Anthony Lyveden
1925 dustjacket | |
Author | Dornford Yates |
---|---|
Genre | Novel |
Publisher | Ward Lock & Co[1] |
Publication date | 1921[1] |
Media type | |
Pages | 308[1] |
Followed by | Valerie French |
Anthony Lyveden is a 1921 adventure novel by the English author Dornford Yates (Cecil William Mercer). It was first published in monthly instalments in The Windsor Magazine.[2] The book was Mercer's first attempt at a full-length novel, and was succeeded by Valerie French which continued the story of the main characters.
Plot
Anthony Lyveden DSO, a destitute ex-officer, is forced to take a job as a footman at the Gramarye estate. The estate's owner, Colonel Winchester, becomes mad and leaves Lyveden in charge under a power of attorney. The situation drives Lyveden himself to madness.
Background
The author was not a happy man at the time, his father having committed suicide early in 1921, and Mercer's biographer AJ Smithers reports a suggestion that at this date he was not far from suffering a nervous breakdown.[3] He defied The Windsor Magazine's tradition that every episode should end with a lovers' meeting, though he was pressed hard by the magazine's editor.[4]
Chapters
Chapter | Book Title | Windsor Title | Date | Volume | Issue | Pages | Illustrator |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
I | The Way Of A Man | In The First Place | January 1921 | LIII | 313 | 101-116 | Norah Schlegel |
II | The Way Of A Maid | In The Second Place | February 1921 | LIII | 314 | 205-220 | Norah Schlegel |
III | The Voice Of The Turtle | In The Third Place | March 1921 | LIII | 315 | 311-324 | Norah Schlegel |
IV | The Golden Bowl | Livery Of Seisin | April 1921 | LIII | 316 | 411-425 | Norah Schlegel |
V | An High Look And A Proud Heart | A Month's Wages | May 1921 | LIII | 317 | 517-531 | Norah Schlegel |
VI | The Comfort Of Apples | Gramarye | June 1921 | LIV | 318 | 3-16 | Norah Schlegel |
VII | Nehustan | Grey Matter | July 1921 | LIV | 319 | 109-124 | Norah Schlegel |
VIII | The Power Of The Dog | Ex-Parte Motions | August 1921 | LIV | 320 | 223-239 | Norah Schlegel |
IX | Vanity Of Vanities | The Return Of The Spirit | September 1921 | LIV | 321 | 337-355 | Norah Schlegel |
Illustrations
The illustrations from the Windsor stories by Norah Schlegel (1879-1963) were not included in the book version.
Critical reception
Smithers considered Anthony Lyveden to be a book of varying quality, and too episodic to be truly called a novel.[5] He criticised the characterisations, suggesting that a reader might with some justice think the hero a pompous prig, one of the young women a humourless, suspicious creature, and the other a trollop manquée.[4]
References
- ^ a b c "British Library Item details". primocat.bl.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
- ^ Smithers 1982, p. 103.
- ^ Smithers 1982, p. 104-105.
- ^ a b Smithers 1982, p. 105.
- ^ Smithers 1982, p. 104.
Bibliography
- Smithers, AJ (1982). Dornford Yates. London: Hodder and Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-27547-2.
- v
- t
- e
- The Brother of Daphne (1914)
- The Courts of Idleness (1920)
- Berry and Co. (1921)
- Jonah and Co. (1922)
- Adèle and Co. (1931)
- And Berry Came Too (1936)
- The House That Berry Built (1945)
- The Berry Scene (1947)
- As Berry and I Were Saying (1952)
- B-Berry and I Look Back (1958)
- Blind Corner (1927)
- Perishable Goods (1928)
- Blood Royal (1929)
- Fire Below (1930)
- She Fell Among Thieves (1935)
- An Eye for a Tooth (1943)
- Red in the Morning (1946)
- Cost Price (1949)
- Anthony Lyveden (1921)
- Valerie French (1923)
- And Five Were Foolish (1924)
- As Other Men Are (1925)
- The Stolen March (1926)
- Maiden Stakes (1928)
- Summer Fruit (1929, US)
- Safe Custody (1932)
- Storm Music (1934)
- She Painted Her Face (1937)
- This Publican (1938)
- Gale Warning (1939)
- Shoal Water (1940)
- Period Stuff (1942)
- Lower than Vermin (1950)
- Ne'er-Do-Well (1954)
- Wife Apparent (1956)