: E. F. Benson
: Delphi Collected Works of E. F. Benson US (Illustrated)
: Delphi Classics
: 9781910630303
: 1
: CHF 1.60
:
: Erzählende Literatur
: English
: 6164
: kein Kopierschutz
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB

The prolific novelist E. F. Benson is celebrated for his hilarious satires of upper-middle-class life, as depicted in the 'Mapp and Lucia' novels, and for being an adept narrator of ghost stories. This comprehensive eBook presents the largest collection of Benson's works ever compiled in a single edition, with numerous illustrations, rare texts and concise introductions. (Version 2)


* Beautifully illustrated with images relating to Benson's life and works


* Concise introductions to the novels and other texts


* 42 novels, all with individual contents tables


* Many early and late novels available here for the first time in digital publishing


* Images of how the books were first printed, giving your eReader a taste of the original texts


* Excellent formatting of the texts


* Rare short story collections, appearing here for the first time in digital print


* Special chronological and alphabetical contents tables for the short stories


* Easily locate the ghost stories you want to read


* Includes a wide selection of Benson's non-fiction


* Features an autobiography - discover Benson's literary life


* Scholarly ordering of texts into chronological order and literary genres



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CONTENTS:


Mapp and Lucia Series


Queen Lucia (1920)


Miss Mapp (1922)



Other Novels


Dodo: A Detail of the Day


The Rubicon


The Judgment Books


Limitations


The Babe, B.A.


The Vintage


The Capsina


Mammon and Co.


The Princess Sophia


The Luck of the Vails


Scarlet and Hyssop


An Act in a Backwater


The Book of Months


The Relentless City


The Valkyries


The Challoners


The Angel of Pain


The House of Defence


Sheaves


The Blotting Book


The Climber


A Reaping


Daisy's Aunt


The Osbornes


Mrs. Ames


Dodo's Daughter


Thorley Weir


Arundel


Mike


An Autumn Sowing


David Blaize


The Freaks of Mayfair


David Blaize and the Blue Door


Up and Down


Across the Stream


Robin Linnet


Dodo Wonders


Lovers and Friends


Peter


Colin



The Short Story Collections


Six Common Things; Or, a Double Overture


The Room in the Tower, and Other Stories


Visible and Invisible


Spook Stories


More Spook Stories


The Countess of Lowndes Square and Other Stories


The Short Stories


List of Short Stories in Chronological Order


List of Short Stories in Alphabetical Order


The Non-Fiction


Daily Training


The Cricket of Abel, Hirst, and Shrewsbury


Winter Sports in Switzerland


Crescent and Iron Cross


Poland and Mittel-Europa


Charlotte Brontë


The Autobiography


Our Family Affairs


 

 

CHAPTER TWO.


ASSHETRAVERSED the smoking-parlour the cheerful sounds that had once tinkled from the collar of a Flemish horse chimed through the house, and simultaneously she became aware that there would bemacaroni au gratin for lunch, which was very dear and remembering of Peppino. But before setting fork to her piled-up plate, she had to question him, for her mental craving for information was far keener than her appetite for food.

Caro, who is an Indian,” she said, “whom I saw just now with Daisy Quantock? They were the other side of il piccolo Avon.”

Peppino had already begun his macaroni and must pause to shovel the outlying strings of it into his mouth. But the haste with which he did so was sufficient guaranty for his eagerness to reply as soon as it was humanly possible to do so.

“Indian, my dear?” he asked with the greatest interest.

“Yes; turban and burnous and calves and slippers,” she said rather impatiently, for what was the good of Peppino having remained in Riseholme if he could not give her precise and certain information on local news when she returned. His prose-poems were all very well, but as prince-consort he had other duties of state which must not be neglected for the calls of Art.

This slight asperity on her part seemed to sharpen his wits.

“Really, I don’t know for certain, Lucia,” he said, “for I have not set my eyes on him. But putting two and two together, I might make a guess.”

“Two and two make four,” she said with that irony for which she was feared and famous. “Now for your guess. I hope it is equally accurate.”

“Well, as I told you in one of my letters,” said he, “Mrs Quantock showed signs of being a little off with Christian Science. She had a cold, and though she recited the True Statement of Being just as frequently as before, her cold got no better. But when I saw her on Tuesday last, unless it was Wednesday, no, it couldn’t have been Wednesday, so it must have been Tuesday—”

“Whenever it was then,” interrupted his wife, brilliantly summing up his indecision.

“Yes; whenever it was, as you say, on that occasion Mrs Quantock was very full of some Indian philosophy which made you quite well at once. What did she call it now? Yoga! Yes, that was it!”

“And then?” asked Lucia.

“Well, it appears you must have a teacher in Yoga or else you may injure yourself. You have to breathe deeply and say ‘Om’ — —”

“Say what?”

“Om. I understand the ejaculation to be Om. And there are very curious physical exercises; you have to hold your ear with one hand and your toes with the other, and you may strain yourself unless you do it properly. That was the general gist of it.”

“And shall we come to the Indian soon?” said Lucia.

Carissima, you have come to him already. I suggest that Mrs Quantock has applied for a teacher and got him.Ecco!

Mrs Lucas wore a heavily corrugated forehead at this news. Peppino had a wonderfulflair in explaining unusual circumstances in the life of Riseholme and his conjectures were generally correct. But if he was right in this instance, it struck Lucia as being a very irregular thing that anyone should have imported a mystical Indian into Riseholme without consulting her. It is true that she had been away, but still there was the medium of the post.

Ecco indeed!” she said. “It puts me in rather a difficult position, for I must send out my invitations to my garden-party today, and I really don’t know whether I ought to be officially aware of this man’s existence or not. I can’t write to Daisy Quantock and say ‘Pray bring your black friend Om or whatever his name proves to be, and on the other hand, if he is the sort of person whom one would be sorry to miss, I should not like to have passed over him.”

“After all, my dear, you have only been back in Riseholme half an hour,” said her husband. “It would have been difficult for Mrs Quantock to have told you yet.”

Her face cleared.

“Perhaps Daisy has written to me about him,” she said. “I may find a full account of it all when I open my letters.”

“Depend upon it you will. She would hardly have been so wanting in proper feeling as not to have told you. I think, too, that her visitor must only have just arrived, or I should have been sure to see him about somewhere.”

She rose.

“Well,