Wednesday, June 5, 2024

About the Captain and the Countess by Rosemary Morris

 


About Rosemary Morris

 

Planning My Novels

 

Some novelists plan every chapter of  their new novels in detail before they begin writing it. This method doesn’t work for me because I like my characters to surprise me. I spend hours answering these questions. When?Who?What?Where?How? I write literary historical romance so, first, I decide on the era I want to set the novel in. For me, it is crucial to get to know the main characters. I refer to The Oxford Dictionary of English Christian Names to ensure I chose ones that are appropriate for the period, and I fill in detailed character profiles. Next, I jot down what will happen in the first chapter and the place where it happens. Finally, I decide on how a crucial event takes place. With these important details decided on I spend more hours thinking about the plot and the theme. When all these factors are clear in my head, the happy moment arrives when I write the first paragraph.

The main plot in the Captain and the Countess is the effect a disastrous marriage on the widowed countess. The theme, one which modern day readers can relate to, is a younger man’s love for an older lady.

 

About The Captain and The Countess

 

London. 1706

 

Why does heart-rending pain lurk in the back of the wealthy Countess of Sinclair’s eyes? 

Captain Howard’s life changes forever from the moment he meets Kate, the intriguing Countess and he resolves to banish her pain.

Although the air sizzles when widowed Kate, victim of an abusive marriage meets Edward Howard, a captain in Queen Anne’s navy, she has no intention of ever marrying again.

However, when Kate becomes better acquainted with the Captain, she realises he is the only man who understands her grief and can help her to untangle her past.

 

Chapters One to Three

 

London 1706

 

Chapter One

 

Edward, the Right Honourable Captain Howard, dressed in blue and white, which some of the officers in Queen Anne’s navy favoured, strode into Mrs Radcliffe’s spacious house near St James Park. 

Perkins, his godmother’s butler, took the captain’s hat and cloak. “Madam wants you to join her immediately.”

Instead of going upstairs to the rooms his godmother had provided for him during his spell on half pay—the result of a dispute with a senior officer—Edward entered the salon. He sighed. When would his sixty-one year old godmother accept that at the age of twenty-two, he was not yet ready to wed?

He made his way across the elegant, many-windowed room through a crowd of expensively garbed callers.

When Frances Radcliffe noticed him, she turned to the pretty young lady seated beside her.

“Mistress Martyn, allow me to introduce you to my godson, Captain Howard.” 

Blushes stained Mistress Martyn’s cheeks as she stood to make her curtsey.

Edward bowed, indifferent to yet another of his grandmother’s protégées. Conversation ceased. All eyes focussed on the threshold. 

“Lady Sinclair,” someone murmured.

Edward turned. He gazed without blinking at the acclaimed beauty, whose sobriquet was “The Fatal Widow.”

The countess remained in the doorway, her cool blue eyes speculative.

Edward whistled low. Could her shocking reputation be no more than tittle-tattle? His artist’s eyes observed her. Rumour did not lie about her Saxon beauty.

Her ladyship was not a slave to fashion. She did not wear a wig, and her hair was not curled and stiffened with sugar water. Instead, her flaxen plaits were wound around the crown of her head to form a coronet. The style suited her. So did the latest Paris fashion, an outrageous wisp of a lace cap, which replaced the tall, fan-shaped fontage most ladies continued to wear perched on their heads. 

Did the countess have the devil-may-care attitude gossips attributed to her? If she did, it explained why some respectable members of society shunned her. Indeed, if Lady Sinclair were not the granddaughter of his godmother’s deceased friend, she might not be received in this house.

The lady’s fair charms did not entirely explain what drew many gallants to her side. After all, there were several younger beauties present around whom the gentlemen did not flock so avidly. 

He advanced toward the countess, conscious of the sound of his footsteps on the wooden floor, the muted noise of coaches and drays through the closed windows and, from the fireplace, the crackle of burning logs, which relieved the chill of early spring.

The buzz of conversation resumed. Her ladyship scrutinised him. Did she approve of his appearance? A smile curved her heart-shaped mouth. He repressed his amusement. Edward suspected the widow’s rosy lips owed more to artifice than nature. 

“How do you do, sir,” she said when he stood before her. “I think we have not met previously.” Her eyes assessed him dispassionately. “My name is Sinclair, Katherine Sinclair. I dislike formality. You may call me Kate.”

“Captain Howard at your service, Countess.” Shocked but amused by boldness more suited to a tavern wench than a great lady, Edward paid homage with a low bow before he spoke again. “Despite your permission, I am not presumptuous enough to call you Kate, yet I shall say that, had we already met, I would remember you.”

“You are gallant, sir, but you are young to have achieved so high a rank in Her Majesty’s navy.” 

“An unexpected promotion earned in battle, which the navy did not subsequently commute.”

“You are to be congratulated on what I can only assume were acts of bravery.”

“Thank you, Countess.”

The depths of her ladyship’s sapphire cross and earrings blazed, matching his sudden fierce desire.

Kate, some four inches shorter than Edward, looked up at him.

He leaned forward. The customary greeting of a kiss on her lips lingered longer than etiquette dictated. Her eyes widened before she permitted him to lead her across the room to the sofa on which his godmother sat with Mistress Martyn.

With a hint of amusement in her eyes, Kate regarded Mrs Radcliffe. “My apologies, madam,

I suspect my visit is untimely.”

Her melodious voice sent shivers up and down his spine; nevertheless, Edward laughed. Had the countess guessed his godmother, who enjoyed matchmaking, wanted him to marry Mistress Martyn? No, he was being too fanciful. How could she have guessed?

“You are most welcome, Lady Sinclair. Please take a seat and partake of a glass of cherry ratafia.” Frances said.

“Perhaps, milady prefers red viana,” Edward suggested. 

“Captain, you read my mind. Sweet wine is not to my taste.”

In response to the lady’s provocative smile, heat seared his cheeks.

Kate smoothed the gleaming folds of her turquoise blue silk gown. The lady knew how to dress to make the utmost of her natural beauty. Her gown and petticoat, not to mention sleeves and under-sleeves, as well as her bodice and stays, relied for effect on simple design and fine fabrics. He approved of her ensemble, the elegance of which did not depend on either a riot of colours or a multitude of bows and other trimmings. Later, he would sketch her from memory.

Kate inclined her head to his godmother. “Will you not warn your godson I am unsound, wild, and a bad influence on the young?” 

Edward gazed into Kate’s eyes. Before his demise, had her husband banished her to a manor deep in the country? If it were true, why had he done so?

Kate’s eyebrows slanted down at the inner corners. She stared back at him. He laughed, raised her hands to his lips, and kissed each in turn. “I look forward to furthering my acquaintance with you.”

“High-handed.” Kate gurgled with laughter. “Captain, please release me.”

What did he care if she were some nine years his elder? He wanted to get to know her better.

Edward bowed. “Your slightest wish is my command.”

His godmother fluttered her fan. “Edward, Lady Sinclair, please be seated.” 

