Late 18th Century in Cornwall
1760
January – Ross Vennor Poldark, newborn, is christened at St.
Sawle, Grambler-with-Sawle church, with his parents Joshua and Grace in attendance.
1765
Claude Anthony Poldark is born to Joshua and Grace Poldark and
christened at St. Sawle church.
1770
May 9th – Grace Vennor Poldark dies, age 30, and is buried at St. Sawle churchyard. Ross, her eldest son, is aged 10.
1771
January 9th- Claude Anthony Poldark, age 6, dies
and is buried at St. Sawle churchyard.
1781
Ensign Ross Poldark, age 21, of the British Army, takes leave
of Cornwall for the American War.
Ross Poldark
Book One
1783
March 11-
Joshua Poldark dies, age 59, buried at St. Sawle churchyard. His son, Ross, now a Captain and in New York recovering at the conclusion of the American War, learns of his passing via letter in the summertime.
October,
mid-month- Captain Ross Poldark, de-commissioned from the Army, returns to Cornwall
with a cheek scar and a leg limp from his British Army days. He borrows first (then later buys) a lame mare from the man at the Red Lion
Inn- she was left as collateral for non-payment of bill. She is christened
“Darkie” by sweet cousin, Verity, because she has a “pretty black streak” and in honor of Ross’s
nickname, the “dark Poldark” (Francis was the “fair Poldark”). Ross discovers
his un-official fiancé, the fair and blond Elizabeth Chynoweth, is engaged to
his cousin, Francis. This is a “bit” of a blow to the now orphaned, Ross. In
modern parlance, we would call this a “bad day”.
-Ross finds his home, Nampara, a
disaster. The cat, Tabitha Bethia is doing well, but otherwise, there are dead
and live chickens in the house, nothing has been cleaned, maintained, repaired,
or tended (meaning no fields plowed or sown) in ages. The last two servants,
Jud and Prudie Paynter, are drunk and in his father’s bed.
October, late in the month - Darkie loses her lameness once
she receives proper shoeing and good treatment.
November 1st-
cousin Francis Poldark weds Elizabeth Chynoweth in the church of St. Sawle.
November 2nd-
New Year’s Eve, and beyond – Ross works steadfastly and without distraction on
the ill-kept and abused Nampara, “drinking too much and thinking too much” and
becoming a “brooding man.” (R.P. p. 80) At least cousin Verity Poldark visits
often and his lameness improves.
Winter - Ross turns 24 years old.
1784
April 11, Sunday – Easter
April 12, Monday - the Ball in Truro: Ross escorts Verity Poldark, dances with Ruth Teague, sees Elizabeth Poldark, and sleeps with Margaret Vosper. It was a big day. VREM, VREM! Comes home slightly depressed (from the "megrims" of the night) and goes for a swim.
April 13, Tuesday - The Annual Redruth Fair: Ross goes to buy
livestock, and succeeds. We meet Demelza Carne, a 13 year-old black-haired girl from a motherless,
drink-addled family with a beating, bully of a father. She agrees to new terms
for her future: kitchen maid at Nampara without beatings. She is accompanied by her loyal, black mongrel dog, Garrick, still a pup like her. She turns 14 very soon
after.
June- early - the main Branch of the Poldark family vetoes
Miss Verity’s selection of a possible husband, Captain Andrew Blamey, who has an unfortunate past history of accidentally killing his first wife while she was with child.
June 30 ish - Jim Carter weds Jinny Martin, eldest of the 12 Martin children.
- Ross returns home from a meeting of the potential shareholders planning on opening the copper mine, Wheal Leisure. He finds a rabid Rueben Clemmow, formerly of Mellin (a Nampara micro-village), hiding in his barn before Rueben swings a mining "jumper" at Ross - which grazes him on the shoulder. A jumper is an iron bar tipped with a chisel shaped edge used by the miners to bore their way into rock,.. or someone's head. Ross escapes the darkened barn, locking it behind - with Rueben trapped inside - then goes into the house to retrieve his pistol. Back at the barn, another near miss with the jumper on Rueben's part, and Ross fires his gun at the fleeing man. But a bloody trail is all that is left behind.
