The idle rich of Boston summer in Maine, a marriage possibly disintegrates far away, and a young boy bitterly mourns the loss of a friendship. We get the alternating perspectives of middle-aged, never married Katharine, and her cousin Maeve's 12-year-old son Andrew, who is staying with Katharine for the summer while Maeve and husband John vacation in Europe. Katharine had thought John would be hers years ago, but he fell instantly for Maeve. Now John has promised Katharine he will leave Maeve for her if the marital problems can't be resolved. Katharine plans a big end of summer lawn party with catherine wheels and other fireworks, and on a whim, orders her tombstone.
The childish perspective, the failures of adults to properly nurture children, and the general tone of expectant unhappiness reminded me of Elizabeth Bowen's The Death of the Heart.
Stafford published this in 1952, and it's set in the 1930s, but it feels much older than that, due to the characters' antique quirks such as driving a horse and carriage, and Stafford's rococo vocabulary:
p. 38: gutta-percha overshoes (latex derived from the gutta-percha tree
p. 39: phrenetic High Church convert (oh, I see this is just an alternate spelling of frenetic).
p. 51: incarnadine house (crimson)
p. 69: a cuspidor made of milk-glass
p. 76: fontanel ("one of the spaces, covered by membrane, between the bones of the fetal or young skull")
p. 81: girandole (a rotating firework)
p. 96: "as virginal and hyaline as the June day" (glassy or transparent)
p. 102: weigela (honeysuckle)
p. 103: isinglass (translucent form of gelatin obtained from fish air bladders)
p. 109: "limp with Musterole" (Vapo-Rub)
p. 111: autochthons (persons native to a place)
p. 117: "she flipped through the tails of her tippet" (a long hanging end of cloth attached to a sleeve, cap, or hood)
p. 119: epithalamium (a song or poem in honor of a bride and bridegroom)
p. 138: "smoking cubebs stolen from his mother's cook" (dried unripe berry of a tropical shrub used as a spice)
p. 155: "stripped of the integument of middle age" (something that covers or encloses)
p. 158: accouchement (time or act of giving birth)
p. 159: dragoman (an interpreter chiefly of Arabic, Turkish, or Persian)
p. 164: "linsey-woolsey knicker bockers and huckabuck shirts"
p. 165: lornly (forlornly)
p. 176: "the purblind mind nosed like a mole" (wholly blind, partly blind, obtuse)
p. 179: gurry (fishing offal)
p. 207: furbelowed
p. 216: infrangible (incapable of being broken)
p. 224: batrachian cicerone (amphibian)
p. 228: tenebrous purgatory
p. 229: earstopples
p. 250: dimity (cotton fabric)
p. 259: freshet (rush of rain or melted snow)
p. 277: tourbillion (whirlwind)
p. 277: garnitures (adornments)
p. 278: squawled (squalled)
p. 45: One use of Dago: "How dared that Dago take such liberties?" (fumed John Shipley after the Cuban parvenu he sold his yacht to painted it green)
p. 97: Nasturtium sandwiches are eaten (cf. M.F.K. Fisher With Bold Knife and Fork who ate them in childhood)