They sat side-by-side opposite Mrs Radcliffe on the sofa upholstered in crimson damask. 

Although Kate smiled at him, the expression in her large blue eyes remained as cool as it had been when she first entered the salon. “Tomorrow, please join those who visit me daily at my morning levee.” 

“I fear my voice would be lost among many, thus casting me into obscurity,” Edward replied, much amused.

“I don’t take you for one to be ignored, sir. However, I respect your wishes. Besides those who seek my patronage, there are many gentlemen eager to wait on me. ’Tis more than my porter’s life is worth to deny them entry.” She looked at his godmother and raised a pencilled eyebrow. “Mrs Radcliffe, do you not agree it is pleasant to lie abed in the morning while indulging in conversation with one’s admirers?”

Frances toyed with her fan. “Receiving one’s admirers does help to pass the time.” “Come, come, madam, confess you value their advice,” Kate teased.

“Sometimes.” Frances looked at her most favoured admirer, Sir Newton.

Kate turned her attention to Edward. “I have no doubt you would become a cherished member of the group of those who seek my favour.” 

“Countess, life at sea teaches a man to be wary of enemies, not to compete with them. I am not a flirt who is given to haunting ladies’ bedchambers.”

“If I seclude myself with you tomorrow morning, may I have the pleasure of your company?” 

“Alone with you in your bedchamber? How improper. Are you always so careless of your reputation?” he asked with a hint of laughter in his voice. 

Her eyes widened. “I have no reputation to guard, Captain.” She had spoken in a forward manner he was unaccustomed to in polite society.

“Have you not?” Edward needed a plunge in icy water.

A frozen glimpse of despair deep in her eyes unsettled Edward. Did he imagine it? He could not speak. Why should a lady like the countess despair? 

He recovered his voice. “If it is your custom to take the air in The Mall, I shall be pleased to be your sole escort.”

Kate fidgeted with one of the diamond buckles that fastened her satin-covered stays. “Are the battle lines drawn?”

“Don’t confuse battle lines with a mere skirmish at sea.” His voice hinted at the chuckle he restrained.

“There are those who would welcome an invitation to a tête-à-tête with me.”

He preferred to take the lead in affairs of the heart. “Perhaps I am not one of them,” he teased. “Maybe I would like to be your friend.” “My friend? Is that all you want of me?”  His eyes widened. 

Kate laughed. “No, I thought not.”

 

 

Kate breakfasted in bed, drinking hot chocolate and eating two slices of thinly cut bread and butter. With pleasure, she breathed in the perfume of narcissi arranged in a pair of tall blue and white Delft flower vases, which stood on two small inlaid tables on either side of the marble fireplace.

Later, Kate washed her face and hands with the finest Smyrna soap. Before she returned to her bed, she first painted and powdered her face with particular care. 

At eleven o’clock, the porter admitted the first of her guests to the house. Each time the door opened, she looked across the bedchamber with the expectation of seeing the captain. Unaccustomed to any gentleman declining her invitation, her annoyance and disappointment increased as the minutes passed. An hour dragged by. Still Captain Howard had not come. Wasted time, and what was more, it had been an equal waste of time to send her tirewoman, Jessie, to Lillie’s for perfume. Kate put her scented handkerchief to her nose to inhale the fragrance of the distillation of roses and sandalwood. Delicious! Indeed, Mister Lillie deserved his title, “The Prince of Perfumers.” Soon, however, the levee would end. 

She glanced at her most persistent admirers, Mister Tyrell, both dashing and bold, and Mister Stafford, conservative and somewhat hesitant. As usual, they had arrived before her other admirers. Now they sat at their ease on gilt-legged chairs near her canopied bed. 

Kate decided she could delay no longer. She rose to make her toilette behind a tall screen, still conscious of the rose-pink night robe she had ruffled around her shoulders with great care before Tyrell and Stafford arrived. 

With Jessie’s help, after Kate removed her nightgown and night rail, she donned her under linen, stays, and a bodice, cut lower than the current fashion and loosely laced in front to reveal gold buckles inset with pearls, which clasped her satin-covered stays so tightly that she could scarce draw breath. “Gentlemen, which petticoat shall I wear?” she asked, giggling deliberately and playing the part of an indecisive female. “Jessie, please show both of them to Mister Tyrell and Mister Stafford.”

Over the edge of the lacquered screen, Jessie dangled the full petticoats to be worn displayed beneath skirts parted down the front.

Kate stood on tiptoe. She peeped over the top of the screen, decorated with a blue and white pot containing tulips, passion flowers, lilies, roses, and sprigs of rosemary.

“Gentlemen, the cream petticoat is made of Luckhourie, a newly fashionable silk from India.

The lavender one is of the finest quality Pudsay.”

“Stap me, they are uncommon plain,” said Mister Tyrell.

Kate knew he admired feminine apparel trimmed with folderols such as gold or silver lace, ruched ribbons, bows, and rosettes. She suppressed a chuckle in order not to offend him.

“My mother approves of modest attire,” Mister Stafford said. 

Before she withdrew her head from their sight, Kate choked back her laughter. Stafford’s contemptuous glance at his rival did not escape her notice.

She doubted Mrs Stafford found much about her to praise, but she cared naught for Stafford’s mother, a creature with the languishing airs of a pseudo-invalid, who bound her son cruelly to her side. Indeed, the gentleman’s determined courtship surprised Kate. It proved he was not, as the saying went, completely under his mother’s thumb.

“Which one shall I wear?” Kate repeated. Although she had already decided to wear cream, she followed the custom of prolonging what amounted to “The Art of the Levee.”  

First, Jessie retrieved the petticoats. Next, she dressed Kate in the Luckhourie one, a gown, and lace-edged apron. 

Stafford spoke first. “I have no doubt her ladyship will favour the cream petticoat, which will enhance the natural delicacy of her appearance.” 

Delicate? Heaven forbid. She did not want Captain Howard to consider her delicate. “’Pon my word, Stafford, I have no wish to give the impression of one who suffers from lung rot.”

Mister Tyrell laughed. “I am sure you don’t, Lady Sinclair. For my part, I beg you to wear the lavender. It will enhance the colour of your blue eyes.”

“I shall surprise both of you.” Kate ignored their petty war of words and wondered why she yearned to see Captain Howard. 

Oh, the young gentleman was tall and broad of chest, and she supposed his face was handsome enough. In her mind’s eye, she tried to reconstruct the captain’s high cheekbones, broad forehead, and square jaw. Well, of one thing she could be certain; his was the complexion of a gentleman accustomed to being out in all weathers. 

Restless, she smoothed her apron. There were many good-looking men in town, some of them far more handsome than the captain. Why did an insignificant naval officer occupy her thoughts? Kate shook her head, unable to build a complete mental picture of him and capture the fiery light of his eyes in her memory. Whatever his complexion, it did not matter because the very essence of him would remain the same. 

She shrugged in an attempt to convince herself she was not piqued. Why should she care if Captain Howard chose not to visit her? Her lips tightened. She did care.

