"The Woman Who Had Imagination."

A village choir travels to a country estate for a music festival, where the young son of the choir director is drawn to a resident of the estate, a mesmerizing and mysterious young woman. Only on the return trip does he learn that she is married to the aged don of the house; as one choir member exclaims, "it needed a bit of imagination to marry that old cock."

The many details of the choir outing may reflect in some respects Bates's own youth, as his father Albert Bates was a passionate singer and choir director (The Vanished World 29). Graham Greene, reviewing the collection first containing the story (attached), wrote that "I cannot enough admire the title story...The dresses and slang...the heat of the afternoon striking up into the crowded brake from the country road, the return at night...these frame, in the setting of the country house, an odd romantic episode. But the sureness of Mr. Bates's tact is seen in this: the unusual...is kept in its place and is not allowed to do more than to throw into relief the lovely realism of the choir's outing." In The Woman Who Had Imagination and Other Stories (1934), Country Tales (1938), Country Tales (1940). Reprinted in Modern English Short Stories (London: Oxford, 1956).

Online Full Text at Hathi Trust Digital Library.

ID: 
b70
Title: 
"The Woman Who Had Imagination."
Genre: 
Story
Page Count: 
37
Word Count: 
ca. 7720
Year of Publication: 
1934
Topic: 
Marriage
Music
Youth
Document Type: 
Autobiographical
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