Lost Sir Massingberd: A Romance of Real Life is a novel by James Payn. It was published serially in the columns of Chambers's Journal, a popular periodical.[1] It was published as a book in two volumes in 1864.[2]
Author | James Payn |
---|---|
Published | 1864 |
Publisher | Sampson, Low, Son, and Marston |
Characters
edit- Sir Massingberd Heath
- Marmaduke Heath – nephew to Sir Massingberd
- Harvey Gerald – friend to Marmaduke
- Lucy Gerald – daughter to Harvey; wife to Marmaduke
- A gipsy woman – wife to Sir Massingberd
Plot
editSir Massingberd Heath neither feared God nor regarded man. His property was entailed, the next heir being his nephew Marmaduke, whom he tries to murder in order to sell the estates. Marmaduke is befriended by Harvey Gerald and his daughter Lucy, falls in love with Lucy, and finally marries her. Sir Massingberd in his youth secretly married a gipsy, whom he drove mad with his cruelty. She curses him: "May he perish, inch by inch, within reach of aid that shall not come." Sir Massingberd disappears, and all search for him is vain; many months later his bones are found in an old tree, known as the Wolsey Oak. It was supposed that he climbed the tree to look about for poachers, that the rotten wood gave way, and he slipped into the hollow trunk, whence he could not escape. Had he not closed up the public path which skirted the tree, his cries for help must have been heard. With his disappearance and death all goes well with the households on which the blight of his evil spirit had fallen, and the story ends happily.[2]
Appraisal
editThis novel, which has been considered the best of this novelist's stories, was one of the earliest,[2] and one of the most popular.[3] According to Helen Rex Keller, "It is a modern tale of English country life, told with freedom, humor, and a certain good-natured cynicism."[2]
References
editSources
edit- Birch, Dinah, ed. (2009). "Payn, James". In The Oxford Companion to English Literature. 7th ed. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 22 October 2022.
- Payn, James (1864). Lost Sir Massingbird: A Romance of Real Life. 2 vols. London: Sampson, Low, Son, and Marston. (Vol. 1. Vol. 2.)
Attribution:
- Keller, Helen Rex (1924). "Lost Sir Massingberd". In The Reader's Digest of Books. The Library of the World's Best Literature. New York: The Macmillan Company. p. 520. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.