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This is a selection of instances
where
Balliol College, Oxford appears in
fiction.
Dorothy L. Sayers attributes
a Balliol undergraduateship to her fictional character,
Lord
Peter Wimsey where he obtained a "double first" in
history. Lord Peter's physical appearance is said to have been
modelled on that of Roy Ridley. In Yes Minister,
Sir Humphrey Appleby, the wily civil servant, went
to Balliol (renamed Baillie in the television programme)
from where he got an MA. He went on to join the Civil Service.
Having served in the War Office and seconded to the Scottish
Office, he joined the Department for Administrative Affairs,
eventually becoming Permanent Secretary. When Sir Arnold retired,
he was appointed Cabinet Secretary. He went on to become Master of
Balliol College when he retired from the Service. Sir
Arnold Robinson, also a Balliol man, was Sir Humphrey's
predecessor as Cabinet Secretary. After stepping down as Cabinet
Secretary, he joined the Campaign for Freedom of Information, to
ensure that that freedom was not abused. In a number of episodes
Sir Humphrey appears wearing the striped Balliol tie.“I
know I'd sooner win two School-house matches running than get the
Balliol scholarship any day." (Frantic cheers.).
Pater Brook extolling the virtues of fellowship and teamwork in
Thomas
Hughes's Tom Brown's School Days (1857).
In Flash for Freedom!, one of the
Flashman novels by George
MacDonald Fraser, Balliol College is a ship captained
by John Charity Spring. Although an Oriel
man, Spring so named the ship because he "hate(d) the B----y
place!" where his father and brothers had gone. In
Jude the Obscure, by Thomas Hardy, Jude Fawley, who dreams of
studying for a university degree at Christminster (Oxford), is
rejected by Biblioll college (Balliol). In Novel
Notes by Jerome K. Jerome the boundary between fiction
and reality is indistinct: :"He was a Balliol man," said
MacShaughnassy, "and his Christian name was Joseph. He was a member
of the 'Devonshire' at the time I knew him, and was, I think, the
most superior person I have ever met. He sneered at the
Saturday
Review as the pet journal of the suburban literary club; and at
the
Athenaeum as the trade organ of the
unsuccessful
writer.
Thackeray, he considered, was
fairly entitled to his position of favourite author to the cultured
clerk; and
Carlyle he regarded as the exponent of the
earnest artisan. Living authors he never read, but this did not
prevent his criticising them contemptuously. The only inhabitants
of the nineteenth century that he ever praised were a few obscure
French novelists, of whom
nobody but himself had ever heard. He had his own opinion about
God Almighty, and objected to
Heaven on account of the
strong
Clapham
contingent likely to be found in residence there.
Humour made him sad, and sentiment made
him ill.
Art irritated him and
science bored him. He
despised his own
family
and disliked everybody else. For exercise he yawned, and his
conversation was mainly confined to an occasional
shrug.
:"Nobody liked him, but everybody respected him. One felt
grateful to him for his condescension in living at all.
Herman Charles Merivale, himself a
Balliol man, wrote a novel called Faucit of Balliol
(1882).In The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis, one of the
main characters, James Dunworthy, is a professor and tutor at
Balliol College. In Be Near Me by Andrew O'Hagan the
protagonist,
Father David Anderton, is educated at Ampleforth
College and Balliol College. In Anthony Trollope's
Barchester Towers, Mr. Arabin had
been entered as a commoner at Balliol, but failed to become a
fellow. Arabin subsequently became a fellow at the fictional
Lazarus College in Oxford. In Arundhati Roy's The God
of Small Things, Chacko, father of Sophie Mol and beloved
uncle of Rahel and Estha, goes away from Kerala to study at
Balliol. "Then Chacko came home for a summer vacation from Oxford.
He had grown to be a big man, and was, in those days, strong from
rowing for Balliol" (page 47). After the book's final tragedy, "The
God of Small Things died, he returned to Ayemenem with his Bharat
bottle-sealing machine, his Balliol oar and his broken heart" (page
236). In Rudyard Kipling's Stalky
& Co., Stalky questions Kipling alter ego Beetle about
his poems lambasting the master King. ""Dunno," said Beetle,
struggling out of the skirt. "There was one about his hunting for
popularity with the small boys, and the other one was one about him
in hell, tellin' the Devil he was a Balliol man. I swear both of
'em rhymed all right."" Charters, a character
in The Lady Vanishes and
Night Train to Munich, mentions
that he and Dickie Randall were both Balliol men
(in the latter film). In Mark Gatiss's novel The Devil In Amber,
the villain, Olympus Mons is described as, "Yankee-born,
Balliol-educated. Anglophile..." See also
William Olaf
Stapledon, an original but somewhat neglected writer of futuristic
fiction, was at Balliol about 1910, and wrote an excellent novel,
obviously autobiographical, "A Man Divided" based partly at the
College and which examines the problem of personal identity on a
very modern way.