The Golden Skylark

The Golden Skylark, by Elizabeth Goudge

During my week away, I was living in a great big university library, so naturally I went and hunted up books I didn't have access to at home.  Most of them were for work, but I did sneak in a few fun books for when my brain couldn't think about academic research any more!  I looked up Elizabeth Goudge in the catalog and was quite thrilled to see two or three titles I'd never read.  This was the one I picked to read.

The Golden Skylark is a collection of short stories, and the dedication -- to a girl "who loves England" -- is a clue to the theme.  All of the stories take place in Great Britain.

There are historical stories about famous people, starting with "The Golden Skylark," about the poet Shelley as a young man and the origin (I presume fictitious) of his skylark poem.  There is a story about Sir Thomas More and his children at the time of More's arrest, and another about a teenage Princess Elizabeth meeting Jane Seymour for the first time.  There's also one about Shakespeare's 'dark lady.'

Sprinkled throughout the collection are charming tales about the du Frocq family on the isle of Guernsey, in which the children get into various kinds of mischief, with interesting results.

There is also a tale about a Scottish castle and the children who belong to it, and another of two elderly ladies, their treasures, and an old rogue named Jenkins.  Oh, and one about a shopkeeping lady's two treasures and the boy and girl who wish to buy them.

It's a beguiling little collection of stories; highly recommended for Goudge fans.  Reminds me a bit of Eleanor Farjeon's stories, too; I think if you like one you'll also like the other.  Lucky me to find it in a library collection!

_______________________________________
I really could just live down there.  The more modern wing of the stacks had those moveable shelves that can cram almost double the books into the space, but unlike most of the moveable shelving I've seen, these had electric buttons instead of cranks.  I think the cranks are more reliable; the buttons are temperamental and getting elderly.  But, oh, the delights inside those stacks!  I found the mid-century English literature, literature from a dozen lands in their own languages, all sorts of lovely things on that floor.

Comments

  1. JEALOUS. That's all I'm going to say.

    Especially now I live in a place that doesn't even have English language books in the library. I'd better learn French, quick.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Well, your situation has its perks! I too would miss easy access to English titles (though ebooks would make up for a good deal), but I am quite envious of your wonderful opportunities. Good luck learning French -- now there's a tricky proposition for me to contemplate! I'd be more comfortable with the German...

    ReplyDelete
  3. You are correct, and yet between getting lost in some old-fashioned library stacks and hiking mountains it's a tough call. Fresh air is good for you but so are books.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Would it be too strange to tell people I am planning a vacation at this library?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Very true, Lory!!

    Deb, that is pretty much what I did. :) So, IMO no.

    ReplyDelete
  6. That sounds delightful. I love the idea of made-up stories about little moments of real history.

    ReplyDelete
  7. It is delightful! She's really good at it, and I bet you'd enjoy the stories.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

I'd love to know what you think, so please comment!

Popular posts from this blog

The Four Ages of Poetry

Ozathon #1: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz