Clock inscribed to Noel Coward, Cole Lesley and Graham Payn.
Jamaica, [1958].
'From London with love'
[Stencilled in white gouache, then signed in autograph]
'Ian - Ann
Blue Harbour
For
Noel
Coley
Graham'
The recipients were Noel Coward, Cole Lesley and Graham Payn. Lesley was Coward's secretary and Payn his long time partner. The three of them had been instrumental in trying to cover up the increasingly intense relationship between Fleming and the then Ann, Lady Rothermere, and the clock would have been given by the now married Flemings as a joke to recognise their role in this subterfuge. Coward documented these sometimes farcical episodes in his diary:
'There have been great carryings on about Lady R and Commander F. She arrived in a blaze of Jamaican publicity and announced that she was staying with me. So when a Life photographer arrived here we had to send Little Lad [to Goldeneye] chaud pied to fetch her.There then began a very natty high comedy scene in which she kept forget-ting she was a house guest and asking us what we had been doing all the morning etc. We then all traipsed over tto Montego Bay for a night and Elle et Lui discreetly (i.e. indiscreetly) had breakfast together on the balcony of his room! After this I descended upon them both and gave them a very stern lecture indeed. I must say they are very sweet but …but I have grave fears for the avenir.'
Lesley Cole was known familiarly to Fleming as Coley and in a letter to Coward from 9th April 1963 he writes:
'Anyway it was a most sweet and kindly thought and in appreciation I shall send you a copy of the London Magazine for April in which your best friend Cyril Connolly, has gone to town on James Bond in a scandalously hilarious fashion.
Even Coley's grim visage will contort into one of those rare smiles of his as he reads it and I fancy tears will pour down those raddled cheeks of yours.'
Fleming has pierced the regimental badge of the Intelligence Corps and fixed it beneath the hands of the clock and placed the scrolled name plate beneath the clock face. There was a degree of inter-departmental rivalry between Fleming's own Naval Intelligence regiment and the land based Intelligence Corps so it is unsurprising that he has chosen that regiment rather than his own for this treatment. Given the inscription 'From London with Love' it most likely dates from 1957.
As well as being one of Fleming's closest neighbours Noel Coward was also one of his closest friends and was given the Bond novels in pre-publication proof form for his editorial input.
Mahogany veneer clock, plaque to dial, Intelligence Club.
Provenance
Delivery
We offer secure and express delivery on all local and international orders of rare books, maps and prints placed through this website.