Short Stories 1927-1956 (98 page)

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Authors: Walter de la Mare

BOOK: Short Stories 1927-1956
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Seven
Short
Stories
(SSS) (1931)

A selection of seven stories published in collections that was illustrated by John Nash. They were ‘Miss Duveen’, ‘The Bird of Travel’ and ‘The Tree’ from R (1923), ‘Maria-Fly’ from Br (1925), and ‘Missing’, ‘The Nap’ and ‘The Wharf’ from C (1926).

The
Dutch
Cheese
(1931)

Published in New York, this contained two children’s stories from Br (1925), ‘The Dutch Cheese’ and ‘The Lovely Myfanwy’, together with illustrations by Dorothy P. Lathrop. It should not be confused with
The
Dutch
Cheese
and
Other
Stories
(1946).

The
Lord
Fish
(LF) (1933)

De la Mare’s second volume of short stories for children. It was illustrated by Rex Whistler, and contained seven stories. In a note at the end, de la Mare wrote as follows: ‘Four of the stories included in this volume appeared in print for the first time some years ago in
Joy
Street,
but they have been revised – titles and all. “Dick and the Beanstalk”, “The Old Lion” and “Sambo and the Snow Mountains” are new.’

‘The Lord Fish’

(a)
Number
Four
Joy
Street
(Oxford,
1926)
(where it was called ‘John Cobbler’)

(b)
Animal
Stories
(1939)
The
Old
Lion
and
Other
Stories
(1942)
CSC (1947)*

‘A Penny a Day’

(a)
Number
Five
Joy
Street
(Oxford, 1927)
(where it was called ‘Wages’)

(b)
The
Dutch
Cheese
and
Other
Stories
(1946)
CSC (1947)*
SSV (1952)

‘The Magic Jacket’ (in LF (1933) and SSV (1952) it was called ‘The Jacket’)

(a)
Number
Six
Joy
Street
(Oxford, 1928)

(b)
The
Magic
Jacket
and
Other
Stories
(1943)
CSC (1947)*
SSV (1952)

‘Dick and the Beanstalk’

(b)
The
Magic
Jacket
and
Other
Stories
(1943)
CSC (1947)*
SSV (1952)

‘The Scarecrow’ (in LF (1933) it was called ‘Hodmadod’)

(a)
Number
Three
Joy
Street
(Oxford, 1925)
(where it was called ‘Old Joe’)
Old
Joe
(Oxford, 1927)

(b)
The
Scarecrow
and
Other
Stories
(1945)
(where it was called ‘The Scarecrow or Hodmadod’)
CSC (1947) (where it was called ‘The Scarecrow’)*

‘The Old Lion’

(b)
The
Old
Lion
and
Other
Stories
(1942)
Mr
Bumps
and
His
Monkey
(Philadelphia, 1942) (the story was given this title here)
CSC (1947)*
SSV (1952)

‘Sambo and the Snow Mountains’

(b) SEP (1938)
The
Old
Lion
and
Other
Stories
(1942)
CSC (1947)*

A
Froward
Child
(1934)

The story that was collected in WBO (1936) was published separately in 1934.

The
Wind
Blows
Over
(WBO) (1936)

Contained eleven short stories (with an illustration by Barnett Freedman), of which two, ‘In the Forest’ and ‘The Talisman’, had been serialized in 1904 and 1907 respectively. In a note at the beginning of the book, de la Mare states that ‘both have been revised’. WBO appeared in October 1936.

‘“What Dreams May Come”’

(a)
John
O’London

s
Weekly,
1 December 1934

(b) BS (1942)*

‘Cape Race’

(a)
Yale
Review,
September 1929

(b)
The
Picnic
and
Other
Stories
(1941)*
CT (1950)

‘Physic’

(a)
Nash’
s
Magazine,
June 1936
Harper’s
Magazine,
August 1936

(b)
The
Picnic
and
Other
Stories
(1941)
BS (1942)*
CT (1950)

‘The Talisman’

(a)
Lady’s
Realm,
March 1907 (where it was called ‘The Talisman of Weisshausen’)

(b) CT (1950)

‘In the Forest’

(a)
Black
and
White,
27 August 1904

(b) SEP (1938)*

‘“A Froward Child”’

(a)
Times
Weekly
Edition,
10 November 1932
A Froward Child (1934)

‘Miss Miller’

(a)
Story-teller,
August 1930

(b)
The
Picnic
and
Other
Stories
(1941)
BS (1942)*

‘The House’

(a)
Observer,
25 December 1932

(b) BS (1942)*
GS (1956)

‘A Revenant’

