Paddy Hogan: New Zealand's Toughest Man Alone

Dale Benson
University of Otago
Departmentt of English
dale@home.otago.ac.nz

Deep South v.3. n.2. (Winter 1997)


Copyright (c) 1997 by Dale Benson, all rights reserved

Paddy Hogan is the amoral protagonist of Travelling Man, Jack McClenaghan's novel about the Depression in New Zealand.[1] Violent, and showing scant regard for the niceties of conventionally approved behaviour, Hogan resembles the Tough Guys of American and European crime fiction of the 1930s. He even speaks a New Zealand version of Hemingway's Tough Guy idiom. Yet Hogan is not a New Zealand gangster, and McClenaghan is not the James Hadley Chase of the Antipodes.

At first glance the difference between Hogan and most of the Men Alone who populate New Zealand's fiction seems an extension of the difference between the early narratives in which the protagonists are conventionally rewarded or punished according to their virtue and the later narratives in which the characters' behaviour is not explicitly judged. Unlike most of the narratives that have emerged from New Zealand's Man Alone tradition, McClenaghan's novel seems to disregard the convention (which the early writers borrowed from their Victorian models) that society will punish those who rebel against it, particularly when that rebellion leads to murder. It also seems to ignore the convention that fellowship is essential for survival. In the place of these customary assumptions and the behaviour they entail, Travelling Man appears to admit Hogan's amoral and violent behaviour.

I suggest that Travelling Man seems to disregard conventions and appears to accept Hogan's amoral conduct because McClenaghan's attitude towards his protagonist is hard to ascertain. Like Hemingway, whose To Have and Have Not commentators consider to be one of the most influential of the Tough Guy novels, McClenaghan intentionally distances himself from his protagonist. Hence, McClenaghan never uses the authorial voice to assert his point of view, and he never allows the third person narrator to expound on Hogan's behaviour.[2] The only source of information about Hogan is Hogan himself. Yet according to Frank Sargeson, "it is impossible for any serious novelist to finish his story without letting you know (at any rate, implicitly), that he has judged his characters".[3] Hemingway, for instance, judged the characters he created according to a code based on his perception that, given the nada (or nothingness) at the centre of existence, conventionally moral behaviour is meaningless. In an imperfect world, according to Hemingway's code, his heroes act toughly and do not deceive themselves. McClenaghan, by contrast, seems to ironically measure his protagonist's tough behaviour against the powerful conventions governing law and order which Hogan ignores, thereby hinting that Hogan's toughness will not save him from society's retribution.

According to Lawrence Jones, writers adjusted the Man Alone's experience to emphasise the different concerns of different periods.[4] As in nearly all New Zealand's Man and Woman Alone narratives, Hogan undertakes a conventional learning journey: as a farm and road labourer, bootleg whisky deliverer, and swagman, he travels the length of New Zealand during the Depression, observing conditions and interpreting what he sees. Traditionally, Hogan's journey would lead either to his successful reintegration into society, as it does for Raleigh in George Chamier's Philosopher Dick: Adventures and Contemplations of a New Zealand Shepherd[5] or to his death, as it does for Manning, whose unredeemed anti-social behaviour leads to his suicide, in John O'Shea's 1964 film Runaway.[6]

Bill, in Frank Sargeson's That Summer[7] and Johnson, in John Mulgan's 1939 novel, Man Alone,[8] are also Men Alone, yet their experiences emphasise a different concern: during the Depression the inevitability and persistence of the economic hardship they endure implicitly debunks the aspects of the Myth of Progress which are sustained by William Satchell's novel, The Land of the Lost: A Tale of the New Zealand Gum Country, published in 1902.[9] Thus, unlike Satchell's protagonist who becomes part of settler society when he sets himself on the conventional path towards prosperity by planning to marry and raise a family, Bill and Johnson cannot join conventional society and cannot achieve prosperity. Yet they are not completely separated from New Zealand's Victorian conventions: in an indifferent universe, they still assume that fellowship makes life bearable.

Travelling Man was written nearly forty years after Man Alone and has a different emphasis: its protagonist emerged from the postwar era when the debunking of the Myth of Progress had widened to a challenging of many more of the moral verities left over from the previous century. Unlike Bill and Johnson who often ignored society's rules but still believed in kindness and fellowship, Hogan is violent and incapable of being anyone's mate. The emphasis in McClenaghan's novel seems to be on how an individual survives in an indifferent universe where one cannot depend on the intervention of a benevolent Creator, where conventions hold only a doubtful validity, and where people are alienated from society and from each other.

According to Sheldon Grebstein in his essay "The Tough Hemingway and His Hard-Boiled Children", the American Tough Guy is the literary descendant of James Fenimore Cooper's Natty Bummpo, Herman Melville's Ahab, and Jack London's Wolf Larsen. All of these characters

are physically hard and emotionally tough. All are supremely adept at their crafts. All espouse objectives which frequently do not square with conventional moral norms but which are admirable nonetheless. All are pragmatists who employ questionable means towards desirable ends. In the Darwinian terminology, they are superbly equipped in the struggle for existence; in the Nietzschean, they practise a Master rather than a Slave morality.[10]

Lawrence Jones' earlier comment about the evolution of the Man Alone helps to explain the difference between Bill, Johnson, and Hogan. Hogan does not unequivocally espouse any socially admirable objectives. Yet in his travels throughout New Zealand he resembles the larger-than-life literary figures described above, these supermen, more closely than he does the moderate Bill and Johnson and their forebears. Thus while Bill and Johnson drift from job to job, careful to avoid trouble, Hogan's manner is always opportunistic and sometimes aggressive or vengeful. While Bill is philosophical about the money which his seeming friends steal from him at the beach, and while Johnson does not want to fight with Stenning about Rua or to punish her for her involvement in Stenning's accidental death, Hogan is eager to retaliate against the people he feels have thwarted or injured him. In That Summer and Man Alone there is an implicit search for a meaningful moral code which is fulfilled when Bill steals milk money to support his friend Terry or when Johnson is able, through fellowship with other soldiers, to transcend the hopelessness of his position as an evacuee. In Travelling Man, by contrast, Hogan neither thinks nor acts on thoughts about fellowship and the moral code it implies.

The absence of a system of values based on fellowship becomes obvious when I compare Travelling Man to Guthrie Wilson's The Feared and the Fearless[11] and Strip Jack Naked.[12] When Il Brutto in The Feared and the Fearless kills many of the people who threaten to curtail his freedom Wilson's careful exposition of his past promotes the idea that, because Il Brutto's personality has been altered by a severe head injury, he is not responsible for his psychotic behaviour. Jack in Strip Jack Naked is also violent. His deprived childhood is the plausible cause. Yet Wilson's displacement of his characters' personal responsibility on to their environment does not mitigate their fate: Il Brutto and Jack will die because, when they killed others, both overstepped the boundary of socially acceptable behaviour.

When in his essay "Raffles and Miss Blandish" George Orwell contrasts the ethical values implicit in E. W. Hornung's Raffles, a Thief in the Night (published in 1900) to those of No Orchids for Miss Blandish by James Hadley Chase (published in 1939), he comes to the conclusion that Hornung's novel is governed by powerful taboos and that Chase's is not.[13] For example, although Raffles is a thief, he redeems his honour when he dies for King and Country in the Boer War. Chase's novel, by contrast, with its emphasis on perversion and murder, "takes for granted the most complete corruption and self-seeking as the norm of human behaviour". A similar distinction may be made between The Feared and the Fearless and Strip Jack Naked and Travelling Man. Wilson's novels imply moral judgements about Il Brutto and Jack when both are killed by the police. In McClenaghan's, however, Hogan's crimes seem to go unpunished.

In the following excerpt Hogan's observations of a small rural town resemble Johnson's implicit debunking of the myth that those who are virtuous and hard-working will be rewarded with material prosperity. Yet the seeming lack of ethical values which distinguishes McClenaghan's novel from Wilson's will also distinguish it from Mulgan's Man Alone.

