"A German Idyll."

Waltham Saint Lawrence, Berkshire: Golden Cockerel Press, 1932 (April 26). Wood engravings by Lynton Lamb. Dedication: "To Karl." An account of Bates's trip to Germany with Charles Lahr and others in 1927, including Karl's (Charles's) reunion with family in the town of Iben, feasting and drinking at the local inn, and a hesitant romance between Richardson (Bates) and the landlord's beautiful daughter Anna. The travelers depart, Richardson reflecting that Anna had "appeared briefly and wonderfully and had vanished, like the rainbow. He knew he would never see her again and he wondered if he would remember her...He wondered also if she would remember him." Rhys Davies confirms Bates's account, adding that "H.E. Bates, offering to escort a girl home, found her watchful aunt dogging their long walk at a discreet distance" (Print of a Hare's Foot, New York: Dodd, Mead, 1969, p. 172). Bates discusses the trip and the story in Blossoming World (54-57, 117) and used the trip for a later story, "The Bath" (a first-person narration).

Reviews:
New Statesman and Nation (October 1, 1932, p. 380, attached)
Times Literary Supplement (June 16, 1932, p. 448, attached)

Published in a limited edition and then later in the collections The Woman Who Had Imagination and Other Stories (1934), Thirty-One Selected Tales (1947), Selected Stories (1957).

Online Full Text at Hathi Trust Digital Library.

ID: 
a16
Title: 
"A German Idyll."
Genre: 
Story
Page Count: 
48
Word Count: 
ca. 9240
Publisher: 
Golden Cockerel Press
Year of Publication: 
1932
Topic: 
Germany
Travel
Youth
Document Type: 
Autobiographical
Full-text Online
Richardson (character)
AttachmentSize
a16 New Statesman and Nation.pdf497.06 KB
a16 TLS.pdf154.12 KB