Affairs at Thrush Green: A Novel

Affairs at Thrush Green: A Novel

by Miss Read
Affairs at Thrush Green: A Novel

Affairs at Thrush Green: A Novel

by Miss Read

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Overview

Make a visit to this English village: “What you will find in the novels of Miss Read is an aura of warm happiness.” —The Columbus Dispatch

In the quaint English village of Thrush Green, a terrible fire has burned the rectory to the ground. Now, kindly vicar Charles Henstock has been appointed to the neighboring town of Lulling and its combined parishes. But while he enjoys the beautiful Queen Anne house provided for him, and his pleasant new surroundings, going to a new church is never easy: Poor Dr. Henstock has encountered some very redoubtable females in Lulling; a full-scale power struggle erupts over the question of kneeling cushions for the Lady Chapel; and other difficulties revolve around the crotchety old sexton Albert Piggott.

Meanwhile, a mysterious stranger arrives at the Fuschia Bush café, and its rivalry with the Two Pheasants becomes more acute. One knows, however, that Miss Read will set everything right in the end.

Affairs at Thrush Green will surely delight all those addicted to Miss Read . . . and may well make converts of those who read her here for the first time.” —The Plain Dealer

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780547526515
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Publication date: 11/01/2017
Series: Beloved Thrush Green Series , #7
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
Sales rank: 386,490
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Miss Read (1913–2012) was the pseudonym of Mrs. Dora Saint, a former schoolteacher beloved for her novels of English rural life, especially those set in the fictional villages of Thrush Green and Fairacre. The first of these, Village School, was published in 1955, and Miss Read continued to write until her retirement in 1996. In 1998, she was awarded an MBE, or Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, for her services to literature.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

A Snowy Morning

CHARLES HENSTOCK awoke with a start. He must have overslept, it was so light in the bedroom.

He turned his head and squinted sideways at the bedside clock. To his relief, the hands stood at twenty past seven.

Still bemused, he gazed above him, relishing the warmth of his bed and the elegant swags of plasterwork which decorated the vicarage ceiling. Those skilful workers some two hundred years ago certainly knew how to delight the eye, thought the present incumbent of the parish of Lulling.

Not that Lulling was the only parish in his care. A mile to the north lay his old parish of Thrush Green, and north and west of that delectable spot were those of Nidden and Lulling Woods. It was a large area to care for, with four splendid churches, and Charles Henstock constantly prayed that he might fulfil his responsibilities with diligence.

His wife Dimity lay curled beside him, still deep in sleep. They had started their married life together at Thrush Green, in the bleak Victorian rectory which had been burnt to the ground some two years earlier. The general opinion was that the fire was a blessing in disguise. The hideous building had stood out like a sore thumb among the beautiful stone-built Cotswold houses round the green.

But Charles still mourned his old home. He had known great happiness there, and even now could scarcely bear to look at the empty site where once his home had stood.

A pinkish glow was beginning to spread over the ceiling. The sun must be rising, but still that strange luminosity which had roused him hung about the room. More alert now, the good rector struggled upright, taking care not to disturb his sleeping partner.

The ancient cedar tree was now in sight, its outspread arms holding thick bands of snow. The telephone wire sagged beneath the weight it was bearing, and the window sill was heavily encrusted.

Very carefully the rector slipped out of bed and went to the window to survey the cold February scene. Since his early childhood he had delighted in snow. Now, looking at his transformed garden, his heart beat faster with the old familiar excitement.

The snow covered everything — the paths, the flowerbeds, the tiny snowdrops which had so recently braved the bitter winds and tossed their little bells under the hedges. It lay in gentle billows against the summerhouse door and the tall yew hedge.

Beyond the garden, St John's church roof glistened under its snowy canopy against a rose-pink cloud and, high above, the golden weathercock on the steeple caught the first rays of the winter sun.

The beauty of it all enraptured Charles. He caught his breath in wonderment, oblivious of the chilly bedroom and his congealing feet. What enchantment! What purity! An overnight miracle!

'Charles,' said Dimity, 'what has happened?'

'It's been snowing,' said her husband, smiling upon her. 'It's quite deep.'

'Oh dear,' said Dimity, getting out of bed. 'What a blessing I brought the spade indoors last night! No doubt we'll have to dig ourselves out.'