The more [Hogan] saw of it, the more the area depressed him. There was no open space, only high hills and open valleys, and although it was young country it had an old, worn out look. The fences sagged, as if the effort of climbing the hills was too much; and in the small settlements, timber mills in the main, box-like houses huddled together, forlorn shelters that needed attention but never got it.

In the next paragraph Ned, a bootleg whisky distributor who contrary to the myth prospers even though his activities are distinctly criminal, describes the same area optimistically. When Turncott, one of Hogan's work and travel companions, ironically remarks on the unreality of Ned's hopes, the myth's groundlessness becomes even more apparent:

`The good thing about this place is the people .... They have to be real battlers, otherwise they wouldn't take this country on. They'll never do much more than scratch a living out of it, but one day it will come right.'

`We'll all be under the sod by then,' said Turncott sourly.[14]

Despite a similar starting point (that is, both novelists intend to debunk the Myth of Progress), as Johnson and Hogan grow more aware of social conditions their awareness does not lead them to similar conclusions or actions. Johnson's involvement in the Queen Street riots and the civil war in Spain turns him into a hero, one who stoically endures hardship in the company of fellow soldiers, the ideal Man Alone "you can't kill".[15] Although McClenaghan's protagonist is also a survivor, his behaviour is hardly that of a hero. Early in Travelling Man Hogan sets alight the scrub which he and Turncott have been employed to cut: he wants to punish the farmer who has pushed them to work harder and harder before terminating their employment because they could not work hard enough. Hogan is pleased at the thought of the farmer scrambling up the hill to escape the fire and is unconcerned about his survival. When their next job--the delivery of bootleg whisky--leads to the death of a pursuing policeman, Hogan and Turncott go their separate ways. Although they have travelled and worked together for some time, they part without regret because individual survival is more important to them than any sense of mateship. Hogan's lack of concern about others becomes even more apparent later, in Invercargill, when he plans to start a romance with a young woman even though he will maintain sexual relations with the widow who gave him a home and then helped him find work on the Hollyford Road. When the widow discovers Hogan's intended infidelity and remonstrates, he beats her and leaves.

The novel's title and dust jacket illustration emphasise Hogan's penchant for moving on when circumstances do not favour his satisfaction. Underneath the bold, stencilled lettering of Travelling Man is a trail of footsteps across the necks and torsos of women which the subtitle, A New Zealand Novel, identifies with the New Zealand terrain. As Hogan walks over the women who lie passively in his path, the illustration identifies him as one of New Zealand's most misogynistic Men Alone. Unlike Raleigh who will begin Philosopher Dick as alienated from conventional society but will end by marrying into it, or Johnson who in Man Alone will remain alienated from women but will still manage to survive with a few male friends, even unlike Manning in Runaway whose lonely death sustains the convention that fellowship is necessary for survival, Hogan will survive even as he continues to hurt others with his amoral behaviour.

Like Johnson, Hogan is involved in the Queen Street riots. They react very differently to them, however. Johnson is caught up in the riots by chance while attending a street rally about unemployment. By the end of the novel he has come to the conclusion that any economic system that forces men to work uselessly for a pittance will cause them to revolt. Hogan, by contrast, actually starts the Queen Street riots. Unlike Johnson, he does not see them as a sign of men "going forward together".[16] Nor does the looting convey a message to him about the consequences of exploitation. Instead, the rioting and looting indicate to Hogan that violence and greed are commonplace. As Hogan remarks to Marie, his companion at the riot, "everyone out there tonight enjoyed smashing all those windows and pinching what they could".[17]

As is obvious in this next passage, in Mulgan's version of the riot Johnson does not take part in the looting but fights for his friend Scotty who is being beaten by a police officer:

Johnson was angry now. He was angered by the brutal blow he had seen, in all that evening's brutality, and angered, too, to think that of the few who would be picked out and punished for all that night's work, one of them must be Scotty, the small, the stupid, at heart the inoffensive.[18]

That Hogan is more concerned with self-preservation becomes apparent when he allows himself to be seconded to the Specials: he does not want to join this group of civilians in their efforts to control the rioters, but he will in order to avoid trouble with the police. During the second night of rioting, however, Marie seriously injures him for joining the Specials rather than remaining faithful to the cause of the unemployed. The novel ends with Hogan just out of the hospital and planning to inform the police that she has looted a fur coat.

