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Showing posts with label Ash-Tree Press. Show all posts
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Tuesday, May 9, 2023

Personifications of malevolence: Seven stories from The Clock Strikes Twelve and Other Stories by H. R. Wakefield. (Ash-Tree Press, 1998)





Readers who are unfamiliar with the collection may prefer to read these notes only after reading the stories.





Two years ago I read most of the short stories in The Clock Strikes Twelve, and posted about them here. Last week, I returned to the collection.


Not Quite Cricket


  ' "There they are, both of 'em!" he yelled. "Sam's come to see the play, bloody face and all!"


"Not Quite Cricket" is a well-told rural horror story centered on the cricket rivalry of two men and their villages. But this is not a Hornung or Wodehouse cricket yard. Wakefield does a fine turn depicting sudden death in sport, pulling in peg legs, gypsies, and a village idiot with second sight. There is nothing light-hearted outside the framing prologue; this is life depicted as lived for mortal stakes.


A Fishing Story


An Irish fishing story, beautifully evoking a troubled landscape.


  A fish rose, head and tail, a little ahead of Tranion's fly. He reeled out, took in the slack, and dropped the fly in the widening swirl.

     It didn't rise again and Meynel's eyes wandered.     Tranion had flushed a small gaggle of geese, which gained flying height, made formation, and sailed seawards. A curlew wailed happily by. A brace of teal, wing to wing, swished towards them, saw them, changed direction, and were lost in a sunbeam. A small bird came to a rock, flicked his tail, and made a tiny, definite sound. A twite, perhaps, thought Meynel; I rather think so. What a long, lovely, desolate land this is, he thought, and hardly a man to be vile. But there was evidence of his existence in the footed stacks of peat where the turf had been neatly shaved down. Directly in front of him were two rough stone pillars, one on each side of the Glady, and nothing connecting them. 

     'Was that bridge destroyed in the Bad Times?' he asked. 

     The gillie stared at it for a moment. 

     'Well, it was not,' he said.       'That wasn't the way of it.' 

     'It just collapsed, did it?' 

     'Well, that's true, it did; that's how it was.' 

     'Just fell in?' 

     'Well, it fell in, it did.' He paused. 'But there was a man on it when it fell,' he added. 'It was rotten, you see.' 

     'All the bridges over the Glady are rotten,' said Meynel with feeling. 'A foot wide, no hand-rails, and full of gaps; horrible wobbly brutes. I hate the sight of them.' 

     'But,' said McBrain, 'those others are foine, stout bridges compared with the way this one was.' 

     'What happened to the chap who fell in? It must have shaken him up a bit.' 

     'It must have done that. There's no doubt about that at all.'

     'Could he swim?' 

     'He could not.' 

     'How did he get out, then?' 

     'Well, that man never got out.' 

     'He was drowned!' 

     'He must have been drowned surely.'

     'But you must know, McBrain! His body must have been found.' 

     'No, that man's body was never found.' 


I Recognised the Voice


"I Recognised the Voice" is one of the stranger stories in The Clock Strikes Twelve


Two men, Goran and Lefanu, spot each other at their club.


Goran had the very queer sensation that they had long been acquainted, as if they had met in some previous incarnation. An absurd idea, but how otherwise to explain this feeling for one with whom he had never exchanged a word, never seen before to his knowledge?


When they sit down over drinks, Lefanu reveals he is somewhat clairvoyant, having "learnt some odd things in Tibet, the air breathes magically there." Each man tries unpicking the tangled skein of their connection. This being a Wakefield story, adultery and murder play a part.


Red Feathers


Bloody hell, "Red Feathers" is a masterpiece of some kind: misanthropy first and last. But also a masterpiece of cold feet about shooting animals and about  having feet of clay about the prospect of  marriage to hell-whelped "steel-and-concrete harpies."


Happy Ending? 


Young student of behaviorism Jonathan Turtell rents a bed- sitting room at 84 H—— Street.


