<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h3 id="id00008" style="margin-top: 3em">THE TRAGIC BRIDE</h3>
<p id="id00009">by</p>
<h5 id="id00010">FRANCIS BRETT YOUNG</h5>
<p id="id00011" style="margin-top: 7em">London: Martin Secker
1920</p>
<p id="id00012"> * * * * *</p>
<h5 id="id00013">WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR</h5>
<h5 id="id00014">NOVELS</h5>
<p id="id00015"> THE YOUNG PHYSICIAN<br/>
THE CRESCENT MOON<br/>
THE IRON AGE<br/>
THE DARK TOWER<br/>
DEEP SEA<br/>
UNDERGROWTH (with E. BRETT YOUNG)<br/></p>
<h5 id="id00016">POETRY</h5>
<h5 id="id00017"> FIVE DEGREES SOUTH
POEMS, 1916-1918</h5>
<h5 id="id00018">BELLES LETTRES
ROBERT BRIDGES: A CRITICAL STUDY
MARCHING ON TANGA</h5>
<p id="id00019"> * * * * *</p>
<h3 id="id00020" style="margin-top: 3em">TO</h3>
<h5 id="id00021">THE COUNTESS OF</h5>
<h5 id="id00022">PEMBROKE AND MONTGOMERY</h5>
<h2 id="id00023" style="margin-top: 4em">PROLOGUE</h2>
<p id="id00024">I never met Gabrielle Hewish. I suppose I should really call her by that
name, for her marriage took the colour out of it as surely as if she had
entered a nunnery, and adopted the frigid and sisterly label of some
female saint. Nobody had ever heard of her husband before she married
him, and nobody ever heard of Gabrielle afterwards, except those who were
acquainted with the story of Arthur Payne, as I was, and, perhaps, a
coroner's jury in Devonshire, a county where juries are more than usually
slow of apprehension. In these days you will not even find the name of
Hewish in Debrett, for Gabrielle was the baronet's only child, and when
Sir Jocelyn died, in the early days of his daughter's married life, the
family, which for the last half century had been putting out no more than
a few feeble and not astonishingly brilliant leaves on its one living
branch, withered altogether, as well it might in the thin Irish soil
where it had stubbornly held its own since the days of Queen Elizabeth.
After all, baronetcies are cheap enough in Ireland, and one more or less
could make very little difference to the amenities of County Galway,
where Roscarna, for all I know, may have been absorbed and parcelled out
by the Congested Districts Board ten years ago. Even in clubs and places
where they gossip, I doubt if the Hewishes of Roscarna are remembered,
for modern memories are short, and in Gabrielle's day the illustrated
Sunday newspapers had not contrived to specialise in the smiles of
well-connected young Irishwomen.</p>
<p id="id00025">Of course the Payne episode—I'm not sure it should not rather be called
the Payne miracle—had always lain stored somewhere in my literary attic;
its theme was too exciting for a man who deals in such lumber to have
forgotten; but that admirable woman, Mrs. Payne, had whetted my curiosity
to such an extent that I weakly promised her secrecy before she told it
to me. "I can't resist telling you," she said, "because it wouldn't be
fair of me to deprive you: it's far too much in your line." She even
flattered me: "You'd do it awfully well too, you know; but I have a sort
of sentimental regard for her—not admiration, or anything of that kind,
but an indefinite feeling that <i>noblesse oblige</i>. In her own
extraordinary way she did us a good turn, and however carefully you
wrapped it up she might recognise her portrait and feel embarrassed.