Keeping in mind that Travelling Man is clearly a Man Alone narrative and that nearly all of New Zealand's Man Alone narratives judge their protagonists according to a set of conventions which proceed from the assumption that community is better than anarchy, it is reasonable to suggest that even though McClenaghan's attitude towards his protagonist is less apparent than Chamier's is to Raleigh or Mulgan's is to Johnson, McClenaghan does imply a judgement of Hogan's behaviour. In this passage, for example, Hogan's attempt to interpret all that has happened to him outlines the journey from ignorance to awareness which Johnson travels in Man Alone:

A funny thing, all those adventures he'd had; no one could possibly have predicted them, the scrub cutting, the dropping, the work on the Hollyford road, on the swag in Central Otago, looting one night and fighting the looters the next.

One adventure after the next, but without a pattern. It had been a sort of jellyfish existence in which he had been content to be carried along by events and had never tried very hard to swim against them.

All those experiences, however, did something to a man. They were changing him. Did that happen to every man? Did they all have their life and their very being shaped against their will? Did no one really have the power to say what sort of man he would be?[19]

If Hogan could ask himself the questions recorded in the excerpt above, perhaps, like Johnson, he would also learn to take responsibility for his destiny. But in fact, he does not. Instead the passage above introduces a subtle and ironic debunking of the notion that he could be changed by his travels. The narrator does not explicitly comment on the discrepancy between Hogan's meditations and his behaviour, but the ironic juxtaposition of his contradictory thoughts and actions does provide a compelling (if silent) commentary. For example, Hogan explains to Turncott near the end of the novel why he has refused an offer of employment with a prosperous businessman: "`I've learned not to get too involved. As far as I can see ... there is no sense in beating your heart out or your guts out, for anything'".[20] Ironically, he has just been released from hospital after his involvement with Marie and the unemployed have led to his severe wounding. Despite his avowed intention to avoid involvement, Hogan has decided that he would rather support unionised labour than the owners who think that they can hire and fire workers casually. Yet when Hogan says "I might get mixed up with them", referring to the unions, it is not wholly because he is interested in improving conditions for the ordinary worker: in the new order anticipated by Savage, unions will hold more power than the owners. McClenaghan treats Hogan's vengeful thoughts just as ironically: after Hogan has decided to work with the trade unions to better employment conditions, he ponders the punishment he will impose on Marie who, aside from putting him in hospital, believes passionately in workers' rights.

In summary, although Travelling Man has emerged from the Man Alone tradition, Hogan is not a traditional Man Alone because his travels do not end with his rejoining of society. He is not a Man Alone like Bill or Johnson, either, because he does not learn to appreciate the value of even their limited kind of fellowship. An ironic reading of Hogan as a Tough Guy who is tough yet handicapped by his limited self-awareness may be possible, yet such a reading is problematical because it is only near the end of the novel that McClenaghan hints that Hogan's ethos may restrict his options. Such a reading also assumes an authorial stance where, in fact, one may not have been intended.

A more certain conclusion may be reached by comparing Travelling Man to an earlier novel written by McClenaghan. In Moving Target Dougherty, the protagonist, runs away from representatives of the New Zealand government because he has been drafted into the Army to fight in the Second World War.[21] When the Army hunts Dougherty as a deserter, he accidentally kills a soldier in self defence. Finally Dougherty commits suicide because he knows that inevitably the Army will either imprison or kill him. From the beginning to the end of Moving Target, the plot moves inevitably towards Dougherty's suicide. The fictional world evoked in Travelling Man may approximate the amoral world of crime fiction deplored by George Orwell, but McClenaghan is not really a Tough Guy writer. Although Hogan's fate is less obvious than Dougherty's, it seems inevitable that Hogan will still be punished for his misdeeds--sometime after the end of the novel. When Travelling Man suggests the eventual collapse of Hogan's amoral lifestyle, therefore, McClenaghan may be described as implicitly challenging his protagonist's way of life as well as implicitly agreeing with those aspects of the New Zealand Man Alone tradition which proceed from the assumption that community is better than anarchy.

