"Alexander."
A boy, age eleven or twelve, travels with his uncle by horse cart to the garden of an eccentric old lady, where each year they pick fruit. In the course of the outing, the boy becomes enamored of a young girl, meets a darkly cunning and cynical poacher, and picks a forbidden apricot as a gift for the girl. His hopes to deliver the gift are dashed by his uncle's need to get home, and he is thrust into first reflections on pleasure, pain, and life itself.
The story is based very closely on trips Bates took with his grandfather George Lucas to nearby Stanwick (depicted in Vanished World 85-97, in the essay "Victorian Garden" in In the Heart of the Country, and in a column Bates wrote for the Ketterling Reminder.). The reviewer in the New Statesman. noted that Bates has, "by seeing with a child's eyes, found a world of marvellous and strange beauty, and has given the smallest shades of change and emotion the magnitude and drama they have in the minds of children and poets." Bates would return to the characters of Alexander and Uncle Bishop, as well as similar themes of boyhood, in the 1934 story "Harvest Moon" and the 1939 tale "The White Pony." In Seven Tales and Alexander (1929), Thirty Tales (1934), Twenty Tales (1951). Reprinted in Modern Short Stories (1939).