"On the Road."

Bates depicts two travelers who come across each other in the woods -- a handsome and muscular man with "a glimpse of a tattoo mark of a purple and crimson flower on his naked chest" and a pregnant woman with "tawny eyes sleepy and rich with changing lights, the lips ripe and heavy, the large, strong face superb with its passionate languor." In the New Statesman (February 28, 1931), Now and Then (Winter 1931), The Black Boxer Tales (1932), Thirty Tales (1934), The Bride Comes to Evensford and Other Tales (1949). Reprinted in Best British Short Stories, 1931 (1931), The Best Short Stories of 1931 (London: Cape, 1932), Turnstile One: A Literary Miscellany from The New Statesman and Nation (London: Turnstile, 1948), and Argosy (November 1950).

ID: 
b47
Title: 
"On the Road."
Genre: 
Story
Page Count: 
12
Word Count: 
ca. 1930
Publisher: 
Argosy
New Statesman
Now and Then
Year of Publication: 
1931