"The Bath."

An episode from Bates's trip to Germany, in the company of Charles Lahr and others, a trip also captured in "A German Idyll" (although that tale was not a first-person narrative). The story relates a party of six who are invited to use a rich farmer's bath-tub and then link "arms with the peasants...and we all sang at the tops of our voices, not knowing quite what we were singing, in the common language of joy." The episode is recounted almost identically by a fellow traveler, the Welsh author Rhys Davies, in his book Print of a Hare's Foot (London: Heinemann, 1969). In Lovat Dickson's Magazine (March 1934), Modern Short Stories (London: Lovat Dickson and Thompson, 1935), Cut and Come Again (1935), Country Tales (1938), Country Tales (1940), Love in a Wych Elm and Other Stories (2009). Reprinted in Modern Short Stories (second series, London: Macmillan, 1951).

ID: 
b76
Title: 
"The Bath."
Genre: 
Story
Page Count: 
14
Word Count: 
ca. 2880
Publisher: 
Lovat Dickson's Magazine
Year of Publication: 
1934
Topic: 
Germany
Travel
Document Type: 
Autobiographical
First-Person Narratives