Dimity had always been the practical partner. Charles Henstock's appointment to the living of Lulling and its combined parishes, had been welcomed by almost all who knew him.

He was much loved in the district for his modesty, his warm heart, and the willing care he gave to his parishioners. The fire at Thrush Green rectory had shocked the community, and Dimity and Charles received much sympathy. It seemed particularly appropriate that he should now live in the beautiful Queen Anne house and enjoy such pleasant surroundings.

Nevertheless, there were a few people in Lulling who viewed their new pastor with some reserve.

Charles had followed his old friend Anthony Bull who had held the living of Lulling for almost twenty years, and had made his mark in the parish.

Anthony had been the very opposite of Charles Henstock. In appearance he was tall and handsome, with a fine mane of hair which he tossed back from a noble brow with the ready expertise of an actor. Charles was short, tubby and bald, and lacked any sort of dramatic technique in the pulpit.

There were quite a few of Anthony's followers who admitted unashamedly that they had attended St John's for the enjoyment of their vicar's eloquent sermons as much as for the High Church ritual for which the church was noted. Anthony Bull's magnificent vestments were the admiration of all, and particularly of the needlewomen in his flock. The fact that he was fortunate in having a wealthy wife who adored him, and was generous with her money, was one which did not go unnoticed in the parish. Never had Lulling Vicarage been so beautifully furnished, or its gardens kept so immaculately. Mrs Bull, it was common knowledge, was prepared to pay almost twice as much an hour for domestic help as was customary, and there were a number of infuriated housewives who were obliged to see their own charwomen vanish towards the vicarage, or else to pay wages which they could ill afford.

The vicarage was now more sparsely furnished with the few pieces of furniture salvaged from the disastrous Thrush Green fire and some modest articles newly acquired. The Bulls' magnificent Persian rugs had given way to some well worn runners in the hall. The priceless Chinese vase which had held exotic blooms all the year round on the Jacobean hall chest, was now replaced by a sturdy earthenware pitcher holding garden flowers or the silvery moons of locally grown honesty, throughout the winter months.

Nevertheless, Dimity, with help on only two mornings, kept the lovely old house shining, and nothing could detract from the beautifully proportioned rooms with their great windows looking out upon one of the most superb settings in Lulling.

No one expected the Henstocks to attempt the same standard of living as their predecessor. They were less concerned than he with material trappings, and even if they had wanted to keep the house as expensively furnished, their modest income would not allow it.

But everyone agreed, even those who lamented Anthony Bull's departed glory in the church itself, that the welcome to be found now at Lulling Vicarage was warmer than ever. It was good, they told each other, to have such a fine pair living at Lulling.

Some quarter of a mile away in the High Street of Lulling the three Miss Lovelocks were surveying the snow from their front bedroom windows.

The old ladies were still in their night attire. The collars of their warm flannel nightgowns were buttoned modestly around thin scrawny necks. Miss Bertha and Miss Ada were wrapped in ancient camel-coloured Jaeger dressing gowns, and Miss Violet in a voluminous light plaid garment purchased some twenty years earlier on a visit to the Shetland Isles. Bony feet were encased in sheepskin slippers, but even so the old ladies shivered as they surveyed the snowy High Street.

'So unexpected,' said Miss Bertha.

'Not a word about it on the weather forecast,' said Miss Ada severely.

'But it's very pretty,' said Miss Violet. 'Just see how lovely it looks caught in the railings!'

They gazed across at the railings outside the Methodist chapel. There certainly was something attractive about the white thick fur that blurred their usual starkness. In fact, the whole street was transformed in the early sunshine.

The roofs glistened like sugar icing. Doorsteps were hidden under gentle billows, and dark ribbons showed where traffic had trundled by in the road itself, highlighting the vivid whiteness of the rest. The pollarded lime trees along the pavement wore thick caps of snow, and the scarlet pillar box, outside The Fuchsia Bush café next door, was similarly topped.

A small black and white terrier rushed out from a house nearby, barking ecstatically and stirring up a flurry of snow dust in its excitement. Now and again it stopped, head up, pink tongue pulsing, legs quivering and stiff, before dashing off again in another frenzy of delight in this strange element.

'Well,' said Miss Bertha, 'this won't do. We must get dressed and see what's to be done.'

'I think porridge for breakfast would be a good idea,' said Miss Violet. 'We don't need much milk if I make it fairly runny.'