  As for the other denizens of Number 84, Jonathan had no concern with them; but he vaguely hoped the person next door didn't snore, for he could hear him moving about and the wall seemed rather thin.


Jonathan that very night begins having consecutive dreams related to that next door room. 


....there was, of course, always the possibility that the Universe was fundamentally irrational and that such phenomena were merely modes of its unreason; that Nature sometimes acted in such a way that man could not frame laws to interpret that action. This possibility was highly unpalatable


Wakefield is happiest grinning as he examines his characters like Petri dishes through the microscope. 


  Jonathan's régime was regular and austere. He had a light breakfast at an A.B.C. shop, worked from nine to one. Had a light lunch at an A.B.C. shop, worked from two to six. Had dinner at a Corner House. Usually went to a movie afterwards, for the reactions of the multitude were of huge psychological value. Walked back to 84 and went to bed.


The real mirth Wakefield conveys in relating facts of everyday life about his protagonists is only matched by his enjoyment of how they suffer his Savonarola-scale authorial chastisements.


Death of a Poacher 


"Death of a Poacher" would have made a memorable episode of "Rod Serling's Night Gallery." Zoologist Sir Willoughby Mantlet, Bart., has returned shattered in mind and body from Africa. A friend of his enlists our narrator for an informal diagnosis during a country house weekend hosted by the Bart.


Sir Willoughby might have scheduled his appointment in Samarra in Africa, but it becomes clear to his guests that he knows the final encounter is now at hand– and that it will be mortal.


He gives the narrator the picture:


  'I had not been long in this region before I had reason to believe it housed a secret. Briefly, there was a conviction amounting to certainty that some strange animal had there its habitat. This belief was held by the white population, though they were disinclined to discuss the matter with strangers. The Masai were elusive and enigmatic about it, as only savages can be....'


[....] To an ardent zoologist the possibility of being the first to discover an animal unknown to science was irresistible....


The usual country house rigamaroles ensue over several days, including rumors of poachers and sounds of distant gunfire.


  It was impossible to concentrate; somehow [Sir Willoughby's] psychic malaise communicated itself to me. It may sound fantastically exaggerated, but I felt in the presence of some thing of darkness. I would have done anything to help him, but what was almost incipient panic urged me to be away.


The final encounter is a showdown at night in open country on the estate.


....I think we both saw it at the same moment. It was huge and it was crouching over something stretched out beneath it on the margin of the stream. It looked up and its eyes were slanted, orange, and utterly evil.


"Death of a Poacher" is a belated story of colonial life coming home to roost. It does not attempt the heights of "Pollock and the Porroh Man" (1895) or "The Recrudescence of Imray" (1891), but it sharply demonstrates the knowledge that there is no UK "moat-defensive" (Clute) untouched by empire's consequences. 


From the Vasty Deep 


"From the Vasty Deep" is a pitch-perfect story of ambitious theme and scope. 


Rival leading men Alistair Brayton and Sir Rex Beaumont find themselves together on holiday at Algiers, a city of fine hotels amid streets filled with "septic beggars and precociously lewd small boys."


Brayton bribes a sand-diviner to predict Beaumont has a year to live, a "catty" move even in "that logically lawless profession."


Within a year Beaumont is dead, at the end of a world cruise meant to help him forget the seer's prophecy.


  Unluckily he went alone save for one companion, John Barleycorn. That boom comrade and he became inseparable. 'Why not,' he told himself, 'if I am doomed!' Of course he got no better. In fact he threw himself overboard on the last night before the ship reached Southampton, and though they searched for a while, they could not find his body. 


Brayton, who could not confess  his joke when Baumont was alive, certainly cannot admit it after the suicide for fear it will end his career.


