I hope that Kindle offers more Dorothy Lambert novels, I would certainly read them, for I so enjoyed Lambert's "Much Dithering". I love older books and this one had me wanting to read until, I found out about all the Much Dithering's happenings. Would Much Dithering become another town that advances to modern ways or will it remain quaint and behind the times? Who is the stranger that comes into town raising an uproar?
Story in short- Young widow Jocelyn Renshawe does everything her mother-in-law and aunt request. Her mother, Ermyntrude thinks her daughter should marry an old man while she should marry a young one.
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The unlikely heroine of this delightful comedy of manners is Jocelyn Renshawe, young widow of the local squire, “a specimen of human cabbage” who “fitted into her surroundings so completely that she was hardly noticeable.” But she’s about to be noticed a bit more—by her jaded, much-widowed mother Ermyntrude, who breezes in on the look-out for her next conquest; by her aunt
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and mother-in-law, who have decided she should marry Colonel Tidmarsh, an elderly (and extremely dull) retired Army man; and by Gervase Blythe, a mysterious acquaintance of Colonel Tidmarsh’s, who arrives in town and rescues Jocelyn from a rainstorm before coming under suspicion as a jewel thief. One is safe in assuming that Jocelyn is about to leave her mouldering existence behind, but how she does so is the sparkling, cheerful plot of Much Dithering.
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‘An excellent evening’s entertainment’ reported the Dover Express (3 January 1934) of two plays staged a couple of days earlier by the Shepherdswell Village Players. The reviewer gave full details of the event, mentioning that the second of the plays, ‘Christmas Party’, written and produced by Mrs. Dorothy Lambert, ‘contained many amusing and delicate scenes’. Among the play’s characters were a ‘Jocelyn’, a ‘Mrs. Goodbun’, and a ‘Colonel Tidmarsh’, all of whom re-appeared four years later, their parts expanded in a full- length novel, Much Dithering. Given by ‘Jocelyn’, catered for by the obliging ‘Mrs. Goodbun’, and attended by, among others, ‘Colonel Tidmarsh’, a Christmas Day party does, indeed, feature in the novel, at the centre of the action a chimney fire, the reactions
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to which sort the Much Dithering sheep from the Much Dithering goats.
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Ermyntrude Lascelles, widowed for the second time, felt that Fate had treated her shabbily in removing her George just as he was about to get command of his regiment. The rôle of a colonel’s wife would have suited her admirably, and twice it had been almost within reach and then snatched away:
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Being George, within sight of achieving his wife’s ambition, he contracted measles, which led to pneumonia, and so Ermyntrude was a widow who lived in a private hotel in South Kensington and visited her friends with unfailing regularity.
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She disliked her sister-in-law and despised her daughter for her lack of initiative and fondness for good
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works. Jocelyn’s marriage, too, had been such a dreary failure. If only she had been able to keep her husband alive a year longer! But there again Fate had been unkindly freakish, and Lancelot Renshawe died of a chill a few months before his father, so Jocelyn had not achieved what all her relatives had so ardently desired for her. The property that had for centuries belonged to the Renshawes had passed her by and had been inherited by a nephew of whom no one knew
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anything, and Jocelyn, instead of being the Lady of the Manor and a daughter of whom Ermyntrude could be proud (as well as being able to provide a pleasant country house in which to stay), was still a person of no importance, living in a small, old-fashioned and inconvenient dower house, and even that only until the new owner should return.
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Yes, she must certainly keep her eye on Adrian, and a visit to Much Dithering would be an excellent idea. It was very odd the way Fate worked. Who would ever have imagined that Much Dithering would prove a battle- ground in which to pit her wits against those of Adrian’s mother, who would be sure to object to her age?
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Of her success with Adrian she had no doubt whatever. He was completely subjugated, and his capture was so certain that she passed that part over with indifference. He was merely the stepping-stone to the country house she desired and the position of wife to the local Member of Parliament.
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Ermyntrude would have to impress upon Jocelyn that the Murchison-Bellabys were not her sort of people and prevent her coming into contact with them if possible. And yet, if Jocelyn did not call and make their acquaintance, how could she in her turn get to know them? The point was exasperating. At all events, Adrian must not meet Jocelyn
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until he was safely booked to be her stepfather.
