The Stolen March


The Stolen March is a 1926 fantasy novel by the English author Dornford Yates, first serialised in The Windsor Magazine.

Plot

The novel starts credibly enough, with the return of Simon and Patricia Beaulieu. Simon falls ill, and on medical advice the couple take a relaxed caravan holiday, driving down through France to the fictional country of Etchechuria, lying in the Pyrenees between France and Spain. En route they are joined by Eulalie and Pomfret Tudor. There, fantastic things start to happen: they are addressed by a mule speaking English, and find themselves in a land peopled by animated illustrations and nursery rhyme characters. The tone becomes darker, and some of the characters start to develop murderous intent.

Background

Mercer himself loved The Stolen March, but recognised that many readers did not. He later said that the editor of The Windsor Magazine would probably never have accepted the novel for serialisation had he realised at the start where the story would ultimately lead.

Critical reception

Mercer’s biographer AJ Smithers, writing in 1982, considered that this book contains some of the author’s best pastoral writing, and that some of it is very funny indeed.

Sequel

Mercer reported that he had "had a great many requests that I should turn again to Etchechuria" and had begun writing a book entitled The Tempered Wind which had reached fifty-one pages when his "subconscious brain stopped dead", and he eventually abandoned the project.