  He could not get Rex out of his mind, especially as he began dreaming about him and what was worse, always the same dream. He was standing on a beach gazing out to sea over some rocks. The sea was breaking lightly over the rocks and he was looking for something he knew he did not want to see. He stared hard, watching the lift of each small wave. Presently he saw something white rise on a crest, surge forward, and disappear. There it was again, a bit nearer this time, and the next time and the next. And then whatever this was reached the rocks. He wanted to run away but he could not move. Then he saw it climb up on the rocks and come toward him and it was something like a naked man, only there was a difference. For instance where the face should have been, he presently could see, was the big ochre shell of a crab, and he could see the claws moving, and that was the worst of all....


The final pages of "From the Vasty Deep" are a tour de force depiction of Brayton's ordeals during rehearsals and the first night of his star turn in Macbeth:


The back parts of theatres during the throes of rehearsal of a big play like Macbeth are crowded, scurrying places; chaos to the uninitiated, but really that odd, motley section of humanity on the move about its business is a good example of organised division of labour. Brayton was, of course, quite at home in this come-and-go and could perfectly distinguish the wood from the trees, the combined effort from the atoms composing it.

  Yet one of these 'trees' began to worry him. Whether it was in a group of scene-shifters, or Scottish Noblemen, or the orchestra, or any grouped bodies contributing to the enterprise, an intruder was sometimes to be seen furtively lurking; very furtively, for the moment Brayton got him properly in his gaze, or rather just before he succeeded in doing so, he at once dissolved and disappeared, presently to reappear elsewhere. During one rehearsal he saw him for a second watching from the Royal Box. The curtains of the box were of light ochre silk and Brayton noticed a certain resemblance.

  Of course his colleagues noticed something was the matter with Billy Bennett and whispered and wondered, but they had to confess he had never acted better. He was word perfect and never more moving and intense; the tortured Thane and he seemed absolutely one in spirit indomitably defying all the legions of Earth and Hell and Heaven.

  For the first night he plugged himself with as much Scotch courage as he dared, and Dulcinea Delavere, the Lady Macbeth, turned up her nose when she accepted his bouquet and hoped for the best. It certainly was the best; he had never given such a terrific performance, in spite of, perhaps partly on account of, the fact that there was someone who had no business to be there, standing for a flash in the shadows behind the weird sisters, and then entering for a second with Duncan's retinue, and just visible out of the corner of his eye as he tried to seize the phantom dagger. But he was very near breaking-point in the banquet scene, for when he and his lady were surveying the assembled guests and the ghost of Banquo should have entered, it was not Banquo who came in, but someone Brayton had seen terribly often coming towards him across the rocks.

  'Which of you have done this?' he cried, and pretty well everyone in the audience felt a quick, damp fear break out on them at the way he spoke that mighty line. Dulcinea, who was watching his face as he spoke it, says she knows she will never forget it, but hopes very much she is wrong....


*   *   *


As part of returning to The Clock Strikes Twelve, I decided to sample a few critical opinions about H. Russell Wakefield. Assessments were mixed.


Mike Ashley summed him up briefly in Encyclopedia of Fantasy (1997):


....noted for his Ghost Stories, some of which rank alongside those of M R James, with whom he is sometimes compared. Although most of his stories are formulaic they are well crafted and frequently atmospheric, and often feature vengeful ghosts (see Vengeance). Wakefield was first inspired to write by an experience he had at a reputedly haunted house in 1917; this resulted in "The Red Lodge", in his first volume They Return at Evening (coll 1928).


Richard Bleiler in Horror Literature through History (2017):


....Wakefield recognized that hauntings did not necessarily need to involve medieval cathedrals and manuscripts or the English public schools; indeed, hauntings could occur in the twentieth century and did not need to involve the English upper classes. Wakefield thus occasionally made use of the traditional English country estate in such works as "The Red Lodge" (published in They Return at Evening), but his settings included golf courses ("The Seventeenth Hole at Duncaster" in They Return at Evening), and could involve even used cars and American gangsters ("Used Car," 1932)....


