Delphi Works of M. E. Braddon

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Delphi Works of M. E. Braddon Page 1145

by Mary Elizabeth Braddon


  MISS BRADDON’S COTTAGE AT LYNDHURST

  The weekly number of ‘Three Times Dead’ was ‘thrown off’ in brief intervals of rest from my magnum opus, and it was an infinite relief to turn from Garibaldi and his brothers in arms to the angels and the monsters which my own brain had engendered, and which to me seemed more alive than the good great man whose arms I so laboriously sang. My rustic pipe far better loved to sing of melodramatic poisoners and ubiquitous detectives; of fine houses in the West of London, and dark dens in the East. So the weekly chapter of my first novel ran merrily off my pen while the printer’s boy waited in the farmhouse kitchen.

  Happy, happy days, so near to memory, and yet so far! In that peaceful summer I finished my first novel, knocked Garibaldi on the head with a closing rhapsody, saw the York spring and summer races in hopelessly wet weather, learnt to love the Yorkshire people, and left Yorkshire almost broken-heartedly on a dull, grey October morning, to travel Londonwards through a landscape that was mostly under water.

  MISS BRADDON’S INKSTAND

  And, behold, since that October morning I have written fifty-three novels; I have lost dear old friends and found new friends, who are also dear, but I have never looked on a Yorkshire landscape since I turned my reluctant eyes from those level meadows and green lanes where the old chestnut mare used to carry me ploddingly to and fro between tall, tangled hedges of eglantine and honeysuckle.

  Richmond Cemetery – Braddon’s final resting place

  Plaque in Richmond Parish Church, commemorating Braddon

  Braddon’s grave

 

 

 


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