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First of all I absolutely disliked Ermyntrude and especially her thinking that she is something grand and her daughter worthless. At first I thought Mrs. Renshawe was a terrible brute, but when Miss Palfrey tries to marry her niece off to the older Colonel, Mrs. Renshawe questions the sense of this. After Blythe tells his plans to marry Jocelyn and leave his aunt in charge of the place, which is what she wanted, she was indeed in good humor. When the Murchison-Bellabys first were mentioned having a son Adrian, I had thought nothing between Adrian and Ermyntrude was there, only in her mind, I had thought Adrian would be with Jocelyn until the stranger, Blythe showed up. It became clear Adrian a worthless cad that would have been attracted to many females and especially a designing older one. I did not feel too sorry for him but I cannot understand how his mother would let him marry someone that would probably not give her grandchildren, Jocelyn, her daughter is 25, and woman with family background but so self centered. I felt Victor married unlucky because either Jasmine will be a good wife or get him into trouble. I suppose he will reign her in. If I had not seen in the Kindle highlights on Blythe's last name, I might have suspected but would be kind of surprised that he was indeed the heir. He looks to be in his early forties and ready to settle down but still have adventures with his wife and future children. Tidmarsh deserved Ermyntrude but he will luck out and get a nice Miss Palfrey to help his elderly years be more comfortable.
*** Much Dithering is where Ermyntrude Lascelles plans to catch husband number three Adrian Murchison-Bellabys. Her husband died before his title realized and her daughter Jocelyn's husband died before his father so the estate goes to a cousin. Ermyntrude does not want Ardrian to meet her daughter until the marriage is over.
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“I’ll tell Leopold,” Mrs. Murchison-Bellaby assured her. “We’ll be sure to come regularly, and our young people, too. I have great hopes that my son will like the place, and that some day he will leave the Army and marry and settle here and stand for Parliament. That’s my ambition.”
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“Of course there’s the Honourable Augusta at the Priory. She’s the widow of our late lamented Lord of the Manor and a bit antiquated in her views, I fear.” “In fact, a frump,” broke in Jasmine rudely. “No good! Go on— who else?” “Then there’s Miss Pallfrey at Green Gates—a dear; but you’ll call her a frump, too, I’m afraid. And then there’s her niece Jocelyn Renshawe. She’s quite young
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and my right hand in the parish. I’d be lost without her. You’ll love her—every one does—and you’ll be very good for her.” She paused and looked Jasmine over. “Yes, you’ll be very good for her. She’s almost too good, though I, the vicar’s wife, say so. She’s young in years, but she has never been allowed to enjoy her youth. Her aunt brought her up, and she was married off at eighteen to young Lancelot Renshawe, who was—well, to be blunt, not quite mental, but soft. Then he died some
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time ago, and she is still ordered about by her aunt and mother-in-law. I’d like to see Jocelyn young. You must shake her up.”
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“There is Colonel Tidmarsh, a retired Army man—very pleasant, but a little gloomy, poor fellow. He is a widower, and I fear has never got over the death of his wife.” “How tiresome!” Mrs. Pomfret put a finger to her lip. “Ah, but I think he is on the mend. I’m sure he admires Jocelyn Renshawe, and I think it would be quite a good thing for her, if nothing else turned up—not lively, of course—but she won’t expect liveliness—and it
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would be a comfort to her aunt to leave her in safe hands when she dies.” “It sounds a pretty poor idea to me,” scoffed Jasmine, “to be left in safe hands. Heavens, give me a spice of danger! I want to be alive. Safety doesn’t appeal to me.” “I dare say not, but every one has her own point of view. I’m glad to say Jocelyn is full of common sense and is never likely to seek for excitement or danger.”
*** Jasmine Murchinson-Bellabys is 20; her mother and herself visit the vicar's wife, Mrs. Pomfret. They are told about the residents who seem boring. Jocelyn's story of being a too good and kind widow but Jasmine is not interested in her story. Her brother Adrian is a trouble maker according to Jasmine.