(b) SEP (1938)*
GS (1956)

‘“A Nest of Singing-Birds”’

(a)
Yale
Review,
December 1933 (where it was called ‘Parleyings’)
Lovat
Dickson’s
Magazine,
January 1934
(where it was also called ‘Parleyings’)

(b) SEP (1938)*

‘The Trumpet’

(a)
Virginia
Quarterly
Review,
October 1936

(b) BS (1942)*
CT (1950)

The
Nap
and
Other
Stories
(1936)

A selection of six stories published in collections that was done for the Nelson Classics. They were ‘Selina’s Parable’ and ‘The Bowl’ from R (1923), ‘Maria-Fly’ from Br (1925), ‘The Nap’ and ‘All Hallows’ from C (1926), and ‘An Ideal Craftsman’ from OE (1930).

Stories,
Essays
and
Poems
(SEP) (1938)

Thirteen short stories were included in this selection of his writings that Mildred Bozman prepared in close collaboration with the author for Everyman’s Library. They had all been published in collections, and were as follows: ‘The Almond Tree’, ‘Miss Duveen’, ‘The Three Friends’ and ‘The Riddle’ from R (1923), ‘Lichen’ from DDB (1924), ‘Missing’ from C (1926), ‘At First Sight’, ‘The Green Room’ and ‘The Orgy: An Idyll’ from OE (1930), ‘Sambo and the Snow Mountains’ from LF (1933), and ‘In the Forest’, ‘A Revenant’ and ‘“A Nest of Singing-Birds”’ from WBO (1936). There was an introduction by the author. See also the Introduction on page
vii
.

Animal
Stories
(1939)

A volume of stories about animals for children, with wood-cuts from Edward Topsell’s
Historie
of
Foure-footed
Beastes
(1658). One story, ‘The Lord Fish’ from LF (1933), was by de la Mare. The rest he had collected together, re-writing some of them.

The
Picnic
and
Other
Stories
(1941)

A selection of eight stories already published in collections. They were ‘Miss Duveen’ and ‘The Three Friends’ from R (1923), ‘The Nap’ and ‘The Wharf’ from C (1926), ‘The Picnic’ from OE (1930), and ‘Cape Race’, ‘Physic’ and ‘Miss Miller’ from WBO (1936).

Best
Stories
of
Walter
de
la
Mare
(BS) (1942)

This selection of sixteen stories published in collections was made by de la Mare himself. It contained: ‘The Almond Tree’, ‘Miss Duveen’, ‘Seaton’s Aunt’ and ‘The Vats’ from R (1923), ‘Missing’, ‘The Nap’ and ‘All Hallows’ from C (1926), ‘Crewe’, ‘The Orgy: An Idyll’, ‘The Picnic’ and ‘An Ideal Craftsman’ from OE (1930), and ‘“What Dreams May Come”’, ‘Physic’, ‘Miss Miller’, ‘The House’ and ‘The Trumpet’ from WBO (1936). No stories for children were included.

The
Old
Lion
and
Other
Stories
(1942)

A selection of four stories from the children’s collections, illustrated by Irene Hawkins. They were ‘Maria-Fly’ from Br (1925), and ‘The Lord Fish’, ‘The Old Lion’ and ‘Sambo and the Snow Mountains’ from LF (1933).

Mr
Bumps
and
His
Monkey
(1942)

Dorothy P. Lathrop did the illustrations for this edition of ‘The Old Lion’ (LF (1933)), published in Philadelphia in 1942.

The
Magic
Jacket
and
Other
Stories
(1943)

A selection of four stories for children from R (1923) (‘The Riddle’), Br (1925) (‘Miss Jemima’) and LF (1933) (‘The Magic Jacket’ and ‘Dick and the Beanstalk’). It was also illustrated by Irene Hawkins.

The
Orgy
(1943)

Reprinted by itself with an illustration by Frank R. Grey. In OE (1930) the story was called ‘The Orgy: An Idyll’.

The
Almond
Tree
(1943)

Reprinted by itself with an illustration by Frank R. Grey. The story originally appeared in R (1923).

The
Scarecrow
and
Other
Stories
(1945)

Another selection of four stories from the two children’s collections, illustrated by Irene Hawkins. They were ‘Broomsticks’, ‘The Lovely Myfanwy’ and ‘Visitors’ from Br (1925), and ‘The Scarecrow’ from LF (1933) (called ‘The Scarecrow or Hodmadod’ here).