'And I really prefer a little salt on mine,' said Miss Bertha. 'So much cheaper than sugar.'

'And whoever is down first,' called Miss Ada to her departing sisters, 'switch on the electric fire in the dining room. One bar, of course, but I think it's cold enough to indulge ourselves this morning.'

The Misses Lovelock were renowned for quite unnecessary parsimony.

A mile away to the north, the inhabitants of Thrush Green greeted the snow with much the same surprise. The young welcomed it with the same rapture as Charles Henstock's. The old looked upon it with some dismay.

Miss Watson and Miss Fogerty, headmistress and assistant at the village school, discussed this unexpected quirk in the weather as they tackled their boiled eggs.

'I hope Betty remembers to put down newspaper in the lobbies,' said Miss Watson. 'It saves such a lot of mess.'

'I'm sure she will,' responded little Miss Fogerty. 'I only hope the children don't try and make slides in the playground before we go across. So dangerous.'

Miss Watson sighed.

'It's mornings like this that makes me regret staying on here,' she confessed. 'To think we might have been happily settled in dear old Barton. There's probably no snow there at all!'

Miss Fogerty tried to rally her old friend.

'It was not to be, Dorothy dear. I'm sure of that. And after all, we've always been very snug in this school house.'

'Maybe, maybe,' agreed her headmistress, 'but I still wish we could have retired when we had planned to do so. It has been such a disappointment.'

Even Miss Fogerty, devout believer in divine intervention in human affairs, could not help agreeing.

The two old friends had hoped to retire together to a small house at Barton-on-Sea. Property, of the type they wanted, was expensive and scarce. A great many people, it seemed, wanted to live in such a pleasant area. They too wanted a small, easily managed house with only a little land to maintain.

The two ladies had spent several weeks during their holidays in looking for a future home. On more than one occasion they thought they had found it, only to come up against snags. Sometimes the surveys had disclosed faulty drains, crumbling foundations, unaccountable subsidence, dry rot, wet rot, or plain shoddy building. In other cases the owners had backed out at the last minute, unable to buy the property they had hoped to purchase, or suddenly deciding to take their own off the market.

In the meantime Agnes Fogerty's arthritis had become worse and the Thrush Green doctor, John Lovell, had recommended a course of treatment which would spread over some months. Added to this was pressure from the local education office, upon Dorothy Watson, to postpone her retirement.

What with one thing and another the two hard-pressed ladies agreed to stay on in their present circumstances, and great was the relief felt by all their old friends at Thrush Green.

On the whole they had been relieved to have this respite after the frustrations of house-hunting. They both enjoyed their teaching, and had the satisfaction of knowing that their efforts were appreciated. The genuine delight of the parents and friends of the school when they had told them of their decision to stay on, was of great comfort to them, and did much to mitigate the disappointment of failing to find a house.

But this morning, with the snow blanketing all, and with memories of past snowy winters at Thrush Green school, the two friends knew that they must put all those wistful might-have-beens behind them, and face the realities of snow-crazed children, wet floor-boards, clothes drying on the fire-guards and, worst of all, no possible hope of playtime being taken outdoors. The dog-eared comics, the well-worn jigsaw puzzles, the ludo and snakes and ladders boards must emerge from the cupboard which held the wet-playtime equipment, and all one could do was to pray for a rapid thaw.

Dorothy Watson folded her napkin briskly.

'May as well make a start, dear,' she said, rising from her chair. 'And if it's not too slushy at playtime, I propose that we let the children make a snowman.'

'But only those with Wellingtons,' Miss Fogerty reminded her.

And with this proviso the two friends prepared to face the day.

Next door, in one of the finest houses on Thrush Green, Harold Shoosmith and his wife Isobel, were also at breakfast.

Theirs was a more leisurely affair than that of the two schoolteachers, for Harold had been a retired man for several years, and relished the fact that he could dally over his breakfast coffee.

Isobel had first met him on one of her visits to Thrush Green. She had been at college with little Agnes Fogerty and they had kept up their friendship over the years. It was a great joy to both to find themselves neighbours in middle age.

The shouts of children took Harold to the window, still cradling his coffee cup.

'My word,' he exclaimed, 'they've made the most splendid slide the whole width of the playground!'

'Agnes and Dorothy won't approve,' commented his wife.