References

[1] Jack McClenaghan, Travelling Man (Auckland: Collings, 1976).

[2] Ernest Hemingway, To Have and Have Not (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1937).

[3] Frank Sargeson,"James Courage: The Fifth Child", Conversation in a Train and Other Critical Writing, selected and edited by Kevin Cunningham (Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1983), 35.

[4] Lawrence Jones, "The Novel", The Oxford History of New Zealand Literature in English, edited by Terry Sturm (Auckland: Oxford University Press, 1991), 148.

[5] George Chamier, Philosopher Dick: Adventures and Contemplations of a New Zealand Shepherd (T. Fisher Unwin, 1891).

[6] John O'Shea, Runaway, 1964.

[7] Frank Sargeson, Collected Stories: 1935-1963 (Auckland: Longman Paul Limited, 1964).

[8] John Mulgan, Man Alone (Auckland: Longman Paul, 1949; rpt. 1984).

[9] William Satchell, The Land of the Lost: A Tale of the New Zealand Gum Country (Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1971).

[10] Sheldon Grebstein, "The Tough Hemingway and His Hard-Boiled Children", The Tough Guys of the Thirties, ed. David Madden (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1968), 18.

[11] Guthrie Wilson, The Feared and the Fearless (London: Robert Hale Limited, 1954).

[12] Guthrie Wilson, Strip Jack Naked (London: Robert Hale Limited, 1957).

[13] George Orwell, "Raffles and Miss Blandish", A Collection of Essays, Doubleday Anchor Books (New York: Doubleday and Company, Inc., 1954), 139-154.

[14] McClenaghan, Travelling Man, 23.

[15] John Mulgan, Man Alone, 207.

[16] Mulgan, Man Alone, 53.

[17] McClenaghan, Travelling Man, 166.

[18] Mulgan, Man Alone, 58.

[19] McClenaghan, Travelling Man, 181.

[20] McClenaghan, Travelling Man, 185.

[21] Jack McClenaghan, Moving Target (Wellington: A. H. and A. W. Reed, 1966).

Works Cited

Chamier, George. Philosopher Dick: Adventures and Contemplations of a New Zealand Shepherd. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1891.

Grebstein, Sheldon. "The Tough Hemingway and His Hard-Boiled Children." In The Tough Guys of the 1930s, ed. David Madden. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1968.

Hemingway, Ernest. To Have and Have Not. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1937.

Jones, Lawrence. "The Novel." In The Oxford History of New Zealand Literature in English, ed. Terry Sturm, 105-202. Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1991.

McClenaghan, Jack. Moving Target. Wellington: A. H. and A. W. Reed, 1966.

________. Travelling Man. Auckland: Collins, 1976.

Mulgan, John. Man Alone. Auckland: Longman Paul, 1949; rpt. 1984.

Orwell, George. "Raffles and Miss Blandish." Chap. in A Collection of Essays, 139-154. New York: Doubleday and Company, Inc., 1954.

O'Shea, John. Runaway. 1964.

Sargeson, Frank. Collected Stories: 1935-1963. Auckland: Longman Paul, 1964.

________. "James Courage: The Fifth Child." Chap. in Conversations in a Train and Other Critical Writing, selected and edited by Kevin Cunningham. Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1983.

Satchell, William. The Land of the Lost. 2d ed. Auckland: Whitcomb and Tombs Limited, 1938.

Wilson, Guthrie. The Feared and the Fearless. London: Robert Hale Limited, 1954.

________. Strip Jack Naked. London: Robert Hale Limited, 1957.


Write a letter to The Editor.