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Unnatural Death (novel)

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Unnatural Death
First edition
AuthorDorothy L. Sayers
LanguageEnglish
SeriesLord Peter Wimsey
GenreMystery novel
PublisherErnest Benn[1]
Publication date
1927[1]
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint
Pages285[1]
Preceded byClouds of Witness 
Followed byThe Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club 

Unnatural Death is a 1927 mystery novel by Dorothy L. Sayers, her third featuring Lord Peter Wimsey. It was published under the title The Dawson Pedigree in the United States in 1928.[2]

Plot

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Lord Peter Wimsey and his friend Chief Inspector Parker hear about the death, in late 1925, of an elderly cancer sufferer named Agatha Dawson who was being cared for by her great niece Mary Whittaker. Miss Dawson had an aversion to making a will and believed that, if she died without one, Miss Whittaker, her only known relative, would automatically inherit everything.

Wimsey is intrigued despite no evidence of any crime having been committed. He sends his private investigator, Miss Katharine Climpson, to the village of Leahampton to investigate. She discovers that shortly before Miss Dawson's death her maids, the sisters Bertha and Evelyn Gotobed, had been dismissed. Wimsey asks his solicitor friend John Murbles to place advertisements in the press asking them to get in touch. A few days later, Bertha is found dead in Epping Forest. On the body is a £5 banknote, originally issued to a Mrs Muriel Forrest who lives in an elegant flat in South Audley Street, Mayfair.

Wimsey and Parker visit her. She claims not to remember the banknote, but thinks she may have put it on a horse. Wimsey tricks her into providing her fingerprints on a wineglass. In a drawer he finds a hypodermic syringe with a doctor's prescription "to be injected when the pain is very severe".

Evelyn Gotobed tells Wimsey of an episode shortly before the sisters were dismissed in which Miss Whittaker had tried to get them to witness Miss Dawson ostensibly signing her will, without the latter's knowledge.

Wimsey visits a West Indian clergyman named Hallelujah Dawson, now in London. It seems that he may be a cousin of Miss Dawson, and a closer relative than Miss Whittaker. He has a large family and is in need of funds.

Wimsey learns of a motive for Miss Dawson to be killed before the end of 1925: a new 'Property Act', due to come into force on 1 January 1926, that changed the law of intestacy. Until 1925, the estate of a person dying without a will always passed to the closest relative, no matter how remote. From 1926, in the absence of near relatives the estate is forfeit to the Crown, leaving more distant relations such as a great niece with nothing.

Wimsey visits Mrs Forrest at her flat in London, where she unsuccessfully tries to drug him. She then makes rather clumsy advances, and Wimsey suspects blackmail. He kisses her, realises that she is physically revolted, and slips away.

In Leahampton, Miss Climpson reports that Mary Whittaker "is not of the marrying sort". Whittaker disappears along with her besotted young female admirer, Vera Findlater. Several days later, Miss Findlater's body is found on the downs, brutally disfigured by a blow to the head. There is no sign of Mary Whittaker. A distinctive cap and male footprints nearby suggest a link with Hallelujah Dawson. However, the post-mortem finds that Vera Findlater was already dead when she was struck. Close inspection reveals that the footprints have been faked, and that the scene has been set up in order to frame the innocent clergyman. Tyre tracks from Mrs Forrest's car cause Wimsey to suspect her and Mary Whittaker of acting in collusion.

Wimsey's manservant, Bunter, realises that the fingerprints on Mrs Forrest's wineglass are identical to those on a cheque written by Miss Whittaker. Wimsey at last understands that Muriel Forrest and Mary Whittaker are one and the same person. She carried out the murders by injecting air into her victims' bloodstream with her hypodermic syringe, causing blockage and immediate death through heart failure.

Miss Climpson heads to South Audley Street where she finds Mary Whittaker in her disguise as Mrs Forrester. The latter attacks Miss Climpson, who is saved from becoming another fatality by the timely arrival of Wimsey and Parker.

Whittaker is committed to prison to await trial. There, she commits suicide. Wimsey is sickened by the killer's evil and greed. Coming out of the prison on a sunny day with Parker, he finds a darkened world: they have emerged just at the time of the total solar eclipse.

