Anthony Lyveden Explained

Anthony Lyveden
Author:Dornford Yates
Genre:Novel
Publisher:Ward Lock & Co[1]
Release Date:1921
Media Type:Print
Pages:308
Followed By:Valerie French

Anthony Lyveden is a 1921 adventure novel by the English author Dornford Yates (Cecil William Mercer). It was first published in monthly instalments in The Windsor Magazine. The book was Mercer's first attempt at a full-length novel, and was succeeded by Valerie French which continued the story of the main characters.

Plot

Anthony Lyveden DSO, a destitute ex-officer, is forced to take a job as a footman at the Gramarye estate. The estate's owner, Colonel Winchester, becomes mad and leaves Lyveden in charge under a power of attorney. The situation drives Lyveden himself to madness.

Background

The author was not a happy man at the time, his father having committed suicide early in 1921, and Mercer's biographer AJ Smithers reports a suggestion that at this date he was not far from suffering a nervous breakdown. He defied The Windsor Magazines tradition that every episode should end with a lovers' meeting, though he was pressed hard by the magazine's editor.

Chapters

ChapterBook TitleWindsor TitleDateVolumeIssuePagesIllustrator
IThe Way Of A ManIn The First PlaceJanuary 1921LIII313101-116Norah Schlegel
IIThe Way Of A MaidIn The Second PlaceFebruary 1921LIII314205-220Norah Schlegel
IIIThe Voice Of The TurtleIn The Third PlaceMarch 1921LIII315311-324Norah Schlegel
IVThe Golden BowlLivery Of SeisinApril 1921LIII316411-425Norah Schlegel
VAn High Look And A Proud HeartA Month's WagesMay 1921LIII317517-531Norah Schlegel
VIThe Comfort Of ApplesGramaryeJune 1921LIV3183-16Norah Schlegel
VIINehustanGrey MatterJuly 1921LIV319109-124Norah Schlegel
VIIIThe Power Of The DogEx-Parte MotionsAugust 1921LIV320223-239Norah Schlegel
IXVanity Of VanitiesThe Return Of The SpiritSeptember 1921LIV321337-355Norah Schlegel

Illustrations

The illustrations from the Windsor stories by Norah Schlegel (1879-1963) were not included in the book version.

Critical reception

Smithers considered Anthony Lyveden to be a book of varying quality, and too episodic to be truly called a novel. He criticised the characterisations, suggesting that a reader might with some justice think the hero a pompous prig, one of the young women a humourless, suspicious creature, and the other a trollop manquée.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: British Library Item details . primocat.bl.uk . 15 May 2020.