'They wouldn't be such spoil sports as to ruin it, surely,' said Harold. 'I wouldn't mind a go on it myself. They're keeping the pot boiling marvellously!'

Isobel joined him at the window which overlooked the playground. Sure enough, the sight was exhilarating. Some dozen or more children, scarves flying, hair on end, were chasing each other in a long line down the twenty-foot slide. Their breath steamed in the frosty air, their faces glowed like winter suns, and the din was appalling.

Rows of smaller, or more timid, children lined the route adding their cheers to the general racket. There was no doubt about it. The slide was a huge success.

Harold, still smiling, looked across the green. The statue of Nathaniel Patten, a zealous missionary of the last century, much admired by Harold who had been instrumental in honouring the old gentleman on his hundredth anniversary, was plentifully daubed with snowy patches. The white cap on his head, and the snowy shawl across his shoulders were deposited naturally from above, but the spattered frock coat showed clearly the results of well-aimed snowballs.

Certainly, the teachers at Thrush Green school were going to have unusually lively pupils on this winter morning, thought Isobel.

At that moment, Betty Bell appeared, pushing her bicycle up the path with some difficulty. She had finished her ministrations at the school next door, remembering to carpet the lobby with newspapers as Agnes knew she would. For good measure she had surrounded the fire guard round the tortoise stove with more newspaper, to catch stray drips from wet clothing and, her duties there done, now approached the Shoosmiths' abode.

'Lord!' she puffed, blowing into the kitchen on a gale of cold air. 'What some weather, eh? Your front path wants doing, and that's a fact.'

'I'm just off to tackle it,' Harold assured her, putting down his cup, and going in search of his largest shovel.

There were others already at work when Harold emerged from his house. At The Two Pheasants, hard by the village school, Mr Jones the landlord was busy shovelling the snow away from the door.

His neighbour, Albert Piggott, watched him morosely, leaning heavily the while upon an upturned broom.

'Time you cleared your own patch,' pointed out Mr Jones, becoming annoyed at Albert's scrutiny.

'I shan't be doin' much,' growled Albert. 'Jest my bit round the door. That lazy Cooke article can dig over to the church. His arms is younger'n mine.'

'Strikes me, young Bob Cooke's doing the lot these days,' replied the landlord, straightening his aching back for a moment. 'Can't see you earn your wage, Albert.'

Albert forbore to answer, but shuffled a few paces nearer his grubby front door, and thrust the broom languidly this way and that in front of him.

Mr Jones muttered something uncomplimentary under his breath, seized his spade again, and set to with a will. It was a sore trial having Albert Piggott as next door neighbour, and he was already regretting his action in getting the miserable old sexton of St Andrew's to help with the beer crates in the evenings. Half the time he didn't turn up, and the other half he was too muzzy to do the job properly.

Ah well! His mother used to say: 'These little things are sent to try us.'

One thing was certain, Albert Piggott was the most unpopular man in Thrush Green.

Mr Jones scooped up the last shovelful, dumped it neatly on the pile at the corner, waved to Harold and went indoors, ready for opening time.

Across the green the distant sounds of other inhabitants at work carried clearly to Harold. Ella Bembridge was digging a way to her gate from her thatched cottage. She and Dimity Henstock had lived there for years until Charles had whisked Dimity across to the rectory and now to the lovely vicarage at Lulling. A cigarette was clamped to her lower lip, and its blue smoke mingled with the clouds of breath around her.

(Continues…)



Excerpted from "Affairs at Thrush Green"
by .
Copyright © 1983 Miss Read.
Excerpted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Title Page,
Table of Contents,
Dedication,
Copyright,
Frontispiece,
1. A Snowy Morning,
2. The Rector Goes About His Duties,
3. Unknown at The Fuchsia Bush,
4. Rumours at Thrush Green,
5. A Visit to Tom Hardy,
6. Spring Fevers,
7. Albert Piggott Under Pressure,
8. Albert Makes a Journey,
9. Dotty Harmer Has Visitors,
10. Mrs Thurgood Fights Again,
11. Problems at Thrush Green,
12. A Question of Housing,
13. A Job at The Fuchsia Bush,
14. Thundery Conditions,
15. Under Doctor's Orders,
16. House-Hunting,
17. Future Plans,
18. Charles Is Melancholy,
19. Marriage Plans,
20. Three Christmas Visitors,
About the Author,

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