Jack Sullivan in The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural (1986):


.... taking James's emphasis on tautness and economy a few steps further, without the doting descriptions of old architecture and often without a denouement. The

cold efficiency of his endings—sometimes consisting of a swift, brutal line or two—can be deliciously shocking or simply puzzling. He was not as richly atmospheric or consistently satisfying as James, but his best work has a percussive power that is unique and memorable.


Jess Nevins, in Horror Fiction in the 20th Century Exploring Literature's Most Chilling Genre (2020), salutes Wakefield's competence, but goes on to quote Brian Stableford to the effect that Wakefield "took up where M.R. James left off in extending the core of the British tradition through the period between the wars."


Wakefield, part of a postwar levy of professional writers, had a wide curiosity about motivations of men and women from all classes. "Lucky's Grove" and  "The First Sheaf", two of his finest stories, are acutely non-Jamesian in point of view. Other specters are linked to domestic crime. In many ways, they share themes explored not by M. R. James but by E. F. Benson. Benson built his career as a fiction writer on comedies and melodramas of domestic malice and rural-urban feudal-bourgeois boundary clashes. 


The most acidic Wakefield critic today, S. T. Joshi, writes in Unutterable Horror: A History of Supernatural Fiction (2014):


[....] Lovecraft enjoyed several stories from his first two collections, but many of them are undistinguished, such as "The Red Lodge," a routine story of a house haunted as a result of murders committed in the past; "'He Cometh and He Passeth By,'" a shameless rip-off of M. R. James's "Casting the Runes" and clearly meant to portray the moral evil of Aleister Crowley; and "The Seventeenth Hole at Duncaster," in which a wood near a golf course apparently has evil properties, for no ascertainable reason.


[....] Some later tales reveal moments of interest.


[....] Some of Wakefield's later work does exhibit an engaging misanthropy (and, perhaps less appealingly, also misogyny), but overall his work is not nearly as meritorious as his small legion of ardent followers appear to believe.


To say that the horrors depicted in the sublime "The Seventeenth Hole at Duncaster" have no ascertainable motivation is willful critical blindness.


*   *   *


Jay

20 April 2023



Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Where is the house? "Brickett Bottom" by Amyas Northcote

A House in a Clearing, 1870 by John Atkinson Grimshaw



     "When did you say Alice would be back?"

     "Before half-past four at the latest, father."

     "Well, what can she be doing? What can have delayed her? You say you did not see the house," he went on.

     "No," said Maggie, "I cannot say I did. It was getting dark and you know how short-sighted I am."

     "But surely you must have seen it at some other time," said her father.

     "That is the strangest part of the whole affair," answered Maggie. "We have often walked up the Bottom, but I never noticed the house, nor had Alice till that evening. I wonder," she went on after a short pause, "if it would not be well to ask Smith to harness the pony and drive over to bring her back. I am not happy about her—I am afraid—"

     "Afraid of what?" said her father in the irritated voice of a man who is growing frightened. "What can have gone wrong in this quiet place? Still, I'll send Smith over for her."

     So saying he rose from his chair and sought out Smith, the rather dull-witted gardener-groom attached to Mr. Roberts' service.

     "Smith," he said, "I want you to harness the pony at once and go over to Colonel Paxton's in Brickett Bottom and bring Miss Maydew home."

     The man stared at him.

     "Go where, sir?" he said.

     Mr. Maydew repeated the order and the man, still staring stupidly, answered: "I never heard of Colonel Paxton, sir. I don't know what house you mean." Mr. Maydew was now growing really anxious.

     "Well, harness the pony at once," he said; and going back to Maggie he told her of what he called Smith's stupidity, and asked her if she felt that her ankle would be strong enough to permit her to go with him and Smith to the Bottom to point out the house.

