An Indiscreet Journey Explained

"An Indiscreet Journey" is a 1915 short story by Katherine Mansfield.[1]

It was republished in Something Childish and Other Stories (1924).

Plot summary

An English woman is traveling to the French front line during the First World War to see her French lover who is the 'Little Corporal'. She is pretending to be going to see her uncle and aunt (two paid actors). She encounters two old women on her train journeys, the first is kind, but the second (nicknamed seagull because of an incongruous fake seagull perched upon her hat) is cunning and perceptive, asking pointed questions, knowing her real purpose in France. The narrator and her lover spend much time in an inn where soldiers drink mirabelle and contemplate their lives and futures.There are few intimate moments shown between the narrator and the little corporal, but one can discern that he is her lover from small details such as his putting his hand over hers, and catching her passport when they are shut alone in a room. The two take rather inconspicuous roles in the latter stages of the story, and the two most prominent roles are the blue-eyed soldier and 'Blackbeard' (a nickname given for similar reasons as 'seagull').

Characters

Various points

Literary significance

The text is written in the modernist mode, without a set structure, and with many shifts in the narrative.

Notes and References

  1. Katherine Mansfield, Selected Stories, Oxford World's Classics, explanatory notes
  2. Book: Alpers . Antony . The Stories of Katherine Mansfield . 1984 . Oxford University Press . Auckland . 0-19-558113-X . 554, 555, 560 .