Characters

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  • Lord Peter Wimsey – protagonist, aristocratic amateur detective
  • Detective-Inspector Charles Parker – Wimsey's friend
  • Mervyn Bunter – Wimsey's manservant
  • Miss Alexandra Katherine Climpson – enquiry agent employed by Wimsey
  • Miss Agatha Dawson (deceased) – wealthy woman who had died suddenly some time before the book opens
  • Miss Mary Whittaker – Miss Dawson's great-niece, the granddaughter of her sister
  • Dr Edward Carr – Miss Dawson's physician
  • Miss Vera Findlater – friend and besotted admirer of Miss Whittaker
  • Miss Philliter – former nurse of Miss Dawson, engaged to Dr Carr
  • Bertha and Evelyn Gotobed – former servants of Miss Dawson
  • Rev Hallelujah Dawson – impoverished West Indian clergyman and cousin of Miss Dawson
  • Mr John Murbles – solicitor and friend of Wimsey
  • Mrs Muriel Forrest – fashionable lady living in London

Literary significance and criticism

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According to James Brabazon in his biography of Sayers, she drew her ingenious and medically doubtful murder method from her familiarity with motor engines, gained from her affair with a car mechanic and motor-bike enthusiast.[3]

In their review of Crime novels, the US writers Barzun and Taylor stated that "The tale is perhaps a little forced in conception and remote in tone. That is the trouble with all the great masters – they accustom us to such dazzling performances that when they give us what would seem wonderful coming from other hands, we sniff and act choosy. The mode of compassing death has been carped at, but no one could do anything but rejoice at Miss Climpson and her subterfuges."[4]

HRF Keating, writing in 1989, noted that Sayers had "invented a murder method that is appropriately dramatic and cunningly ingenious, the injection of an air-bubble with a hypodermic". However, "not only would it require the use of an instrument so large as to be farcical, but Miss Sayers has her bubble put into an artery not a vein. No wonder afterwards she pledged herself 'strictly in future to seeing I never write a book which I know to be careless'."[5]

Themes and treatment

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In Murder in the Closet: Essays on Queer Clues in Crime Fiction before Stonewall (2017), Noah Stewart described Mary Whittaker as being "to my knowledge the most clearly delineated homosexual character in Golden Age detective fiction, despite the word 'lesbian' never being used, and she's depicted as enticing a young girl into a life of homosexuality". The episode in which Mary Whittaker is kissed by Wimsey is "the closest that a writer in 1927 would be able to come to saying that a character was a lesbian and that kissing a man made her want to vomit."[6] Laura Vorachek argued that, in the novel, "Sayers attempts to challenge the prevalent cultural associations of blackness and criminality."[7]

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On 1 January 1926, the date specified by Sayers, two important property statutes came into force in England: the Law of Property Act 1925 and the Administration of Estates Act 1925. The latter, corresponding most closely with the ‘Property Act’ of the novel, swept away the old rules on intestacy[8] and specified by way of a six-point list the persons who would inherit if the intestate left neither issue nor parents. If the deceased had no surviving relatives of the classes mentioned (which did not include great-niece), the estate would go to the Crown.[9]

Adaptations

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In May 1975, an adaptation was made for BBC Radio 4, produced by Simon Brett and starring Ian Carmichael as Lord Peter Wimsey.[10]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "British Library Item details". primocat.bl.uk. Retrieved 31 December 2017.[dead link]
  2. ^ Sayers, Dorothy L (1928). The Dawson Pedigree. New York: The Dial Press. Retrieved 31 December 2017 – via Library of Congress Online Catalog.
  3. ^ Brabazon, James (1981). Dorothy L Sayers: a biography. Scribner. ISBN 978-0684168647.
  4. ^ Barzun, Jacques; Taylor, Wendell Hertig (1989) [1971]. A Catalogue of Crime (revised and enlarged ed.). New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-015796-8.
  5. ^ Keating, HRF (1989). The Bedside Companion to Crime. New York: Mysterious Press. ISBN 0-89296-416-2.
  6. ^ Stewart, Noah (2017). "Dropping Hairpins in Golden Age Detective Fiction: Man-Haters, Green Carnations and Gunsels". In Evans, Curtis (ed.). Murder in the Closet: Essays on Queer Clues in Crime Fiction before Stonewall. Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Company. pp. 46–49. ISBN 978-0-7864-9992-2.
  7. ^ Vorachek, Laura (2019). "'His Appearance Is against Him': Race and Criminality in Dorothy L. Sayers's Unnatural Death". Clues: A Journal of Detection. 37 (2): 61.
  8. ^ King, Michael (July 2012). "The rules of intestacy". Will and Probate Magazine. Retrieved 2 January 2018.
  9. ^ Administration of Estates Act 1925, original version as printed
  10. ^ "Lord Peter Wimsey". BBC Genome. 1975. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
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