Jessie twitched the last fold of the lavender gown—worn over the cream petticoat—into place. 

Kate left the shelter of the screen. “Behold, gentlemen, have I not pleased both of you?”

Mister Tyrell laughed. “May I say you are a minx, madam?”

She fluttered her eyelashes. “You may not, sir.”

Kate sat at her dressing table to complete her toilette. She greeted yet more of her admirers, who praised her to the skies and offered their advice, while Jessie also admitted purveyors of fine wares, an artist, and a playwright who sought her patronage.

By the time Jessie pinned a wisp of point lace to Kate’s hair, it lacked a quarter hour before one of the clock. Kate gave up all hope of the captain’s arrival. “’Odds’ bodikins!” she exclaimed to vent her irritation. “Go,” she said to the purveyors of fine goods and the playwright.

Mister Stafford sighed as he shook his head. “Lady Sinclair, I never expected to hear such an oath issue from your pretty lips.”

“Upon my honour, Stafford,” Mister Tyrell began, “your objection to such a pretty little oath smacks of the schoolmaster.”

Someone knocked on the door. Hope bubbled through Kate. Perhaps the captain had changed his mind.

Her tirewoman answered the summons. “Flowers, my lady.” 

John and Simon, two of Kate’s lackeys, entered the bedchamber, their arms overflowing with red roses which filled the room with fragrance more potent than that of the narcissi.

“How beautiful! Please hand me one of the flowers, Jessie.” Kate looked at her lackeys.

“Who sent them?” 

Simon inclined his head. “Captain Howard brought them with his compliments.” 

“Is the captain still here?”  “No, my lady,” John said.

She indicated the Delft vases on either side of the marble fireplace. “Have them refilled with the roses.”

Mister Tyrell’s eyes narrowed. “Such extravagance. I would not embarrass a lady thus.” 

Her face alive with curiosity, Gertrude Corby, Kate’s plump, widowed mother, bustled into the room. “What beautiful roses. Pray tell me who sent them?” 

Stafford and Tyrell bowed to her mother while Kate peered into her mirror, a treasure from the east, framed with carved rosewood. She scrutinised her face, grateful because her mask of powder and paint concealed her heightened colour.

Satisfied with her appearance, she shortened the stem of the rose with scissors, stripped it of its thorns, and tucked the fragrant blossom into the bosom of her gown.

“What a sweet boy,” Kate mused. “Where did he find roses in May?”

“The weather is mild enough to advance the season,” Gertrude remarked. “If they were picked in bud and brought indoors, I think they opened in the warmth.”

Mister Tyrell clenched his fists. Stafford’s tight pressed lips reminded Kate of a baited mousetrap. A clock chimed the hour of one. Both gallants made their farewells, bowed, and withdrew with the other visitors.

Gertrude sank onto a chair. “A boy, you said, Daughter, I hope you are not about to trifle with yet another green youth’s affections.”

“I don’t trifle with any man’s affections. ’Tis not my fault if I am admired.”

“Be warned. One day, when you are old, no one will admire you.”

Kate scowled. Heavens above, she would never allow anyone to treat her in the manner her odious husband had treated her, carping and criticising, as well as punishing her for minor misdemeanours. She shifted on her chair, imagining she could still feel the sting of his cane.

“What do I care, Mother? I live to amuse myself.”

Gertrude’s weak chin quivered. “You will care one day. You have never suffered. For now, you are too heartless to understand what it is like to be alone and unloved at my age.” 

Her parents had never dealt well together. Kate knew her mother frankly preferred widowhood, so the words did not touch her heart. “Oh, don’t be so histrionic. You are not alone in this house full of people.” 

Kate’s brow furrowed. Could anyone blame her for not loving a parent, who, when she was a small child, relinquished custody of her as though she had no more importance than an unwanted kitten? A mother, who had not even been concerned with her education.

She shrugged. Nothing could change her past, so why waste time blaming her impoverished parents, who handed her over to her father’s elder brother and his barren wife in the expectation of him settling his fortune upon her. They could not have foreseen that Uncle Matthew would lose everything at the card tables. A young girl’s voice, hurt and betrayed, whispered deep within her. Mother should have done her utmost to dissuade Father from consenting to my uncle marrying me off to Sinclair. By law, Uncle was not my legal guardian so Father could have prevented the marriage but he did not want to.

Gertrude tapped her foot on the floor. “Have you nothing to say?” 

“I trust you don’t think I have failed in my duty toward you, Mother,” Kate replied, unable to bring herself to make a false declaration of daughterly love. “Please have the goodness to excuse me. I am going to shop at The Exchange.”

 

* * *

 

Halfway to the famous shopping mart, Kate changed her mind and ordered the men carrying her sedan to proceed along the narrow streets to Mrs Radcliffe’s house. She alighted from the sedan with the firm intention of obtaining Captain Howard’s address. Near the doorstep, she attempted to justify her decision. After all, politeness required her to either thank the captain in person for the roses or to leave him a note of thanks. She fingered the fragrant blossom at her bosom while gazing down into its golden heart.

When she raised her head, she saw Captain Howard walking toward her with brisk footsteps. Upon catching sight of her, he increased his pace.

“Good day, Lady Sinclair. I trust you are well.” His dark eyes gleamed. He indicated the rose. “I am flattered to see red and white nestled so charmingly together.”

For a moment, she did not understand his comparison of the skin of her partially revealed bosom to a white rose. When she did, she pressed her hand to her breast. “Captain, you make me blush. I cannot imagine what prompted you to speak thus.”

“Can you deny it is as though the red rose of Lancaster, and the white rose of York, battle within you?” 

Kate stared over his shoulder. “It is nonsensical of you to allude to the ‘Wars of the Roses,’ Captain.” She scrutinised his face. “Sir, I came to procure your direction from Mrs Radcliffe so that I could write a note of thanks for the roses. Our meeting spares me the task. Thank you for sending such beautiful flowers. Good day to you.”

“I am honoured, milady, because you came in person instead of sending your foot page to make enquiries.”

Kate bent her head, hoping he did not guess she had wanted to see him again.

“Milady, I am staying with Mrs Radcliffe. Will you not come inside and partake of refreshment?”

“No. Thank you. I must go.”

“Good day, milady.” The captain emphasised the word but did not seek to detain her. In silence, he tucked her hand into the crook of his arm, and then led her to the sedan emblazoned with the Sinclair coat of arms. 

“The Exchange,” Kate ordered her coachman.

Captain Howard’s luminous eyes looked into hers for a moment before he broke the spell and handed her into the conveyance.

 

Chapter Three

 

 Edward watched Kate’s sedan until it turned the corner at the end of the street. Her pride, high spirits, her vivacious manner and unique style of dressing, intrigued him. 

He turned to stare at Mrs Radcliffe’s house. His godmother’s superfine gallant of gallants, Clarence Newton, stood by the railings.

Edward’s lips twitched. Older than Mrs Radcliffe, Sir Newton dressed like a youngster newly come into an estate; his slim body encased in finery like a sausage in a skin. Edward grinned. No doubt “stays” compressed his lordship.

