart may have passed through. The Grand Hotel was renovated and turned into
an office block in 1994; The Victoria Falls Hotel has swelled far beyond ‘long
and low’ and now offers five-star luxury to a mainly foreign clientele. I think of the man at the Railway Museum who
showed me crockery from the Royal Train of 1947. ‘You see these,’ he said. ‘There are some on
display, but the rest we keep in here.
I’ve seen them go for about $US800 each on e-bay.’ Each plate is worth ten times his monthly
pension allowance, but the whole lot would have to be sold many times over to save
some of the other relics in the Railway Museum.
On the terrace
at the Victoria Falls Hotel, I am surrounded by tourists in white linen and
safari khaki taking high tea and enjoying their colonial experience. It looks like fun, but I can’t help feeling a
pang that it is hard today to find something genuinely itself and not a
creation. I think back to the Railway
Museum and the Archives and of the past stored away in all those filing
cabinets and drawers. It is then that I
am glad I never found the visitors’ book for I would have hated to have stopped
there. When I began my research, I
thought I was following Agatha Christie on part of her journey, but now I
wonder if the journey hasn't become my own. I am indebted to the following for all their assistance while writing this article: Jeanne Moxon and Karl Snater of the Meikles Group, Gordon Murray at the Railway Museum (Bulawayo) and the National Archives of Zimbabwe.
Victoria Falls Hotel www.victoriafallshotel.com
Railway Museum http://www.geoffs-trains.com/Museum/BulawayoRlyMuseumHome.html
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