From the
Wikipedia:- "
Dorothy Edwards (18 August 1903 – 6 January 1934), was a Welsh novelist of the early 20th century.
Edwards was from Ogmore Vale in South Wales. She was educated at Howell's School for girls in Llandaff and at Cardiff University. She was politically active, working for socialist and Welsh nationalist causes, but wrote in English. She was also a talented amateur singer. On 6 January 1934 she threw herself in front of a train near Caerphilly railway station. She left a suicide note stating: "I am killing myself because I have never sincerely loved any human being all my life. I have accepted kindness and friendship and even love without gratitude, and given nothing in return."
Edwards wrote a short story, "The Conquered," which was included in A View Across The Valley (an anthology re-claiming female Welsh nature writers)."
A Review of "Rhapsody" - Dorothy Edwards ( Parthian/Library of Wales )
"I
am killing myself because I have never sincerely loved any human being
all my life. I have accepted kindness and friendship, and even love,
without gratitude and given nothing in return."
Cardiff Times 13th January 1934
So read the suicide note found on Dorothy Edwards' body after her tragic death in January 1934.
This fine collection of short stories amply
demonstrates why, had she lived longer, she might have gone on to become
the Welsh Chekhov. Each one is a finely crafted gem although none of
them could count as cheery companions for a vacation trip. Many of her
characters demonstrate the same eerie and unsettling sense of detachment
from their own lives which is evident in the suicide note quoted above.
They are frequently consumed with a passion for music which seems to
act as a surrogate for genuine emotional attachments. Their enthusiasm
for the "life of the mind" seems to preclude and eclipse meaningful
human relationships.
It was fashionable in the early 70's to evaluate
artists and authors in terms of psychological diagnostic categories and
many including
Sylvia Plath and even Dylan Thomas were labeled as
schizoid
by literary critics of that era.. However flawed such critical
practices may be the label does seem to throw some light on both Dorothy
Edwards and many of her characters.
In the first of these tales, the eponymously titled
Rhapsody
George Everett is introduced in the following terms:- "His face wore a
curious expression, as if he were listening all the time to something
intensely illuminating but scarcely audible, or as if he were
experiencing some almost intolerably sweet emotion, and he seemed to be
imploring you 'Please don't interrupt me for a moment; it will soon be
over.' Later in the book after his wife's death his reaction to this
tragic event is characterized thus:- " Everett behaved at her death very
much as he had behaved when she was ill. He was vaguely sorry for her,
but he did not altogether understand what was expected of him."
This collection, which includes three stories not
published or excluded from the original 1927 edition, abounds with
characters who are similarly emotionally crippled or repressed.
As
Christopher Meredith says in his excellent introduction to this Parthian/Library of Wales
edition:- " Fashion for re-readings according to various theories have
helped critics to rediscover her from time to time, but I believe that
Dorothy Edwards is a great deal more than an interesting literary case.
She's an important, utterly original modernist. Whichever way you read
her, she's the extraordinarily accomplished author of powerful and
suggestive fictions."
In echoing these sentiments I can only add that as an
avid fan of the short story genre these must rank amongst the finest I
have read in many years.
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For the morbidly curious the approximate site of her
tragic death can be viewed in the Google Map linked below. Railway
Terrace and the "Allotments" ( Community Gardens ) referred to in the
"Cardiff Times" article linked above are still there. To the best of my
knowledge there is no plaque to mark the spot. Perhaps there should be?
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