“Good day, m’dear boy,” Newton said.

“Good day, sir.”

“Ah, can’t help noticing you are looking at m’hat. A fashion entirely m’own.” He stroked his hat as though it were a pet. “Why, I asked m’self, do gentlemen always wear black beaver hats? So, for a change, I chose cherry red felt.” He patted the hat. “A bold venture is it not?”

“Yes,” Edward said, on the verge of laughter. “You will cause a sensation both at the coffeehouse and your club.”

“So, say I. If the ladies, bless ’em, cover their heads with red mantles, why then, I said to

Paine—he is my valet you know—Clarence Newton can wear a red hat.”

Edward did know. Since boyhood, he had been acquainted with Newton’s devoted, but longsuffering valet. He laughed to himself, imagining Paine’s horrified expression when confronted with the reality of that hat.

Newton looked at his headgear with evident satisfaction. He perched it on top of his full bottomed grey wig. “Enough of hats. Though your business is not my affair, I must say I don’t care to see you keeping company with the Countess of Sinclair.”

“You are right, Sir Newton, my business is not your affair.”

“No need to take umbrage with me, m’boy. I recall the day when your nurse said,Pull up your skirts and piss like a man. Now, will you come into your godmother’s house with me?” “Yes, sir,” Edward said, chastened by the elderly gentleman’s words.

After Sir Newton ascended the shallow flight of steps, he applied the brass knocker in the shape of a ferocious dragon’s head.

Edward sighed, ashamed of his anger toward an old man with naught but his best interests at heart. “It is always a pleasure to see you, sir.”

Newton turned around. His smile explained why his godmother liked Sir Newton so much. Despite the gentleman’s vanity, he possessed a heart as warm as his smile. He did not gossip and had no known vices in this age of debauchery and excessive gambling. 

Edward decided to make a peace offering. “Do you know the Countess of Sinclair well?”

Newton nodded. “Yes, she is a distant relative of mine. I must say I pity her. Old beliefs concerning men’s rights over women die hard, but her husband’s treatment of her was deplorable.” The front door opened while Newton continued. “I am not one for tittle-tattle so I must not say more. Forgot m’self for a moment. Forgive an old man.”

Edward’s jaw tightened. Why had the late earl banished his countess? He kept pace with Newton while they followed the butler to the salon, with walls hung with wallpaper imitating white marble, a foil for many mirrors and oil paintings. 

Seated on a sofa opposite the tall, narrow windows, his godmother held court among her afternoon callers. Several ladies, including Mrs Martyn and her daughter, and half a dozen or more fashionably attired men, filled the salon. 

“My two favourite gentlemen,” Frances said, a smile in her eyes when Edward approached with Newton. 

Edward disengaged his arm before he kissed her cheek, his mind filled with thoughts of the bewitching countess.

Sir Newton lowered himself onto the sofa beside Frances Radcliffe and kissed each finger of her white, diamond-ringed hand while she cooed with appreciation.

All his thoughts still of Kate, Edward retreated to the opposite side of the salon. He stood between a pair of tall potted palms, recreating Kate’s unique smile in his mind’s eye.

The movement of a fan, wielded by a young lady seated on a sofa opposite him, attracted his attention. Upon recognising Mistress Martyn, his brow creased. He choked back his amusement, well aware of Mrs Radcliffe’s determination to alter his bachelor state.

Well versed in the language of fans, he understood what Mistress Martyn meant when she put her fan near her heart. You have won my love, the unspoken message stated. To whom was the silent message addressed? Bold of Mistress Martyn to risk such a declaration while seated by her mother, yet the sly puss had chosen her moment well. Mrs Martyn’s head was turned away from her daughter while she conversed with another matron seated beside her.

Edward glanced around the room. Had Mistress Martyn signalled to the foppish youth neatly attired in puce and cream who stood to one side of the fireplace? He raised his eyebrows. Could the chit have been foolish enough to communicate with Cyril Fenton, a man of mature age, whom, at the very least, gentlemen considered a very strange card? Thoughtful, he gazed at Fenton, who stood on the other side of the fireplace.

Despite his dubious reputation, Mister Fenton—a man of good birth and heir to his rich uncle, a baron—knew how to charm the ladies, although his heart never seemed to be in his fulsome compliments. Edward shook his head. Rumour said the baron’s days were numbered while he lay on his sickbed, and Fenton would soon inherit the title, together with a large fortune.

Edward watched the fellow advance toward Mistress Martyn. Fenton bowed. “Good day to you, sir,” Mrs Martyn said. “Will you not join us? I am sure my daughter is delighted to see you.”

Mistress Martyn’s hand gripped her fan until her knuckles whitened. She bent her head, her cheeks suffused with a rush of colour. 

Edward frowned. It seemed his godmother’s protégée disliked the gentleman. So, why did Mrs Martyn encourage him? Had she set her heart on a title for her daughter? Surely the woman could find a better match for the girl. Was she fool enough to be blinded by Fenton’s superficial charm?

Mrs Martyn and the other matron stood. Fenton sat next to Mistress Martyn. To Edward’s disgust, Fenton not only greeted Mistress Martyn with a prolonged kiss on the mouth, but also grabbed her hand and kissed it. Like Kate, would Mistress Martyn be offered up on the altar of unhappy matrimony?

Edward made his way to his godmother’s side. “I am surprised to see that reprobate, Fenton, in your salon,” he said under his breath, although Mistress Martyn’s fate was not his concern.

“Does your young friend need to be rescued from him?”

“Bah, reprobate is a strong word for a delightful gentleman, Edward.” 

He decided not to disillusion his godmother by repeating the rumours about Fenton circulating at clubs and in coffeehouses. 

Frances snapped her fan shut. “I daresay you have some reason for calling Fenton a reprobate. Please be good enough to ask Mistress Martyn to join me. Sir Newton, would you be kind enough to make room for her to sit next to me?” With good grace, Newton stood.

Edward, determined not to do anything regarding the young lady that might be misconstrued by either his godmother or her mother, inclined his head to Newton. “My dear sir, please oblige me by conveying my godmother’s request to Mistress Martyn?”

A quiet laugh escaped Sir Newton. He inclined his head. “Mrs Radcliffe, I told you the boy is not ready to tie the knot, but you ignored me.”

Edward refused to allow his irritation at being called a boy to show. “Sir Newton is right.” “Indeed.” Frances pursed her rouged lips.

“Godmother, to be blunt, I am not ready to be hand-fasted and request you to cease your endeavours on my behalf.”

“But, Edward, dear Jane is so eligible. Look at her, she is pretty and her manners are pleasing.”

“I think,” Edward began, “that Mrs Martyn desires a title for her daughter. Besides, my taste does not run to chicks newly hatched from the schoolroom. What is more, my means are sufficient for my needs. I don’t need to marry money. My brother is generous. Also, I have my inheritance and my prize money which are more than sufficient for my needs. Please don’t inconvenience yourself by introducing me to any more eligible ladies.” 

