<html><head><meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"></head><body dir="auto"><div>Everything Connects! Great good work and happening. <br><br>Sent from my iPad</div><div><br>On Feb 1, 2016, at 7:49 PM, Mike Weaver <<a href="mailto:mike.weaver@zen.co.uk">mike.weaver@zen.co.uk</a>> wrote:<br><br></div><blockquote type="cite"><div>
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In the late 90s I was part of the cataloguing team at the Working
Class Movement Library. One book I catalogued was 'Agin the
Governments' by Sir Francis Fletcher Vane (published in 1929). <br>
Dedicated to his dog Tox. <br>
M&D read not long before, my curiosity was piqued - Vane, dog,
Tox - had I stumbled on a odd corner of Pynchonian research? <br>
It turned out that Sir Francis was a direct descendant of Sir Henry
Vane the Younger, whose 'melancholy yet darkly inspirational Tale'
is referred to on page 225. <br>
<br>
My enthusiasm for Pynchon's books had recently persuaded the WCML
librarian to read GR, so I shared my possible discovery with him. <br>
"You know those boxes in the basement", he said, "marked 'Shields
Papers', they include an unfinished biography of Sir Francis." <br>
<br>
I had a look and, like Edward Shields and others before me, I became
interested in this oddball aristo. I had a new project! <br>
I sorted the papers, <a href="http://www.wcml.org.uk/our-collections/activists/francis-fletcher-vane/">created
a web page</a> on the man, his deeds and his writings and over the
next few years had various correspondences with others who for one
reason or another were interested in him, and along the way I
gathered more material to add to Shields' notes. <br>
<br>
Edward Shields had become interested in Vane when researching for a
songbook commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Easter Uprising
in Dublin. <br>
Now, as a result of that, then the sheer chance that I, a Pynchon
reader, was the cataloguer of that particular book, it has come
about that, as a part of the 100th anniversary of the uprising, a
photo of Vane from the Shields collection has been used for one of
the<a href="http://www.irishstamps.ie/shop/c-209-1916-2016-eighth-definitive-series.aspx">
commemorative stamps</a> just issued by the Irish Post Office. <br>
<br>
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