Saturday, August 12, 2023

4:50 from Paddington by: Agatha Christie

What’s fascinating about the Miss Marple mysteries I have read is that Miss Marple has always been in the background of events, something that is entirely in keeping with what Agatha Christie is doing.  Miss Marple has essentially been an analysis of class and 4:50 from Paddington is an excellent examination of that.  The murder in this one is a woman on a train, being seen through the window of a passing train by Mrs. Elspeth McGillicudy.  A ticket collector doesn’t believe her and the other train finds nothing out of the order, but Mrs. McGillicudy is a friend of Miss Jane Marple of St. Mary’s Mead.  Miss Marple’s characterization here is excellent, there is something incredibly comforting of Marple showing a total belief in Mrs. McGillicudy’s insistence on seeing a murder when the authorities simply take her for a dotty old woman.  Women are generally seen in this novel to be lesser, yet throughout the investigations of the murder it’s the women who are deemed innocent, this and the future murders of the novel are all crimes of a man’s emotion’s getting the better of him.  They are essentially murders of desperation, the first being by strangulation while the others are poisoning.  The poison deaths are steeped in framing women, the large and rich English family that becomes the centerpiece of the novel has only one female member in Emma Crackenthorpe.  Emma is shackled to the home and her station taking care of her father, a position she does not become free of though the end hints that the ordeal has changed the family for the better.

 

Miss Marple doesn’t actually do the investigating herself after becoming aware of Rutherford Hall and the Crackenthorpe family, instead sending her cook Lucy to investigate and find the body, which is eventually found in a sarcophagus on the estate.  Once we get to this point in the narrative, Lucy becomes our point of view character, as well as a character whose only option for upward mobility in society is through marriage, something that Miss Marple subtly hints throughout the novel is something that will happen.  Lucy is also responsible for much of the investigation, her lower class allowing a station that would go unnoticed and to make easy friends with the members of the household and to uncover the intricate secrets of the house.  There is this constant sense of danger as Lucy is in the thick of it, yet there is this added smokescreen of her potential to be the murderer herself due to having access to the food that contains some of the poison, and later a trusted servant (though one of a higher class) Dr. Quimper and his pharmacist are suspected due to a successful poisoning.  The rest of the Crackenthorpe family all have the motive to kill, the woman is revealed to have connections to the estate and a potential claim on Luther Crackenthorpe’s fortune (at least in part) through his last will and testament.  The rest of the family all have their own eccentricities setting them apart from the expectations of their class, from married but childless Alfred, to artist and gambler Alfred, to Bryan Eastley, the widow and father of Luther’s grandson Alexander.  This makes for a great list of potential subjects that Christie weaves in and out shifting into whodunnit territory once the body is actually found, but never losing focus of the class aspect.

 

Overall, while 4:50 from Paddington as a title is a bit unnecessary, it’s just the train Mrs. McGillicudy was on that serves as the inciting incident, this is actually one of Christie’s very best mysteries.  It’s a small treatise on the expectations of class that are clearly subverted and shifted through the multiple murders and deaths plus a brilliant reveal for the murderer.  Miss Marple being a background player only enhances what makes the novel work.  9/10.


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