To take the sting from his frank declaration, Edward kissed his godmother’s cheek. He wished his conscience had not prompted him to draw her attention to Fenton and Mistress Martyn. The chit did not interest him. How could she when no lady compared favourably to Kate?

 

* * *

 

Frances snapped her fan shut. Provoking boy! Earlier on, she had seen Edward tête-à-tête with Kate from her window. Obviously, his taste ran to more sophisticated ladies than dear Jane. She pressed her lips together, worldly-wise enough to know she was powerless to prevent a man from pursuing his inclinations, even if they would lead to disaster. No matter how much she wished to, it would be impertinent to speak of her misgivings to Kate.

“Mrs Radcliffe.” Jane executed a perfect curtsey.

Sir Newton bowed. “Now I have brought Mistress Martyn to you, I hope you will be good enough to excuse me.”

“And please excuse me, madam,” Jane said. “I am faint and need some air. With your permission I will take a turn in your garden.”

The young lady looked at her mother, who, with her back to them, sat deep in conversation. Mistress Martyn gathered her skirts in her small hands before hastening across the salon.

“What extraordinary conduct,” Frances remarked. “But ’pon my word the chit must not sally forth alone. Edward, see no harm comes to her.”

 

* * *

 

Edward noted the young fop to whom Mistress Martyn earlier signalled was following her. His lips twitched. “I doubt she is at risk in your garden.” Perhaps the youngsters fancied themselves in the roles of those blighted lovers, Romeo and Juliet.

“Edward,” Frances insisted.

“I am pleased to obey you, madam, provided Sir Newton will accompany me.” Edward had spoken, aware that if by malign chance Mrs Martyn discovered him on his own in the garden with her daughter, it would be tantamount to his making an offer for the young lady’s hand in marriage. 

In the vestibule, Edward grinned at Newton. “I doubt Mistress Martyn wishes for our presence.”

Fenton rushed out from the salon. “Where is Mistress Martyn?” he asked a lackey.

Edward exchanged a knowing glance with Newton.

Before the lackey could reply Newton stepped up to Fenton. “Good day, tell me what think you of m’hat,” he said with the obvious intention of preventing Fenton from finding Mistress Martyn.

“Your hat, Sir Newton?” Fenton asked, with palpable surprise.

“Yes, m’hat.”

“A monstrosity, sir.”

“You are too unkind, but I feared you might say so,” Newton murmured as he seized Fenton’s arm. “M’dear sir, do me the honour of coming to m’club to discuss the merits of red hats.”

Edward grinned. Few gentlemen would turn down an invitation from wealthy, influential Newton.

“Come,” Newton urged Fenton with the manner of one interested in nothing more in the world than fashion.

At the precise moment at which the lackey closed the front door behind Newton and Fenton, Mistress Martyn entered the vestibule, the colour in her cheeks heightened. 

“Captain Howard, I did not expect to see you here. The garden is beautiful, is it not? I must return to the salon. My mother might be looking for me.”

He took pity on her incoherence. “I trust the fresh air benefited you.” 

After Mistress Martyn nodded, she hurried back to the salon. A minute or two later, the handsome, puce and cream clad youth followed her.

Edward sighed as he went up to his rooms. There was more to Mistress Martyn than either his godmother or her mother suspected. He dismissed the young lady from his mind. When would he see Kate again?

 

* * *

 

Edward smiled. Glorious to lounge, at ease, with money enough to suffice in this, the queen of cities, with its bustling River Thames, the skyline of Sir Christopher Wren’s beautiful churches, and a peaceful rural landscape on its fringes. He linked his hands behind his head. In comparison to the cramped conditions on board ship, it was luxury to stretch out on a four-poster bed in his godmother’s London house—although his body, toughened by conditions at sea, had always adjusted to austerity without difficulty. Yet, when ashore, he could not relinquish his passion for the sea, and he painted seascapes, as well as landscapes of foreign countries.

He looked up at the red velvet canopy, embroidered with threads of gold, and sighed with satisfaction. An excellent hostess, his godmother placed great importance on physical comfort and good food. However, he must remain vigilant to avoid gaining weight and letting his teeth rot from over-indulgence in sweet dishes.

Maybe Kate would enjoy a picnic in the country. Edward smiled. He sat up, imagining a tryst that would not compromise her reputation. He knew the very place to take her.

The countess aroused his curiosity. Yes, she was high-spirited, but he had seen fleeting sadness in her eyes. Was it due to her unhappy marriage or something else? 

She was a lady without comparison, beautiful, mysterious, and vivacious. After he dined, he would take the air in Hyde Park in the hope of encountering her.

 

 The Captain and the Countess is available from all your favourite bookstores from:-

 

https://bookstoread.com/The-Captain-and-the-Countess

 

https://rosemarymorris.co.uk

Tuesday, June 4, 2024

Spring Piglets: A Short Story about Grampa by Julie Christen

 

    This time of year on a farm is so full of new life, which often translates to new perspectives for me. It's a time to look forward to the future, but for some reason - especially as I grow older - springtime sends my thoughts to the past too. 

    Here is a short story reminiscing of a time when I learned something - something about life as well as something about people. Country Magazine showcased it in its "The Way It Was" section back in 2012. I thank my "scary" Grampa Frank Spiekermeier for it. 

    This is for him.

Spring Piglets 

By Julie Christen

            At dawn, I wake in the farmhouse. I sneak soundlessly from my little cot under the window to my suitcase where I dress without a sound into my purple corduroys and Black Stallion shirt. I am not supposed to be up. The creaky stairs threaten to give away my early rising, but I continue down on tip-toe.

            The box elder bugs slowly creep along the windowsill as the sun begins to brighten the living room. The grandfather clock ticks. My feet are soundless still.

            Around the corner, I see the long kitchen counter span all the way to the breezeway. Grandma Olive stands in her housecoat and slippers gazing out the kitchen sink window at her dewy, no-frills vegetable garden while she sips her first of many cups of black coffee.

            Grampa Frank’s massive frame, dressed in pin-striped overalls swelling at the seams, sits in his spot at the end of the room on his black, vinyl-covered steel chair. His heavy boots, already muddied, grind gravel into the flooring. I see him rustling through a shoebox full of papers and receipts. He smokes a cigarette, probably not his first of the day and certainly not his last, and slurps coffee from a thermos while he listens to the tinny radio squawk about weather and crop prices and news.

            They are silent. They are the past.

            I bite the side of my lip and peek into the kitchen. It is so early for little blonde-haired girls to be up. I am up, nonetheless.

            “Well. It’s our little Julie Andrews,” Grampa says then laughs a gravelly, “Heh, heh, heh,” and grunts.

            He so often finds me in the hay shed singing to the mice. “Doe, A Deer” is my favorite.

            Coughing, coughing, coughing. Juicy, croupy, gurgly coughing. Heavy wheezy breathing. “You’re up early!”

            Grampa Frank has a gruff voice and a gruff demeanor. He is kind of scary. I just sidle up next to Grandma Olive.

