Bruce F. Cummings
(7 Sep 1889 - 22 Oct 1919)
English: English entomologist Bruce Frederic Cummings (1889-1919), best
known for his diaries published as The Journal of a Disappointed Man
under the pen name of Wilhelm Nero Pilate Barbellion (W. N. P.
Barbellion).
Cummings was born in Barnstaple on 7 September
1889, the youngest child of John and Maria Cummings. He was a naturalist
at heart and ended up working at the
British Museum's Department of Natural History in London. Having begun
his journal at the age of thirteen, Cummings continued to record his
observations there — gradually moving from dry scientific notes to a
more personal, literary style. Despite an obvious passion for the
subject from an early age, Barbellion, upon the advice of others,
followed his father into the world of journalism, which he hated, as he
often mentioned in his diary. His literary ambitions changed course in
1914 upon reading the journal of the Russian painter Marie Bashkirtseff,
in whom he recognised a kindred spirit. In his 15 January 1915 entry he
indicated that he intended his Journal to be published: "Then all in
God’s good time I intend getting a volume ready for publication."
Cummings' life changed forever when he was called to enlist in the
British Army to fight in World War I in November 1915. He had consulted
his doctor before taking the regulation medical prior to enlisting, and
his doctor had given him a sealed, confidential letter to present to the
medical officer at the recruitment centre. Cummings did not know what
was contained in the letter, but in the event it was not needed; the
medical officer rejected Cummings as unfit for active duty after the
most cursory of medical examinations. Hurt, Cummings decided to open the
letter on his way back home to see what had been inside, and was
staggered to learn that his doctor had diagnosed him as suffering from
the disease now known as multiple sclerosis, and that he almost
certainly had less than five years to live.
The news changed
Cummings profoundly, and his journal became much more intense and
personal as a result. He had married Winifred Eleanor Benger (aka
Eleanor Abbey after her second marriage to Edwin Abbey) shortly before
discovering his illness in 1915, and had a daughter, Penelope, in
October 1916, but was later moved to discover that his wife had been
informed of his condition long before he himself knew his fate, and his
efforts to spare the feelings of his family had been in vain since they
had known his condition even before he had.
The Journal of a Disappointed Man
His diaries up to the winter of 1917, which he revised and corrected
prior to publication, were eventually published in March 1919 under the
title The Journal of a Disappointed Man. He chose the pseudonym "W.N.P.
Barbellion" to protect the identities of his family and friends; he
chose the forenames "Wilhelm", "Nero" and "Pilate" as his examples of
the most wretched men ever to have lived. The first edition bore a
preface by H.G. Wells, which led some reviewers to believe the journal
was a work of fiction by Wells himself; Wells publicly denied this but
the true identity of "Barbellion" was not known by the public until
after Cummings' death.
The Journal of a Disappointed Man,
filled with frank and keen observation, unique philosophy and personal
resignation, was described by its author as "a study in the nude". The
book received both adulatory and scathing reviews; Collins, having
originally optioned the book, eventually rejected it because they feared
the "lack of morals" shown by Barbellion would damage their reputation.
An editor's note at the very end of the book claims Barbellion died on
31 December 1917, but Cummings in fact lived for nearly two more years.
He died on October 22, 1919 at home; Camden Cottage, Gerrards Cross,
Buckinghamshire having recently approved the proofs of a second short
volume of memoirs, Enjoying Life and Other Literary Remains; a third
brief volume of his very last entries, A Last Diary, appeared in 1920.
His identity was made public through his obituaries in various
newspapers, at which point his brother Henry R. Cummings gave a
newspaper interview providing details of the life of "Barbellion".
The strong early sales and the admiration received by The Journal of a
Disappointed Man are largely forgotten by the wider reading public
today, but the book has been frequently reprinted in paperback and is
regarded as a classic of English literature. It has been likened to the
best work of other writers like Franz Kafka and James Joyce.
It
is also much admired by many sufferers of multiple sclerosis as a frank
and eloquent portrayal of their struggle, and numerous MS societies and
charities have recommended or even published copies of the book to
encourage greater understanding among sufferers and non-sufferers alike.
Barbellion sums up his life in one of the last entries in The Journal
of a Disappointed Man: "I am only twenty-eight, but I have telescoped
into those few years a tolerably long life: I have loved and married,
and have a family; I have wept and enjoyed, struggled and overcome, and
when the hour comes I shall be content to die."
The Journal of a Disappointed Man
His diaries up to the winter of 1917, which he revised and corrected
prior to publication, were eventually published in March 1919 under the
title The Journal of a Disappointed Man. He chose the pseudonym "W.N.P.
Barbellion" to protect the identities of his family and friends; he
chose the forenames "Wilhelm", "Nero" and "Pilate" as his examples of
the most wretched men ever to have
lived. The first edition bore a preface by H.G. Wells, which led some
reviewers to believe the journal was a work of fiction by Wells himself;
Wells publicly denied this but the true identity of "Barbellion" was
not known by the public until after Cummings' death.
The
Journal of a Disappointed Man, filled with frank and keen observation,
unique philosophy and personal resignation, was described by its author
as "a study in the nude". The book received both adulatory and scathing
reviews; Collins, having originally optioned the book, eventually
rejected it because they feared the "lack of morals" shown by Barbellion
would damage their reputation. An editor's note at the very end of the
book claims Barbellion died on 31 December 1917, but Cummings in fact
lived for nearly two more years. He died on October 22, 1919 at home;
Camden Cottage, Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire having recently approved
the proofs of a second short volume of memoirs, Enjoying Life and Other
Literary Remains; a third brief volume of his very last entries, A Last
Diary, appeared in 1920. His identity was made public through his
obituaries in various newspapers, at which point his brother Henry R.
Cummings gave a newspaper interview providing details of the life of
"Barbellion".
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