     Maggie agreed readily and in a few minutes the party started off. Brickett Bottom, although not more than three-quarters of a mile away over the Downs, was at least three miles by road; and as it was nearly six o'clock before Mr. Maydew left the Vicarage, and the pony was old and slow, it was getting late before the entrance to Brickett Bottom was reached. Turning into the lane the cart proceeded slowly up the Bottom, Mr. Maydew and Maggie looking anxiously from side to side, whilst Smith drove stolidly on looking neither to the right nor left.

     "Where is the house?" said Mr. Maydew presently.

     "At the bend of the road," answered Maggie, her heart sickening as she looked out through the failing light to see the trees stretching their ranks in unbroken formation along it. The cart reached the bend. "It should be here," whispered Maggie.

     They pulled up. Just in front of them the road bent to the right round a tongue of land, which, unlike the rest of the right hand side of the road, was free from trees and was covered only by rough grass and stray bushes. A closer inspection disclosed evident signs of terraces having once been formed on it, but of a house there was no trace.

     "Is this the place?" said Mr. Maydew in a low voice.

     Maggie nodded.

     "But there is no house here," said her father. "What does it all mean? Are you sure of yourself, Maggie? Where is Alice?"

     Before Maggie could answer a voice was heard calling "Father! Maggie!" The sound of the voice was thin and high and, paradoxically, it sounded both very near and yet as if it came from some infinite distance. The cry was thrice repeated and then silence fell. Mr. Maydew and Maggie stared at each other.

     "That was Alice's voice," said Mr. Maydew huskily, "she is near and in trouble, and is calling us. Which way did you think it came from, Smith?" he added, turning to the gardener.

     "I didn't hear anybody calling," said the man. "Nonsense!" answered Mr. Maydew.

     And then he and Maggie both began to call "Alice. Alice. Where are you?" There was no reply and Mr. Maydew sprang from the cart, at the same time bidding Smith to hand the reins to Maggie and come and search for the missing girl. Smith obeyed him and both men, scrambling up the turfy bit of ground, began to search and call through the neighbouring wood. They heard and saw nothing, however, and after an agonised search Mr. Maydew ran down to the cart and begged Maggie to drive on to Blaise's Farm for help leaving himself and Smith to continue the search. Maggie followed her father's instructions and was fortunate enough to find Mr. Rumbold, the farmer, his two sons and a couple of labourers just returning from the harvest field. She explained what had happened, and the farmer and his men promptly volunteered to form a search party, though Maggie, in spite of her anxiety, noticed a queer expression on Mr. Rumbold's face as she told him her tale.

     The party, provided with lanterns, now went down the Bottom, joined Mr. Maydew and Smith and made an exhaustive but absolutely fruitless search of the woods near the bend of the road. No trace of the missing girl was to be found, and after a long and anxious time the search was abandoned, one of the young Rumbolds volunteering to ride into the nearest town and notify the police.

     Maggie, though with little hope in her own heart, endeavoured to cheer her father on their homeward way with the idea that Alice might have returned to Overbury over the Downs whilst they were going by road to the Bottom, and that she had seen them and called to them in jest when they were opposite the tongue of land.

     However, when they reached home there was no Alice and, though the next day the search was resumed and full inquiries were instituted by the police, all was to no purpose. No trace of Alice was ever found, the last human being that saw her having been an old woman, who had met her going down the path into the Bottom on the afternoon of her disappearance, and who described her as smiling but looking "queerlike." [....]


_____

"Brickett Bottom" by Amyas Northcote


My notes on the story are here.


Full story: here and here.







Friday, September 2, 2022

Yesterday Knocks by Noel Boston (Ash-Tree Press, 2012)

Readers unfamiliar with Yesterday Knocks may prefer to read these notes only after reading the collection.




Yesterday Knocks by Noel Boston (Ash-Tree Press, 2012)


The Half Legs

     Mr. Rotrod is asked to find a hidden room in the Worcestershire home of an old Catholic family. After finding the room, and determining another had been eliminated, Rotrod spends an eventful night. His bedroom is visited by half a specter who has not adjusted to the floorplan change.