            “Let’s get you some breakfast,” she says.

She fries me an egg and sits me down at the metal kitchen table. My tiny juice glass with the orange slices on the outside is filled with freshly squeezed orange juice. I try to strain the pulp through my teeth, but I end up politely chewing the juice, regardless.

They have their routine, quiet and busy all at the same time. My legs are antsy to move about. I begin playing my own kind of hopscotch on the black and white linoleum squares.

“Listen, Julie honey,” Grandma Olive says, “can’t you do that somewhere else?”

I am underfoot. I go to the adjacent dining room and stare out the picture window at the crab apple tree in the picket-fenced front yard. Nothing to do. Nothing to do.

“Say, Julie.” Her no-nonsense tone startles me out of my daydreaming. “Go with Grampa Frank,” Grandma Olive tells me.

So few words. Why did they use so few words?

I swallow a nervous lump in my throat. Grampa is already gone, his heavy footfalls pounding mercilessly. Coughing. The screen door groans and slams in complaint. I hear “Outa the way, damn it!” and cats screeching. They sit at the door looking for warmth or a scrap from Gramma, but that puts them underfoot. I know how they feel.

I can hear Bocci’s and Brownie’s toenails scratching the garage floor as they prance around his feet. The big, hairy German shepherd and golden mutt are always happy to see me too. They never think I’m in the way.

The animals compel me to go.

Following the trail of cigarette smoke, I slip on my rubber boots and windbreaker in the breezeway. By the time I greet the dogs, rub their bellies, and scratch their ears, I see Grampa is already lumbering to the hog barn.

Does he really want me with him? I wonder. He doesn’t so much as say my name or turn around to motion me toward him. He just keeps walking. This is all Grandma’s terrible idea, I think.

Stalling, I reach for the comfort of the black barn cat sitting amongst the disaster of shop tools on the workbench. It doesn’t have a name. Barn cats are for mousing. And that is it.

But I hold this one and scratch his ears while his grumbly purr soothes me, and I stare out the garage door toward the hog barn. Brownie and Bocci are already off romping into their next adventure. No one would see hide nor tail of them until nightfall, unless of course, Grampa gives a whistle.

With the dogs gone, I decide that even if Grampa really doesn’t want me with him, I will hang in the shadows of straw bales and watch him work. This is far better than being lonely.

Some clanging and banging echoes from the hog barn, but I can’t make out what Grampa Frank is doing in there. As I draw a little nearer, some thrashing and scrambling and screaming stops me in my tracks. Horror fills my veins.

What is he doing to those pigs?

I know that life on the farm is very different than my life by the lake. I know it can be … harsh. Sunday dinner’s pork chops or fried chicken or roast beef doesn’t just drop from the sky. It comes from the animals fattened in the coup and the pens and the fields.

My heart grips my chest as I wonder if Grampa is going to teach me about the harsh realities of life today. Is he planning to show me how to toughen up? Make me learn that the world is a nasty place, and you have to get over it if you want food on your plate? Is he going to try to show me how I can’t just daydream and sing songs and climb around on hay bales all day?

My throat tightens as I clench my jaw and absentmindedly squeeze the black cat. But that only makes him meow and jump out of my arms. I am on my own for the rest of the journey.

When I arrive, I see my grampa leaning over a makeshift pen of straw bales. He doesn’t look at me, but I go to him. I hear snuffling and shuffling on the other side.

When I look into the pen, I see them. Ten black and white piglets, hardly bigger than a breadbox. They’re rummaging and rutting around exploring their new space. I look up, up, up to my grampa’s face and find that he is now looking at me with a toothless grin.

He shoves his cap high on his forehead and asks, “What do you think? Do you want one?”

“Want one?” I whisper.

“Sure. To play with today. You pick out your favorite, and I’ll shoo out the rest of these.”

“Just for me? Like … he’s mine?”

Coughing. “Yep. Just like he’s yours.”

We analyze all ten discussing their markings and determining which ones have the best personalities. It’s the longest conversation I have ever had, and will ever have, with my grampa.

At long last, I pick out one piglet with a particularly interesting pattern of spots and a rambunctious personality. I name him Spot. Grampa Frank stays with me while I chase my piglet around and try to teach it tricks. He laughs his “heh, heh, heh” laugh in between coughs while he leans against the gate.

“Can I pick him up, Grampa?” I ask.

“Sure, you can. Just don’t go dropping him. He’s damn wiggly, that one.”

“I know it,” I manage to say while I strain to get Spot into my arms. “I’ll tame him, though.”

“I’d like to see that,” he says pushing his bushy eyebrows up high.

The piglet squirms with all his might, but I manage to set him down gently before he falls.

Grampa Frank grunts then says, “Go get him again there, little Julie Andrews,” as he waggles a beefy finger at me. That makes me laugh for some reason, and I am off after my pig in the dust and the straw.

As the morning warms, I play, and Grampa watches. I can tell that there is no ulterior motive to educate me on the cruel realities of the world today. Nor will there ever be. He sees me for who I am, and he is enjoying a little frivolous time with his youngest granddaughter. For the time being, I don’t recall his gravelly, scratchy nature. In fact, I wonder how I ever could have thought him scary.

I do not know, of course, that in two short years, Grampa Frank will be gone. Something about those cigarettes and that nagging cough of his. And though it will matter so very much in two year’s time, it does not matter at this moment. This is my morning with my grampa and the piglet he has given me for a day.

Grampa Frank's Spotted Poland China Piglets




Monday, June 3, 2024

One Take Jake by Jay Lang

 

 

For purchase information click here to visit Jay Lang's BWL Author page

One Take Jake

             While outlining this rock and roll thriller, I experienced the strangest thing
The moment I began typing the first sentence, the characters sprang to life, guiding me through an incredible journey. I found myself struggling to keep pace with them, quickly jotting down the exciting scenes unfolding before my eyes.

The subject matter of sexual abuse within the music industry was undeniably grim. However, I felt a strong urge to address it after reading headline news about a musician charged with drugging and raping young girls. Despite knowing that certain aspects of this story would be difficult to confront, I believed it was crucial to shine a light into this dark corner and discuss the long-term effects on the victims of these horrendous crimes.

Much to my amazement, over a dozen high-profile musicians joined my story ad wrote compelling quotes in the book. Their determination to speak out on this issue was fueled by a deep-seated resentment toward the predators who used the music industry as a breeding ground for their crimes.  

Before writing this book, I had firsthand experience with celebrities and the music industry. Having worked as both an actress and a clothing designer for rock bands, I gained valuable insights into the entertainment industry. This prior experience greatly helped to authentically navigate the settings of this rock and roll story.
Among the many books I've written, "One Take Jake" stands out as the story that most closely mirrors my own character.
"One Take Jake" and its newly released sequel, "One Take Jake: Last Call," hold a special place in my heart. They're like my babies, and I love them deeply. If you are a thrill seeker and love a fast-paced murder mystery, I think you’ll enjoy these books.




Thanks for reading, Jay Lang

Sunday, June 2, 2024

What readers have wanted to know by donalee Moulton

                                         


                                                      Click here for purchase information.



I’ve been doing a lot of book readings and book signings recently. It’s a wonderful opportunity to meet readers and discuss all things mystery. They also keep me on my toes. Here are some questions I’ve been asked recently.

What was the first seed of an idea you had for your mystery book? How did it develop?

 

It started with a bath. I’m a big believer in bubbles, candles, scrubs, essential oils, and music with birds chirping in the background. Friends call this bathroom time my shrine. One night immersed in a lavender cloud I realized it was time to begin writing my mystery. Get off the pot kind of thing. That led me to a litany of possible characters and crimes. Through the mist Riel emerged. Not fully formed but outlined enough that I wrote down my ideas before I even moisturized.

How did you celebrate the publication of your first book?

Sunday dinners are a tradition in our family and at our house. Over the years the faces around the table have changed, but they are all family and friends. It’s not unusual for us to have 10 or more people for dinner, and dinner is a communal process: cooking, cleaning, setting the table, making tea.

Hung Out to Die is dedicated to my 95-year-old godmother. When the first copy of the book was in my hands, three of us decided to surprise her with this inaugural copy and celebrate its publication. As we were sipping tea and finishing the last of dessert, I gave my godmother the book and directed her to the dedication page. She started to cry and without speaking passed the book to the next person at the table. They began to cry. They passed the book on. It made its way around to everyone. Most of us were in tears, even those of us who knew why my godmother cried even before the book reached them.

What a wonderful way to celebrate my first mystery novel.   

How would you describe your writing process? Do you outline? Let the muse lead you? Or something else?

 

I am not a marathon writer. I am a sprinter. I can’t sit and write for hours at a time. I break up my writing by taking a yoga class, soaking up some sunshine, checking email, doing some paid work. I do try to write 1,000 fictional words a day. Some days I achieve this. We don’t need to talk about the other days.

 

I love the idea of plotting out my books from beginning to end. However, the idea remains just that. I have the most basic of plot outlines and work from there, filling in and exploring options as the writing unfolds. When the characters become their own people, I know I’m on the right track.

When you get the edits back from your editor, how do you work through that process?

I’m a firm believer in the importance and power of editing. When I get an edited anything back – novel, article, short story – I read through the comments and take some time to think about them. Then I dive in. Often I agree with the editor; sometimes there is a compromise. Always the writing is better for another set of eyes. 

What books have influenced you as a writer? 

When I was about eight or nine, a next-door neighbor tossed me a Nancy Drew book. She thought I might like it. I sat on the curb between our two houses and read the entire book cover to cover. I loved the puzzle, figuring out who dunnit, and being propelled into a world outside my own. 

That same year someone gifted me Charlotte’s Web, and my life was forever changed. Not only could words transport you to new worlds, they could become a part of your heart, change you in ways you could not have imagined. I wanted to do that.

 

What is the best piece of advice about writing that you have ever heard or read? What would you tell aspiring writers today? 

Write. This sounds simple. Many days it isn’t. Some call this dedication, others devotion. I’m not sure it matters what it’s called as long as it happens. You will never be a better writer, you will never write another book if you don’t sit down in front of your computer screen and begin to put words in front of you.




 

Saturday, June 1, 2024

BWL Publishing New Releases for June 2024

 


Releasing June 2024

Twice Hung

Book 10, Canadian Historical Mysteries - Prince Edward Island

Vanessa Hawkins

Ethel Arsenault's been hearing noises in her brother's house ever since she arrived from Summerside, but when he turns up dead, could the supernatural be to blame, or her sister-in-law Dolly who's been caught talking to herself when night falls?

Ethel isn't sure, nor is she happy when she's left alone to care for Ernest's estate. Was her brother the victim of sweet, little Dolly Arsenault, or is some other sinister force at work? The city of Charlottetown is quick to point the blame at Dolly, but now Ethel has been hearing things in the house...

 

 ... or is it just her imagination?

 

 

 

Thursday, May 30, 2024

A Thing or Two about Running by Eden Monroe

 


Click here to purchase

In Sunrise Interrupted, movie star Alexandra Martel is a recreational runner, and what better way to ease away the tensions of a hard day on set than to go for an early-morning jog in the beautiful New Brunswick countryside.

“… off she went in a soul-pounding run down the narrow secondary road. The birdsong itself was rich and luxuriant as she drank in lungfuls of crisp fresh air. The smells of the fields, the flowers, the trees, just nature itself as it was laid before her inviting the warmth of the sun preparing to make its grand entrance above the horizon. Oh how she had missed this.

“There was nothing to compare with being in nature, nothing filled up the soul in quite the same way. She usually ran in the city but it in no way compared to this. How she missed her uncomplicated life in New Brunswick. She knew her family loved hearing about her glamourous lifestyle as a movie person, but there was much that was lost too.”

Running, or jogging as it was originally called, gained popularity in North America during the early 1970’s and has never looked back. Now a global sensation, we look to New Zealand for the origin of the sport as we know it today (atreyu.com). Arthur Lydiard was an outstanding athletics coach in that country, and is “widely regarded as the founder of modern jogging.” It was during the late 1950’s and early 1960’s that Lydiard implemented this new form of training for his athletes, a low-intensity exercise that he called jogging. His goal was to improve their overall fitness and endurance, while avoiding excess strain on their bodies. His vision “revolutionized the sport of distance running” as well as motivating a new generation of fitness seekers.

According to Vox.com, the US craze can date its inception back to Bill Bowerman, a running coach at the University of Oregon, who is described as legendary. He was made aware of the phenomenon of jogging while on a trip to New Zealand where he met Arthur Lydiard, and immediately became convinced of its many physical benefits. As a future co-founder of Nike, it seems he also understood the importance of proper footwear in which to run. He also wrote a book on the subject with Dr. W. E. Harris entitled “Jogging”, which is “justifiably credited with kick-starting a movement.”

Dr. Kenneth Cooper of the United States also advocated the health benefits of running. He is also considered “a key figure in the history of jogging” and it was Dr. Cooper who coined the term “aerobics.”

But people have been running for eons. It was a necessary component of a successful hunt in order to survive. The hunter’s fitness and speed were both important elements in chasing down their chosen prey to the point of exhaustion, a vital tactic that enabled them to make the kill. According to Eastermichael.com: “The researchers discovered the bones of prehistoric homo sapiens were more dense than ours, suggesting early humans likely ran far more often—and for longer distances. Other studies suggest many early humans had the running capacity of today’s competitive cross-country athletes.”

As for competitive running, there were plenty of running events at the Ancient Olympic games in Olympia, Greece, from completing three marathons in one day to chasing down a live hare. These ancient competitors were the real deal and included such superstars as Leonidas of Rhodes who mastered so many of these events he was “arguably the most impressive Olympian of all-time”. (Olympics.com)

However, not everyone can or will become an Olympic god for their efforts, but today millions lace up for their daily jog, or weekend-warrior marathon. But when the craze first began in the sixties in the United States, anyone who wasn’t a serious athlete, such as a boxer, was considered to be engaging in “suspicious activity” says Vox.com. That was the reason given by police when Senator Strom Thurmond was stopped while jogging in Greenville, South Carolina in 1968.