The
Dutch
Cheese
and
Other
Stories
(1946)

The fourth selection of children’s stories illustrated by Irene Hawkins, containing five this time: ‘The Dutch Cheese’, ‘Lucy’, ‘The Three Sleeping Boys of Warwickshire’ and ‘Alice’s Godmother’ from Br (1925), and ‘A Penny a Day’ from LF (1933).

Collected
Stories
for
Children
(CSC) (1947)

Brought together in one volume all except three of de la Mare’s stories for children in Br (1925) and LF (1933), an d also ‘The Riddle’ from R (1923). The three omitted were ‘Pigtails, Ltd.’, ‘The Thief’ and ‘A Nose’ in Br (1925). It contained seventeen stories in all, and was illustrated by Irene Hawkins. The second edition (1957) was illustrated by Robin Jacques. See also the Introduction on page
vii
.

The
Collected
Tales
of
Walter
de
la
Mare
(CT) (1950)

A selection published in New York of twenty-four out of the forty-seven stories in R (1923), DDB (1924, 1936), C (1926), OE (1930) and WBO (1936). It was edited by Edward Wagenknecht. ‘The Connoisseur’ (C (1926)) was given complete. The stories were as follows. R (1923): ‘The Almond Tree’, ‘Miss Duveen’, ‘Seaton’s Aunt’, ‘The Bowl’, ‘The Three Friends’, ‘Lispet, Lispett and Vaine’, ‘The Tree’, ‘The Creatures’, ‘The Riddle’ and ‘The Vats’; C (1926): ‘Missing’, ‘The Connoisseur’, ‘The Nap’, ‘All Hallows’ and ‘The Wharf’; OE (1930): ‘Willows’, ‘The Orgy: An Idyll’ and ‘An Ideal Craftsman’; DDB (1936): ‘Strangers and Pilgrims’; and WBO (1936): ‘Cape Race’, ‘Physic’, ‘The Talisman’, ‘In the Forest’ and ‘The Trumpet’.

Selected
Stories
and
Verses
of
Walter
de
la
Mare
(SSV) (1952)

This Puffin included six of de la Mare’s stories for children: ‘The Dutch Cheese’ and ‘The Sleeping Boys of Warwickshire’ from Br (1925), and ‘A Penny a Day’, ‘The [Magic] Jacket’, ‘Dick and the Beanstalk’ and ‘The Old Lion’ from LF (1933).

A
Beginning
and
Other
Stories
(Beg) (1955)

De la Mare’s last major published work before his death in 1956. It came out sometime after June 1955. It contained thirteen short stories, and of these ‘The Quincunx’ had been serialized in 1906, ‘Odd Shop’ in 1937 and ‘The Guardian’ in 1938. Others too had originally been written years before, e.g. ‘A Beginning’, the title story, which dates from before 1900. But some were recent.

In his introduction, de la Mare wrote as follows: “Most of (the stories) have passed through changes – seldom rich, alas, but occasionally strange. Some of them are middle-aged. And, worse, may only too clearly look it. Most have been revised repeatedly; while some were born all but spick and span, only a springtime or so ago. One of them, cut down by half, actually came into being when Queen Victoria was still on the throne. Some of them, finally, in a different shape, have been “on the air”, and many have been serialized …’ See also the Introduction on page
vii
and Unpublished Stories on pages
515
,
533
,
538
and
551
.

‘Odd Shop’

(a)
Listener,
31 March 1937 (where it was called ‘Odd Shop: A Dialogue for Broadcasting’)

‘Music’

(a)
Adelphi,
April-June 1952 (where it was called ‘Music from the Sea’)

‘The Stranger’

(a)
London
Magazine,
September 1954 (where it was called ‘The Stranger: A Dialogue’)

‘Neighbours’

‘The Princess’ (two notes on the TS read ‘13.3.37’ (the day on which it was
broadcast by the BBC) and ‘revised again Jan. 1954’)

(a)
Good
Housekeeping,
October 1952

‘The Guardian’

(a)
John
O’London’s
Weekly,
10 June 1938
The
Best
British
Stories
of
1939
, ed.
Edward O’Brien (Boston, 1939)
Second
Ghost
Book,
ed. Cynthia Asquith (1952.)

‘The Face’

(a)
World
Review,
December 1950

‘The Cartouche’

(a)
Encounter,
December 1954

‘The Picture’

(a)
Argosy,
February 1955

‘The Quincunx’

(a)
Lady’s
Realm,
December 1906

(b) GS (1956)

‘An Anniversary’ (originally written in or before 1945)

(a)
Saturday
Book,
No. 12 (1952)

(b) GS (1956)

‘Bad Company’

(a)
Listener,
1 April 1954

(b) GS (1956)

‘A Beginning’ (originally written in about 1900)

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