"The House With the Apricot."

A young traveller reports his stay at the home of a wealthy and attractive woman. She is engaged to a man who has convinced her that he is a respectable match, but is in fact a dissipated, violent-tempered failure of a farmer. "As she stood at the gate and shook hands with me and wished me a good journey she looked at me with shining eyes, wit a radiant triumph that seemed almost too perfect." The title stems from an analogy between the apricot tree of the family house, beautiful but barren due to lack of root-pruning, and the woman. The mood established in the tale has been compared to that of "Alexander" and "The Woman Who Had Imagination. Baldwin 116) notes that the story was inspired by a walking tour of the Cotswolds in August 1932 with Bates's friend Harry Byrom. In The House With the Apricot and Two Other Tales (1933), Cut and Come Again (1935), Country Tales (1938), Country Tales (1940).

ID: 
b67
Title: 
"The House With the Apricot."
Genre: 
Story
Page Count: 
42
Word Count: 
ca. 12190
Year of Publication: 
1933
Topic: 
Music
Document Type: 
First-Person Narratives