Jogging was considered an amusing trend, according to a New York Times piece that referred to those who took part in the activity as  “a handful of unusual freaks who chose to run in their free time.”

Runners today enjoy a plethora of running events, other than a brisk jog for good health. For the keenest of them all there are the ultra runs, the top ten in that category considered to be the toughest in the world, so says Redbull.com. The following are the top three:

At number one is the Hardrock Endurance Run 100 held in Colorado. With altitude (10,000 metres), wilderness, storms and steep drops, it’s considered to be “the toughest 100-miler in the US.”

Number two features The Jungle Marathon in Brazil, two hundred kilometres in which you’ll contend with swamps, snakes, mosquitoes, leeches, crocs and mud. It’s billed as the “world’s most terrifying adventure”.

In third place is Montane Yukon Arctic Ultra, described by organizers as “… cold, very cold”. Its distance is 692 kilometres (about 430 miles), with a climb of 6,000 metres. The hazards of this Canadian adventure are hypothermia, frostbite and exhaustion. It’s “the world’s coldest and toughest ultra thanks to the epic conditions”. If you decide to enter this race you’ll be pulling a sled with all your mandatory equipment and food aboard in temperatures that average between plus twelve degrees Celsius and minus twenty-five degrees Celsius. “Just surviving is an achievement.” There is little room for error.

Kind of makes the Saturday morning run look pretty tame by comparison, but then one never knows. Alexandra thought her sunrise jog would be a routine affair, but it turned out to be something quite different altogether. Some might even consider her run to be the most dangerous of all:

“He crested another knoll, passing basecamp on his left but there was no sign of her, and then ahead in the distance he saw something on the side of the road and he cut his speed. It had to be her! His heart was drumming a spectacular tattoo now that the moment of contact was at hand.

“He had the black hood ready on the passenger seat, the rag soaked with chloroform in a plastic bag. She was just a few feet ahead of him now….”

 

https://www.bookswelove.com/monroe-eden/

 

Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Mysterious Mythical May


 Amazon  
http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B004HIX4GS

Weather-wise, May can be a checkered month. I often saw snow in May in my upstate NY childhood during the early 50's. The last time I had such a surprise was while living near Hartford, CT, when I boarded a commuter bus, annoyed that I had snow all over my new high heels. The entire drive to bus, along slippery country roads, I'd seen the white stuff threatening to break the blossoming branches in orchards and front yards. I'm not likely to ever see that again! 


May even feels a little a little unsteady, at least inside my seasonally-minded head. From the little we can know about early European religions, it appears many of our ancient relations felt that way too. May was a between month--between winter and summer--neither one thing nor the other. In many cultures, then as now, it was a time of clearing out of the grime left behind by winter cooking and heating, of freshening and storing away of the heaviest clothing. On the farms, young animals now frolicked in the fields; fresh milk was in. The spring cycle of plowing and planting was already underway, but, in the spiritual sense, this month was a pause.

Now, you may be thinking "Well, what about May Day and May Eve, two nights of dancing, feasting, and coupling, with or without, benefit of clergy?" All that is also true. May traditionally began with a party. We are familiar with the British tradition has the men riding out at dawn wearing sprigs of blooming Hawthorn followed by the Maypole dance. Perhaps the disconnect is a result of a lunar calendar and a year which accomodated thirteen months instead of our twelve. At any rate,



the "unlucky" time, the time of mourning and cleansing, the time of celibacy and onerous spring cleaning, began later in our May, perhaps beginning on the 13th and extending until the 9th of June.

"Ne'er cast a clout ere May be out." (Don't change your clothing) This saying was current in Britain and even into northern Spain, for the idea of an unlucky May was widespread. May was a time to abstain from sex across ancient Europe, from Greece to the west in Ireland, explaining why, traditionally, May is unlucky for marriage. In Britain, the month is associated with the Hawthorn or "Whitethorn," the tree of the Crone Goddess Cardea, who cast spells using hawthorn branches. The Greek's called her "Maia," a deity the romantic poets have led us to believe was young and fair, but Maia actually means "grandmother," a goddess whose son conducted the dead to the underworld. The Greeks propitiated the old Crone at marriages--"for the custom was hateful to the goddess," by carrying five torches of hawthorn-wood.*  

In the temples, May was month of cleansing. Altars were purified, religious images were removed and washed, not only with water, but with rituals.  Ovid, in his Fasti, says that the Priestess of Juppiter told him that his daughter should not enter into marriage until "the Ides of June, (mid-month) for until then there is no luck for brides and husbands. Until the sweepings of the temple of Vesta have been carried down to the sea by the yellow Tiber, I must myself not comb my locks which I have cut in sign of mourning, nor pare my nails, nor cohabit with my husband, though he is High Priest of Juppiter. Be not in haste. Your daughter will have better luck in marriage when Vesta's fire burns upon a cleansed hearth."

In Welsh mythology, Yspaddaden Penkawr, the Hawthorne giant, was father to the Fair Olwen (She of the White Track). No man could have her until her father received a dowry of thirteen treasures--all nearly impossible to obtain, of course. At last, a hero arrived. This man, fated to marry her, was named Kilhwych. Olwen was kept mewed up in a castle which was guarded by nine porters and nine watch dogs--note all those magical numbers! Until the unlucky power of May was broken, the Hawthorn's curse held sway.


 In Ireland, we find  many legends concerning magical wells and associated Hawthorn trees. According to E.M. Hull 's "Folklore of the British Isles," a man who destroys a hawthorn tree will suffer the loss of his children as well as the death of all his cattle.  In "Historic Thorn Trees of the British Isles," It is noted that 'St. Patrick's Thorn' at Tin'ahely in County Wicklow was still celebrated into the 19th Century. Here, celebrants paraded to the church and circled the holy well. Here, they tore bits of cloth from their old garments and left them upon the thorns of the ancient Hawthorn that grew there. Long ago, all over Europe, this practice was a sign of mourning and propitiation that must take place before the time of weddings and bringing in the first fruits of summer, which would take place in June. 

I realize that this has been a long wander into the tangles of ancient mythology. Much of this information comes to me from a controversial source: "The White Goddess" by Robert Graves, who was a poet, and, naturally, often occasionally afflicted by bee in his bonnet fits of hubris and madness. Nevertheless, he was also a man who understood many ancient languages well and who moved in scholarly academic circles. I find it interesting that many of his suppositions, arrived at through his knowledge of ancient languages, has actually anticipated many of the new DNA researches into the migrations of people into Europe, from the steppes and even from what is now Turkey and the Middle East. It amazed him, and it still amazes me, all the journeys that the ancestors made and the places in which they ended.


~~Juliet Waldron

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