The Bellarmine Jars

     Mr. Rotrod, "a scholar who added to a small private income by lecturing and writing on antiquarian and historical subjects," helps uncover the diabolic purpose for which two Bellarmine jars were used back in 1634. 

     'I had no idea you knew so much about the subject,' said his wife. 'It is not exactly in your line.'


Lot 629

     "Lot 629," a square piano purchased at an estate auction by the narrator, plays "The Death of Nelson" (1810) at 1:30 a.m.


The North Cloister Walk

     A cathedraly Christmas season tale.

     It is an undeniable fact that the plainer the indications are of wild weather without, the warmer and cosier we feel inside. Tom Smart, the hero of 'The Bagman's Story' in Pickwick, understood this well; and who has not lain in bed and listened to the howl of the wind in the chimney and the buffetting of the gale on the windows and not experienced just that extra snugness, that luxurious content, that feeling almost of self-congratulation, knowing that, roar as they may, the elements cannot touch us here?


The P Aia Johns Blak

     "The P Aia Johns Blak" is a fascinating story. Boston takes us behind the scenes as Mr. Rotrod breaks some bad news to a local vicar on behalf of the diocese.


     'But if you will not let us sell the Psalter, how are we to pay for our roof? And a roofless church is no use to anyone. Can you get us a grant from the Diocese?'

     'This Diocese,' said I, 'has about seven hundred churches, and its building committee has something under a thousand a year to dole out. You will get something, that is sure, and I may be able to tap other and central sources for you as well. But remember, you did not have to build the church. You inherited it, and it is up to this generation to prove itself worthy of its inheritance and to do something itself, rather than rely on the generosity of the past by selling its treasures.'


Happily, a series of providential events (that some might call coincidence) intervenes, and the vicar and his committee are saved from fundraising.


Right Through My Hair

     "Right Through My Hair" is one of Boston's most satisfying ghost stories. With skill and patience he builds a portrait of "Minor Canon Jogglebury's ambition to write a history of the Choir School attached to the Cathedral at Losingham." In his research, Jogglebury has an unfortunate encounter with something in the cathedral triforium, and Boston excels at depicting the menace of a large dark interior structure at night.


The Audit Chamber

     'There's no need for us to use conventional language,' I replied. 'Let's be plain. You think the room is haunted?'   

     'Well, yes. What else can I think? Someone sneezes and there is no human being there to sneeze—but whoever heard of a room being haunted by a sneeze?'


For all its charm and cathedral close detail, "The Audit Chamber" is notably time-consuming and wears on the reader's patience.


Bump in the Night

     "Bump in the Night" is a mellow, carefully prepared story of non-threatening supernatural horror. Though horror is hardly the word to describe such a congenial story of antiquarian investigation. I cannot help but like a story with dialogue like this:


     'Mr Rotrod, before you go off,' said the Colonel, 'I do want to say that if ever you find yourself in Gloucestershire I very much hope that you will spend a day or two with me. . . . I have a collection of first editions of some of the Victorians, and it would give me great pleasure to show it to you. Now, don't forget, that is not just a polite remark. I really mean it. Abbotts Avon Hall is the address—make a note of it now! And the 'phone is Crutchley 62….'


Several weeks later, Rotrod spends the night at Abbotts Avon Hall while investigating the condition of a Medieval dovecote in the vicinity. 


The Face at the Window

     'You were at Rotary a month ago when I told Broomfield that we had seen someone in Southfield House who had no business to be there?' said Carr.

     At once there was a subtle change in the vicar's attitude. The hearty buffoon attitude had disappeared and, instead, two rather disconcertingly alert and penetrating eyes gazed across the desk at Carr. 

     'I was.'

