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Over  the  top ALAN  MCNEE

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W  ade  Dav is  INTO  THE  SILENCE  The  Great  War,  Mallory  and the  conquest  of  Ev erest  655pp.  Bodley  Head.  £25.

Published:  9  December  2011

97 8  1  847 92  1 84  0  US:  Knopf.  $32.50.  97 8  0  37 5  40889  2 Responding  to  the  disappearance  of  George  Mallory  and Sandy  Irv ine  during  the  attempt  on  Ev erest  in  1 924,  their fellow  climber  Teddy  Norton  wrote,  “From  the  first  we  accepted  the  loss  of  our  comrades  in  that  rational spirit  which  all  our  generation  had  learnt  in  the  Great  War”.  Another  member  of  the  team,  perhaps consciously  echoing  Laurence  Biny on’s  poem  “For  the  Fallen”  (1 91 4),  commented  that  the  two  men  “had gone,  without  their  ev er  knowing  the  beginnings  of  decay ”. Mallory  and  Irv ine  were  not  the  first  men  to  die  in  the  attempt  to  climb  the  world’s  highest  peak,  only  the most  famous.  Sev en  Sherpa  porters  perished  in  an  av alanche  during  the  prev ious  assault,  in  1 922,  while  the ex plorer  and  scholar  Alex ander  Kellas  and  the  Indian  orderly  Asghar  Khan  both  died  during  the reconnaissance  that  discov ered  the  northern  route  to  Ev erest  v ia  Tibet  in  1 921 .  The  reactions  to  these  deaths had  been  similarly  stoic,  and  sometimes  apparently  heartless.  “It  is  v ery  rough  luck  and  ev ery one  was  v ery much  upset.  Howev er,  it  can’t  be  helped”,  wrote  one  colleague  of  Kellas’s  death.  As  Wade  Dav is  points  out,  the men  who  attempted  to  first  surv ey  and  then  climb  Ev erest  had,  almost  without  ex ception,  surv iv ed  some  of the  worst  horrors  of  the  First  World  War,  and  in  some  cases  had  also  been  inv olv ed  in  the  brutal  conflict  of 1 91 9  on  the  North-­West  Frontier.  They  were  no  longer  easily  shocked  by  death,  ev en  that  of  their  close companions:  the  war  “had  changed  the  v ery  gestalt  of  death”. The  story  of  Mallory  and  Irv ine  has  been  told  so  many  times  that  another  book  on  the  topic  inev itably  risks superfluity .  Y et  Into  the  Silence,  which  took  ten  y ears  to  research  and  write,  seems  likely  to  stand  as  the definitiv e  work  not  just  on  the  ill-­fated  1 924  Ev erest  attempt,  but  also  on  the  ex peditions  of  1 921  and  1 922,  as well  as  a  useful  introduction  to  the  history  of  ex ploration,  diplomatic  intrigue  and  imperial  adv entures  that preceded  them.  Dav is’s  lucid  and  sometimes  haunting  prose,  his  masterly  handling  of  a  great  v olume  of material,  his  v iv id  portraits  of  the  astonishing  cast  of  characters,  and  of  places  as  div erse  as  Newfoundland, the  trenches  of  northern  France,  and  the  Tibetan  plateau,  all  contribute  to  this  achiev ement.  His understanding  of  the  racial,  class  and  colonial  assumptions  of  the  period  is  sophisticated,  but  he  is  scrupulous in  judging  his  characters  by  the  standards  of  their  own  time  rather  than  ours. Perhaps  his  most  important  contribution  is  his  account  of  the  complex  and  sometimes  contradictory  impact of  the  First  World  War  on  the  climbers,  ex plorers  and  geographers  who  were  drawn  to  the  Himalay as  in  the y ears  following  the  Armistice.  It  is  this,  rather  than  the  widely  debated  but  now  esoteric  question  of  whether Mallory  and  Irv ine  actually  made  it  to  the  summit  before  their  deaths,  that  engages  Dav is  and  allows  him  to shed  light  on  the  motiv es  and  assumptions  of  his  subjects.  Dav is  ex amines  why  Mallory  returned  to  the mountain  a  third  time,  despite  his  own  inner  conv iction  that  it  would  kill  him.  Without  descending  into amateur  psy chology ,  Dav is  locates  the  answer  in  a  unique  set  of  influences  and  personal  characteristics, www.the-­tls.co.uk/tls/reviews/other_categories/article838120.ece

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foremost  among  them  the  ex perience  of  Mallory  and  his  contemporaries  in  the  First  World  War. If  Mallory  and  Irv ine’s  tale  is  well  known,  the  story  of  the  Great  War  has  been  retold  and  analy sed  so thoroughly  that  it  has  largely  lost  its  capacity  to  shock.  It  is  all  the  more  impressiv e,  then,  that  Dav is  can  still kindle  pity  and  indignation  in  the  reader  with  his  accounts  of  the  characters’  ex periences  at  the  Somme, Y pres,  Passchendaele  and  Gallipoli.  His  sketch  of  the  war  is  as  deft  and  readable  as  his  summaries  of  Sir Francis  Y ounghusband’s  incursion  into  Tibet,  the  tangled  history  of  Sino-­British  political  manoeuv ring  in Tibet,  Nepal  and  Burma,  the  beliefs  of  Tibetan  Buddhism,  and  the  work  of  the  Surv ey  of  India.  Far  from suggesting  that  the  men  who  turned  to  Ev erest  were  simply  coarsened  or  brutalized  by  their  ex perience  of  the war,  Dav is  shows  how  ev en  the  dangerous  and  punishing  pursuit  of  high-­altitude  mountaineering  could  be  a life-­affirming  activ ity .  Quotations  from  the  diaries  and  letters  of  ex pedition  members  illustrate  the  ly rical, sometimes  my stical  sensibility  with  which  the  climbers  approached  the  mountain.  Mallory  described  his  first v iew  of  Ev erest  as  a  “prodigious  white  fang  ex crescent  from  the  jaw  of  the  world”,  and  the  idea  of  literally “walking  off  the  map”  (the  1 921  ex pedition  mapped  1 2,000  square  miles  of  territory  prev iously  unknown ev en  to  the  surv ey ors  of  British  India)  appealed  to  the  sensibilities  of  men  who  were  traumatized  by  their  war ex periences  and  often  struggling  to  reintegrate  into  post-­war  society .  Climbing  for  these  men  was  not  a  death cult  but  a  way  of  affirming  life;;  y et  at  the  same  time  they  were  acutely  aware  of  their  own  v ulnerability  and impermanence.  As  Dav is  concludes,  “They  had  seen  so  much  of  death  that  life  mattered  less  than  the moments  of  being  aliv e”.  Into  the  Silence  is  permeated  by  this  mix  of  sadness  and  sublimity .  A  world  apart from  the  gimmicks  and  media  stunts  that  hav e  surrounded  the  cult  of  Mallory  and  Irv ine,  Wade  Dav is’s  book stands  as  a  fitting  memorial  to  a  story  that  is  at  once  poignant  and  stirring.

www.the-­tls.co.uk/tls/reviews/other_categories/article838120.ece

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