"The Wedding."

In this second of many Uncle Silas tales, the young narrator recalls his family traveling by horse and trap to the wedding of Silas's only son Abel, nearly forty, to the nineteen-year-old Georgina. The story shows seventy-year-old Silas -- tipsy, randy, and in "devilish splendour," singing a pub-song with the bride and kissing her "with a loud smack."

Bates would later explain that the story accurately related the wedding of Joseph Betts's only son: "Such was the sharpness of the impression it all made on me that though it was a near quarter of a century before I put it down in a story called The Wedding the words practically wrote themselves" (Vanished World 61). Later, in the preface to My Uncle Silas, Bates would refer to the wedding as an event "which my sister and I still remember as one of the golden days of our childhood." The grandfather of the narrator directly reflects Bates's grandfather George Lucas in such passages as: "'Don't want to hear a lot o' popery and hymn-singing, do you?' and we stayed outside together, looking for nests in the churchyard yews and reading the names on the tombstones until the wedding was over." A television adaptation starring Albert Finney was aired in 2001.

In John O'London's Weekly (June 24, 1933), The Woman Who Had Imagination and Other Stories (1934), My Uncle Silas (1939). Reprinted in Argosy (April 1942) and Best Country Stories (London: Faber, 1969).

ID: 
b71
Title: 
"The Wedding."
Genre: 
Story
Page Count: 
15
Word Count: 
ca. 3090
Publisher: 
Argosy
John O'London's Weekly
Year of Publication: 
1933
Document Type: 
Comic Fiction
Film & Television
First-Person Narratives
Uncle Silas Stories