     'Well,' continued Charles, 'to put it in a nutshell, I have seen that face three times more, and though four of us have searched the house from cellar to attic not a trace of anyone can we find. It gets dark early at this time of year and about seven o'clock I could swear I have seen someone peering out of that window. It was too dark to see the features but the hair leaves me in no doubt it was a woman. It seems to peer out of one corner of that window.'

     'Is it the same window?' asked the vicar.

     'Yes, and the same position; and, as I say, we have searched and searched, but not a trace of anyone can we find.'


"The Face at the Window" is another non-malevolent haunted house tale. The owner of a local business and his friend the vicar try to solve a mystery about the empty house across the road from the Cowham Iron Foundry.


The Barrier

     That whole day and all that evening Jonah schooled himself not to betray his fears. Quite early he went up to his room, but made no attempt to undress, nor did he turn his light out. In his time he had had some queer adventures. The war had provided him with many startling happenings, but never before had he found himself caught up in such a fantastic affair. Here they were warring against a man who had left this earth two hundred years before, and they had to war with the power of the mind, to put their human minds against that evil being. And who can tell how powerful the mind may become once it is free from the trammels of the body?


"The Barrier" is an almost perfect malevolent supernatural thriller. A novelist staying at a country house teams up with the butler and a retired clergyman to thwart an ancestral curse against his host. Will Sir Giles Massingham be the third scion of Bracken Hall in Norfolk to be lured to his doom by a spectral coach and four?


Scraping the Barrel

     Boston wrote these stories after the second world war. Country houses had been in decline for several decades. The tax burden of the world empire, and buying off a top echelon of the proletariat, was not cheap.

     In the excellent story "Bump in the Night" Colonel Lamborn is down to just Stammers, his old batman, and Mrs. Stammers. Rotrod tells him:

      'You will know what I mean by the difference between a live house and a dead one. Compare the atmosphere of a house inhabited by a family whose forebears have lived here for generations—have probably built the place—and a house, however splendid, that has become the property of some trust or corporation and is open to the public as a show place. By all means let the public see our great houses, but if humanly possible, let us keep them for the purpose for which they were built. Colonel, if I had my way, the country should pay people like you to go on living in your family house, or at least there should be sufficient tax relief to make it possible.'


"Scraping the Barrel" is another story about the scion of an old family trying to keep the property alive.


The story's supernatural element is quaint and never threatening. As is the case with many of these stories, it is the density of family and local history that is the chief pleasure:

     [....] At Sir Daniel's death Maurice found himself nothing like so well off as he had expected. Mind you, there was enough to keep the great place up; for even in those days Hornbeam cost what most men would consider a fortune to maintain—but carefully managed there was enough. But there certainly was not sufficient to look after the estate and to squander at the same time—and this is precisely what Maurice did! I won't particularize, but it was the old story—fast women and slow horses. There was dicing, and cards, and cock fighting, and all sorts of rackety people in the house. That sort of thing absorbed jolly nearly all the income, and at the same time, not a penny was spent on the house or estate. Indeed, when my grandfather came into the property (in the 1860s that would be) he has often told me that the house was nearly derelict, the coverts neglected, hardly a gate that would shut in the park, and the farm and the cottages in a terrible condition. It was far worse for them than for Sir Maurice. In a house the size of Hornbeam, if the rain comes through the ceiling you can always move into another room, but with the cottages it was pretty grim. The tenants grumbled, and from one of the happiest, friendliest places in the country Hornbeam became thoroughly discontented.'


*   *   *


The good Noel Boston (1910-1966) did in life as a clergyman, his friendship and generosity, are attested to by Lionel & Patricia Fanthorpe in their introduction to Yesterday Knocks. His achievements as a fiction writer are minor, and his contribution to supernatural horror fiction is negligible. He clearly abjured the macabre "red in tooth and claw" style of H. R. Wakefield. He was probably too busy with the realities of everyday life to work at imbuing his stories with the cunning of M. R. James or the literary grandeur of E. F. Benson. 


Jay

30 August 2022