It's she that I'm thinking of, not Arthur. Arthur was too young at the
time to realize what was happening, and if he saw your picture of two
women desperately fighting over the soul or body of a boy of seventeen
who resembled himself I doubt if he'd tumble to the portrait. He's a
dear transparently honest person like his father. Still, I don't want to
hurt her, and so, if you want the story, you must gloat over it in
private, and cherish it as an unwritten masterpiece. Probably if you
<i>did</i> write it, it wouldn't be a masterpiece at all. Console yourself
with that."</p>
<p id="id00026">She told me her story—for of course I gave her the promise that she
demanded—in a midge-infested corner of the garden at Overton, while
Arthur, the unconscious subject of it, was playing tennis with the
clergyman's daughter whom he married a year later. I think Mrs. Payne
knew that this affair was coming off, and offered me the tale as a
combination of oral confession and Nunc Dimittis, watching the boy while
she told it to me with a sort of hungry maternal satisfaction, as
somebody whom she had not only brought into the world but for whose
salvation she was responsible. No doubt she had put up a hard fight for
him and had every reason to be satisfied, though Gabrielle shared the
honours of the mother's triumph in her own defeat. We sat there talking
until all the birds were silent, but a single blackbird that made a noise
in the shrubbery like that of two pebbles knocked sharply together; until
the young people on the tennis court could no longer see to play, and the
tall Californian poppies at the back of the herbaceous border that was
her special pride shone like moon-flowers in the dusk.</p>
<p id="id00027">"When I think of all that … that summer," she said with a sigh, "I'm so
thankful … so thankful." And then Arthur came back with his sweater
over his arm, swinging his racket, and she went straight up to him and
kissed him with the sort of modesty that you would have expected in a
young girl rather than a middle-aged widow.</p>
<p id="id00028">"You dear thing, Mater," he said, kissing her forehead in return.</p>
<p id="id00029">This is the land of digression into which memories of Overton lead one.
My only excuse is that part of the story, and indeed its emotional climax
belongs to Overton, to that smoothly ordered country house with its huge
sentinel elms and its peculiar atmosphere of leisure and peace. No doubt
Mrs. Payne was aware of this when she kissed her son. From the lawn
where we were sitting she could see the yew-parlour and the cypress hedge
in the shadow of which she had stood on the tremendous evening about
which she had been telling me. We walked back to the terrace, and on the
way she gave me a shy smile, half triumph, half apology. She never
mentioned the episode again and though the story fermented in my brain,
maturing, as I hoped, like a choice vintage, and has emerged from time to
time when my mind has been free from other work, I have kept my promise
and have neither repeated it nor written it till this day.</p>
<p id="id00030">Now, at last, I find myself absolved. Arthur Payne, I believe, is
happily married to the fresh young person with whom he was playing
tennis. Soon after their marriage they emigrated to the backs of Canada,
or was it New Zealand: somewhere at any rate beyond the reach of colonial
editions. Overton is now in the possession of a Midland soap-boiler.
Mrs. Payne, having fulfilled her main function in life and fearing
English winters, has retired to a small villa at Mustapha Superieur, near
Algiers, where, though she live for ever she is not likely to read this
book. And Gabrielle, the beautiful Gabrielle, is dead.</p>
<p id="id00031">The news came as a shock to me. For the moment I, who had never even set
eyes on her, suffered the pain of an almost personal bereavement; I was
moved, as poets are moved by the vanishing of something beautiful from
the earth. Was she then so beautiful? I don't know. But I like to
persuade myself that she was a fiery, elemental creature of a rare and
pathetic brilliance … for the sake of her story, no doubt. But, for
the moment, when old Colonel Hoylake, who always began his <i>Times</i> by
quotations from the obituary column—he had survived the age when births
or marriages are interesting—suddenly brought out the word Hewish:
Gabrielle Hewish, I was startled out of the state of pleasant lethargy
into which a day's fishing on the Dulas and the Matthews' beer had
plunged me, and became suddenly wide awake. I had the feeling that some
bright thing had fallen: a kingfisher, a dragonfly. "Hewish," he
murmured again. "Gabrielle Hewish … Well, well."</p>
<p id="id00032">"You know the family?"</p>
<p id="id00033">"Yes, I knew her father, poor feller," he said.</p>
<p id="id00034">Now I was full of eagerness. It had come over me all at once that this
obituary notice was, for me, a happy release. It meant that, for a month
or two, all through the mesmeric hours that I should spend up to my knees
in the swift Dulas, alone with the dippers and the ring-ousels and the
plaintive sand-pipers, I should be able to explore, to my own content,
this forbidden treasure, searching in the dark soul of Marmaduke
Considine and the tender heart of Gabrielle; threading the lanes that
spread in a net about the schoolhouse at Lapton Huish; brooding over the
deceptive peace of Overton Manor; recalling the scene in the yew-parlour,
the atmosphere, terrifically charged with emotion, of the day when Mrs.
