The Inn of the Two Witches explained

The Inn of the Two Witches
Author:Joseph Conrad
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Published In:The Pall Mall Magazine
Pub Date:March 1913

"The Inn of the Two Witches" is a work of short fiction by Joseph Conrad, first published in The Pall Mall Magazine in March 1913. The story was collected in Within the Tides (1915) published by J. M. Dent and Sons.[1]

Plot

The story is set during the Spanish Peninsular War, a military theater of the Napoleonic Wars. A British naval officer goes in search of his henchman who has disappeared. Spending the night at an isolated inn, the officer narrowly escapes death. The four-poster bed he sleeps in is an ingenious device fitted with a descending canopy that serves to suffocate its slumbering victims. He narrowly escapes the fate of his servant.[2] [3]

Critical assessment

Biographer Jocelyn Baines provides no analysis of "The Inn of the Two Witches", merely describing it as "a very un-typical potboiler" and "a story more suitable for boys than for adults."[4] Literary critic Laurence Graver, after providing a thumbnail sketch of the story, adds that the work "does not require discussion."[5]

Graver offers these remarks concerning Conrad's final efforts as a writer of short fiction:

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Graver, 1969 p. 201: Appendix
  2. Baines, 1960 p. 390: Plot summary
  3. Graver, 1969 p. 171, footnote: Plot summary, "...an anecdote about a British soldier who is nearly murdered in a huge bed with a false canopy that can be manipulated to suffocate its victims."
  4. Baines, 1960 p. 390:
  5. Graver, 1969 p. 171, footnote