Lud-in-the-Mist
The Free State of Dorimare was a very small country, but, seeing that it was bounded on the south by the sea and on the north and east by mountains, while its centre consisted of a rich plain, watered by two rivers, a considerable variety of scenery and vegetation was to be found within its borders. Indeed, towards the west, in striking contrast with the pastoral sobriety of the central plain, the aspect of the country became, if not tropical, at any rate distinctly exotic. Nor was this to be wondered at, perhaps; for beyond the Debatable Hills (the boundary of Dorimare in the west) lay Fairyland. There had, however, been no intercourse between the two countries for many centuries.
The social and commercial centre of Dorimare was its capital, Lud-in-the-Mist, which was situated at the confluence of two rivers about ten miles from the sea and fifty from the Elfin Hills.
Lud-in-the-Mist had all the things that make an old town pleasant. It had an ancient Guild Hall, built of mellow golden bricks and covered with ivy and, when the sun shone on it, it looked like a rotten apricot; it had a harbour in which rode vessels with white and red and tawny sails; it had flat brick houses—not the mere carapace of human beings, but ancient living creatures, renewing and modifying themselves with each generation under their changeless antique roofs. It had old arches, framing delicate landscapes that one could walk into, and a picturesque old graveyard on the top of a hill, and little open squares where comic baroque statues of dead citizens held levees attended by birds and lovers and insects and children. It had, indeed, more than its share of pleasant things; for, as we have seen, it had two rivers.
Also, it was plentifully planted with trees.
One of the handsomest houses of Lud-in-the-Mist had belonged for generations to the family of Chanticleer. It was of red brick, and the front, which looked on to a quiet lane leading into the High Street, was covered with stucco, on which flowers and fruit and shells were delicately modelled, while over the door was emblazoned a fine, stylized cock—the badge of the family. Behind, it had a spacious garden, which stretched down to the river Dapple. Though it had no lack of flowers, they did not immediately meet the eye, but were imprisoned in a walled kitchen-garden, where they were planted in neat ribands, edging the plots of vegetables. Here, too, in spring was to be found the pleasantest of all garden conjunctions—thick yew hedges and fruit trees in blossom. Outside this kitchen-garden there was no need of flowers, for they had many substitutes. Let a thing be but a sort of punctual surprise, like the first cache of violets in March, let it be delicate, painted and gratuitous, hinting that the Creator is solely preoccupied with aesthetic considerations, and combines disparate objects simply because they look so well together, and that thing will admirably fill the role of a flower.
Hope Mirrlees
LUD-IN-THE-MIST
HOPE MIRRLEES
CHAPTER I
MASTER NATHANIEL CHANTICLEER
CHAPTER II
THE DUKE WHO LAUGHED HIMSELF OFF A THRONE AND OTHER TRADITIONS OF DORIMARE
CHAPTER III
THE BEGINNING OF TROUBLE
CHAPTER IV
ENDYMION LEER PRESCRIBES FOR RANULPH
CHAPTER V
RANULPH GOES TO THE WIDOW GIBBERTY'S FARM
CHAPTER VI
THE WIND IN THE CRABAPPLE BLOSSOMS
CHAPTER VII
MASTER AMBROSE CHASES A WILD GOOSE AND HAS A VISION
CHAPTER VIII
ENDYMION LEER LOOKS FRIGHTENED, AND A BREACH IS MADE IN AN OLD FRIENDSHIP
CHAPTER IX
PANIC AND THE SILENT PEOPLE
CHAPTER X
HEMPIE'S SONG
CHAPTER XI
A STRONGER ANTIDOTE THAN REASON
CHAPTER XII
DAME MARIGOLD HEARS THE TAP OF A WOODPECKER
CHAPTER XIII
WHAT MASTER NATHANIEL AND MASTER AMBROSE FOUND IN THE GUILDHALL
CHAPTER XIV
DEAD IN THE EYE OF THE LAW
CHAPTER XV
"HO, HO, HOH!"
CHAPTER XVI
THE WIDOW GIBBERTY'S TRIAL
CHAPTER XVII
THE WORLD-IN-LAW
CHAPTER XVIII
MISTRESS IVY PEPPERCORN
CHAPTER XIX
THE BERRIES OF MERCIFUL DEATH
CHAPTER XX
WATCHING THE COWS
CHAPTER XXI
THE OLD GOATHERD
CHAPTER XXII
WHO IS PORTUNUS?
CHAPTER XXIII
THE NORTHERN FIRE-BOX AND DEAD MEN'S TALES
CHAPTER XXIV
BELLING THE CAT
CHAPTER XXV
THE LAW CROUCHES AND SPRINGS
CHAPTER XXVI
"NEITHER TREES NOR MEN"
CHAPTER XXVII
THE FAIR IN THE ELFIN MARCHES
CHAPTER XXVIII
"BY THE SUN, MOON AND STARS AND THE GOLDEN APPLES OF THE WEST"
CHAPTER XXIX
A MESSAGE COMES TO HAZEL AND THE FIRST SWALLOW TO DAME MARIGOLD
CHAPTER XXX
MASTER AMBROSE KEEPS HIS VOW
CHAPTER XXXI
THE INITIATE
CHAPTER XXXII
CONCLUSION