M - Menabilly
The opening of Rebecca, possibly Daphne's most famous novel begins -
Belonging to the Rashleigh family, Menabilly, became the home for Daphne and her husband from 1943 to 1969, its history and grounds also provided input to novels later than Rebecca.
The first novel she wrote at Menabilly was The King's General. Set during the English Civil war, it was prompted by the discovery, during alterations to Menabilly in the 1820s, of a walled-up skeleton thought to have been a Cavalier. It tells the story of the love between Richard Grenville, The King's General and Royalist Honor Harris, one of du Maurier's strongest heroines.
in 1969 the year she was made a DBE, the Rashleighs wanted to return to Menabilly; despite all the money she had spent on its restoration Daphne was forced to accept a move to its dower house, Kilmarth, where she was to live until her death.
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Menabilly, The Seat of Rashleigh, Esq. Cornwall (Antique print - in public domain) |
I first went to Fowey in Cornwall in 2007. By chance our visit coincided with the Daphne du Maurier Festival celebrating her centenary.
The opening of Rebecca, possibly Daphne's most famous novel begins -
"Last
night I dreamt I went to Manderley again. It seemed to me I stood by the iron
gate leading to the drive, and for a while I could not enter, for the way was
barred to me. There was a padlock and chain upon the gate. I called in my dream
to the lodge keeper, and had no answer, and peering closer through the rusted
spokes of the gate I saw that the lodge was uninhabited."
That opening introduced Manderley, a forbidding house
with an equally forbidding, black-clad Mrs Danvers as its housekeeper. The
fictional Manderley was modelled on Milton House, near Peterborough the ancestral
home of the Fitzwilliam family and the house and gardens of the Cornish
Menabilly.
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Menabilly House, Fowey, Cornwall (Created Jan 1, 1920 - in public domain) |