Author | Dornford Yates |
---|---|
Series | Berry books |
Genre | Short stories |
Publisher | Ward Lock & Co[1] |
Publication date | 1914[1] |
Media type | |
Pages | 304[1] |
Followed by | The Courts of Idleness |
The Brother of Daphne is a 1914 collection of comic short stories by the English author Dornford Yates (Cecil William Mercer), the first book published under the pen name he had been using for magazine pieces since 1910. This was also the first book to feature the group of characters that featured in many of his future works: Bertram ('Berry') Pleydell, his wife and cousin Daphne Pleydell, Daphne's brother Boy Pleydell, another cousin Jonathan ('Jonah') Mansel, and Jonah's younger sister Jill Mansel. The group of five - Berry, Daphne, Boy, Jonah and Jill - later came to be known collectively as 'Berry and Co'.[2]
The short stories in the collection were originally published in The Windsor Magazine,[3] their publication in book form having been suggested to Mercer by the Windsor's editor Arthur Hutchinson.[4]
Contents
Fifteen short stories recounting the comic adventures of Boy, Daphne, Berry, Jonah and Jill, set in Hampshire, Devon, The Cotswolds, and Austria. They are narrated in the first person by Boy.
Background
Mercer was living in London and working as a barrister at the time these stories were written. He had sold short stories previously to Punch (1910), The Harmsworth Red magazine (1910) and Pearson's Magazine (1910 and 1912) before developing a working relationship with The Windsor Magazine that continued (with breaks during the war years and between 1929 and 1935) until the magazine's final issue in 1939. The Berry family characters first appear in "The Babes in the Wood" in Pearson's in September 1910, in a story that has never appeared in book form.[5]
Chapters
Chapter | Book Title | Windsor Title | Date | Volume | Issue | Pages | Illustrator |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
I | Punch And Judy | Punch And Judy | October 1911 | XXXIV | 202 | 541-551 | H Radcliffe-Wilson |
II | Clothes And The Man | There Is A Tide | August 1913 | XXXVIII | 224 | 263-271 | G C Wilmshurst |
III | When It Was Dark | A Drive In The Dark | November 1911 | XXXIV | 203 | 669-676 | Fred Pegram |
IV | Adam And New Year's Eve | Fair Exchange | January 1914 | XXXIX | 229 | 209-218 | G C Wilmshurst |
V | The Judgement of Paris | The Judgement of Paris | June 1914 | XL | 234 | 79-86 | G C Wilmshurst |
VI | Which To Adore | Which To Adore | March 1914 | XXXIX | 231 | 486-494 | G C Wilmshurst |
VII | Every Picture Tells A Story | Every Picture Tells A Story | July 1914 | XL | 235 | 201-208 | G C Wilmshurst |
VIII | The Busy Beers | Busy Bees | September 1911 | XXXIV | 201 | 391-398 | A Wallis Mills |
IX | A Point Of Honour | A Point Of Honour | October 1913 | XXXVIII | 226 | 501-507 | G C Wilmshurst |
X | Pride Goeth Before | Pride Goeth Before | April 1914 | XXXIX | 232 | 672-678 | G C Wilmshurst |
XI | The Love Scene | The Love Scene | September 1913 | XXXVIII | 225 | 383-391 | G C Wilmshurst |
XII | The Order Of The Bath | The Order Of The Bath | May 1914 | XXXIX | 233 | 685-693 | G C Wilmshurst |
XIII | A Lucid Interval | A Lucid Interval | November 1913 | XXXVIII | 227 | 621-627 | G C Wilmshurst |
XIV | A Private View | A Private View | July 1913 | XXXVIII | 223 | 141-148 | G C Wilmshurst |
XV | All Found | All Found | February 1914 | XXXIX | 230 | 371-378 | G C Wilmshurst |
Illustrations
The first edition of the book, published in 1914, included plates of the illustrations by George Cecil Wilmshurst (1873-1930), originally included in The Windsor Magazine serialisations, for the stories included as chapters 2, 4, 6, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15. The illustration from Chapter 15 "All Found" was also used on the dustjacket of the first edition. Wilmshurst's illustrations for chapters 5 and 7, and the illustrations by the three artists from the 1911 serialisations, were not included in the book. The book was reprinted in 1920, and that and subsequent editions did not include any illustrations.
Dedication
- "To Her. Who smiles for me, though I essay no jest, Whose eyes are glad at my coming, though I bring her no gift, Who suffers me readily, though I do her no honour, My Mother."
Critical reception
The book was reviewed favourably by Punch in August 1914. The reviewer called the stories "agreeable nonsense", in which the narrator "apparently could not go out for the simplest walk without meeting some amiable young woman, divinely fair and supernaturally witty, with whom he presently exchanged airy badinage".[6]
Dramatisation
An episode of the ITV Hannay series, "A Point of Honour", was based on the eponymous story published as Chapter IX of The Brother of Daphne, but the source was uncredited.
References
- 1 2 3 "British Library Item details". primocat.bl.uk. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
- ↑ Usborne 1974, pp. 28–29.
- ↑ Smithers 1982, Appendix I.
- ↑ Smithers 1982, p. 78.
- ↑ The Best of Berry (Dents Classic Thrillers 1989) introduction by Jack Adrian
- ↑ "Our Booking-Office. (By Mr Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks)". Punch. 19 August 1914.
Bibliography
- Smithers, AJ (1982). Dornford Yates. London: Hodder and Stoughton. ISBN 0 340 27547 2.
- Usborne, Richard (1974). Clubland Heroes. London: Barrie & Jenkins. ISBN 0 214 20012 4.