Payne took her courage in her hands and fought like a maternal tigress
for Arthur's soul. My heart beat faster as I led the old fisherman on
with "Yes?"</p>
<p id="id00035">He laid aside <i>The Times</i> and lit one of the long Trichinopoly cheroots
that he smoked perpetually, settling himself back in the comfortable
hotel chair.</p>
<p id="id00036">"Hewish," he said. "Sir Jocelyn Hewish. That was the father's name.
Lived at a place called Roscarna in the west of Ireland. He was an
extraordinarily good fisherman: tied his own flies. I have some
sea-trout flies in my book that he tied thirty years ago … a kind of
blue teal that he'd invented. Of course they had a fine string of
white-trout lakes—many a good fish I've had there—but the remarkable
thing about Roscarna was this. Right in front of the house at the bottom
of the sunk fence, there ran a stretch of river,—about three hundred
yards of it, clear deep slides with a level muddy bottom. One winter old
Sir Jocelyn took it into his head to clean up this bit of water, and when
they came to scrape the bottom they found under the mud that the whole
bed of the stream was paved with marble slabs like a swimming bath …
Connemara marble. They went on with the job because it looked so well,
all this green, veined stuff shining through the clear water. So they
scoured the bottom and fixed up a banderbast for keeping the mud from
coming downstream from above, and having made a sort of stewpond, put in
four or five hundred yearling brownies. You'd never believe how those
fish grew. In a couple of years the water was full of three and four
pounders, lovely fish with a small head and pink flesh like a salmon.
Quite a curious thing! And you'll never guess the reason. No sooner had
they cleared away the mud than the place swarmed with freshwater shrimps.
The yearlings throve on them like a smolt when it goes down to the sea.
That was the remarkable thing about Roscarna…."</p>
<p id="id00037">I knew, of course, that it wasn't. The remarkable thing about Roscarna,
to anyone with a ha'porth of imagination, was Gabrielle Hewish. Luckily
that admirable gossip Hoylake had another interest in life besides
fishing stories, and one that served my purpose,—genealogy. It is an
interest not uncommon with old soldiers—that is why they often write
such incredibly dull memoirs—and after allowing him a number of sporting
digressions in the direction of a Lochanillaun pike and the altogether
admirable blackgame shooting at Roscarna, which, he assured me, was
better than anything in the west except Lord Dudley's shoot on the
Corrib, I played him tactfully into the deeper water that interested me
and, by the end of the week, had succeeded in drawing from him a good
deal of irrelevant family history and, what is more to the point, a
fairly consecutive account of the last of the Hewishes, Sir Jocelyn and
his amazing daughter.</p>
<p id="id00038">As he told it to me in the parlour of the fishing inn beside the Dulas, I
began to realise that accidentally, and at the moment when I needed it
most, I had stumbled on a fountain of curious knowledge. If I had missed
meeting him, my story, fascinating as it was, would have been incomplete.
It armed me with a whole new theory of Gabrielle, suggesting causes, or,
if you like, preparations for the extraordinary episode that followed.
It showed me that I had been flattering myself that I knew all about it
when, as a matter of fact, I had only got hold of one—and the wrong—end
of the stick. I fished the Dulas for a fortnight, hypnotised, pondering
on the whole curious business, not only when the bright water rippled by
me, but when old Hoylake told me stories of mahseer and tiger fish and
barracuda that he had missed, when I was walking through the pinewoods
under the mountain, when I was eating, and, I verily believe, when I was
asleep. I had thought before that my friend Mrs. Payne was the heroine
of the story. Now I am not sure that Gabrielle does not share the
honours.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />