Originally entitled Some
Must Watch when published in 1933, Ethel Lina White’s book was renamed The Spiral Staircase after the film was released
in 1946 under that title. It would be three more years before her most famous
book was published, The Wheel Spins
(retitled The Lady Vanishes).
Both book and film have similarities, but the film diverges
in important respects, notably in character relationships. Though the book was set in England, the film transposed
the setting to New England. In the book, the heroine Helen Capel is an
unskilled diminutive woman, a so-called ‘lady-help’ employed by Professor
Warren to attend his sick mother, Lady Warren, in their country house, The
Summit. In the film, Helen is a mute, having lost her voice due to extreme
trauma when young. Bearing in mind that this was written at a time when it was
commonplace for eugenics to be espoused for improving the human gene pool towards 'purity', the film’s
version is perhaps more pertinent to the plot.
Other characters are Mrs Oates, the cook and housekeeper, Mr
Oates, driver and handyman, Nurse Barker to attend to the ailing Lady Warren, the
professor’s son and daughter-in-law (Simone) and a resident pupil (Stephen
Rice) the professor was coaching for the Indian Civil Service. And Dr Parry, ‘clever,
young and unconventional’, and lastly the mysterious Lady Warren herself: ‘The household was waiting for her to die, but she still
called the tune. Every morning, Death knocked politely n the door of the blue
room and Lady Warren saluted him in her customary fashion with a thumb to her
nose.’ (p162)
Mrs Oates exhibits mood changes. ‘For no apparent reason,
she was swaying to and fro, like a weathercock. Whence came the mysterious wind
which was blowing on her?’ (p221)
Simone fancies Stephen, but he isn’t interested: ‘He did not
run from her pursuit, he merely shoved her away... he was in the
kitchen, helping Mrs Oates. He had been offered romance – and he chose onions.’
(p197)
As can be seen above, there’s humour, too. Take also, for example,
p200: ‘Is it still raining heavily?’ asked Helen.
‘Not near so much,’ interposed Mrs Oates bitterly. ‘Oates
brought most of it in with him.’
Recently, in the area there had been four women murdered,
all seemingly committed by a maniac. And we first encounter Helen amidst her
thoughts walking back to the country house as night closes in: ‘… the place was
suggestive of evil. Tattered leaves still clung to bare boughs, unpleasantly
suggestive of rags of decaying flesh fluttering from a gibbet.’ (p165) White
has a knack of creating atmosphere, and it was captured well in the
black-and-white film. ‘Every now and again a twig tapped the window, like a
bony finger giving a signal. The clock ticked, like a leaking tap, and the wind
blew down the funnel of the chimney.’ (p317)
It seems as though the murderer is getting closer to the
house. Dr Parry was called out to the latest tragic case. He warns everyone to
stay inside. A wet dark night stretched ahead. And gradually, on one pretext or
another, individuals left the house, or were incapacitated – or vanished.
Leaving Helen and Lady Warren to face the early hours by themselves… ‘(Helen) …
dreaded the night which divided her from the dawn.’ (p244)
This is one of those early examples of a psychological
melodrama. Some chapter headings offer warnings: 2, The First Cracks; 12, The
First Gap; 13, Murder; 16, The Second Gap; 18, The Defence Weakens; 30, The
Walls Fall Down. Aided by lousy weather, almost a character in itself: ‘Only
the wind shrieked, as though a flock of witches sailed overhead, racing the
moon, which glided through the torn clouds…’ (p321)
Helen may be small in stature, but she is nevertheless
brave. When she spotted the figure of a man merge with the silhouette of a
tree, she went to investigate! By which time, he was gone – if he had existed…
Finally, ‘Helen knew. The acid of
terror cleared the scum from her mind…’ (p331)
White employs a good turn of phrase from time to time: ‘She
believed that, even as shadows on the sea betray the presence of rocks, so
trifles indicate character.’ (p263) And: ‘She must not think of the horror
which had actually taken place within these walls, or wonder if the girl still
lingered somewhere in the atmosphere, the dust or the stones.’ (p290) And: ‘She
remembered how the bushes had writhed, like knotted fingers tapping the glass,
and how the tentacles of the undergrowth had swayed in mimicry of subaqueous
life.’ (p293)
A fascinating period piece; certainly worth reading.
It may be of no significance, but this book pre-dates Agatha
Christie’s And Then There Were None
(1939), where characters in an isolated home ‘leave’…
[The page numbers for excerpts relate to the double volume,
cover depicted.]
Editorial comment
A strong tendency to repeat words close together, and also
to head-hop from one character to another in the same scene, but these traits
do not affect the pace of the story.
A commendable abrupt (but fitting) ending; no lingering about.
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