July- later in the month - Garrick the-Dog, is allowed entrance, for the first time, into the kitchen.
July – Elizabeth Poldark is with child.
August, mid-month - Ross, who has grown fond of his
intelligent, young kitchen girl, allows her to ride with him on Darkie and buys
her a red cloak.
August, late in the month - Captain Andrew Blamey, having secured the
approval of Ross some months back, has been meeting occasionally with Verity at
Nampara until this day, when he has a near fatal duel with Francis Poldark, who really doesn't like him. Having used Ross's father's dueling pistols for the aforesaid duel, Ross is unhappy, but Francis is more so, and a falling out between the two begins.
September (Autumn) - Francis Poldark and his good friend,
George Warleggan, begin regularly frequenting gambling parties- furnished with
many physical stimulations beyond drink, cards and coin. Hint, hint, nudge, nudge, know what I mean?
- Ross hires Jack Cobbledick to work on the farm.
October, end of the month - Geoffrey Charles Poldark born at
Trenwith to his parents, Francis and Elizabeth. Elizabeth discovers the
greatest love of her life: her child. Her husband falls to a dismal fifth place behind #1- his son, # 2 & #3- her parents (which is obligatory love, but keenly bound love nonetheless) and #4- Ross Poldark, his cousin, the danger boy. It is a bitter pill for him to swallow.
Late November-early December- Geoffrey Charles’ Christening
at St. Sawle, after which Ross attends the celebration at Trenwith and first hears
the women gossiping about a perceived inappropriate relationship between him
and his serving girl, Demelza. He is a just a trifle angry, the serving girl being but 14- Jeeze!!- but says nothing...though he thinks a great deal and it is very colorful language.
1785
Early in the year - Demelza discovers a new world at Nampara
when she finally braves the closed room of the library… a room that Ross avoids
due to its potent family memories. Having no decent memories of her own childhood, this place is Disneyland to Demelza.
March - Benjamin Ross Carter born to Jinny and Jim Carter- the
child is named in honor of Captain Ross Poldark, who has particularly
befriended the young family.
April - Reuben Clemmow, the very disturbed man from the previous June, returns to Mellin late one night and
attacks Jinny Carter in her cottage (while Jim is at Hendrawna Beach to help
scavenge a new sea wrecked ship). He dies in the chaos and delirium of the
struggle, but the baby, Benjy Ross, is left with a scar-for-life to match his namesake. Jinny is stabbed in the chest, but her heart is not injured...physically, at least.
Book Two
Mid-April - Demelza turns 15.
January to late Autumn - Ross avoids all social events with
people of his own class due to his aversion of being around the tiresome and
offensive gossips that he so dislikes. (social media of the 18th
century).
1786
March - Demelza has moved into the role of “general
housekeeper” and enjoys “contriving the meals and cooking them”…because Prudie
lacks real initiative, it seems (R.P. p.264).
Late April -
Demelza, now age 16, finds a bottle of gin in the library and samples it; a
fight between her and Jud ensues, broken-up by a rather displeased Ross, who
gives Demelza the sterner of the tongue lashings. She is forbidden drink
thereafter. Demelza is beyond chagrined.
May - a
deeper friendship begins to develop between Ross and Demelza because “he was
lonely and glad of companionship” (R.P. p 264) and she seeks to remedy his
disappointment in her...over her getting inebriated and wrestling with Jud.
June and
July - Demelza sets about to restore Grace’s old garden at Nampara.
July - Ross
is still drinking heavily (R.P. p 264).
Autumn-
Demelza is given her own allowance.
1787
February -
Jim Carter is treated by Dr. Choake for Morbid
Condition of the Lung. He can no longer work in the mine.
April –
Demelza turns 17.
April - After
much preparatory work by Ross, the decision is finally made (and a consortium
is formed) to re-open Wheal Leisure Mine on the edge of Nampara land.
- - Horace
Trenaglos, utterly un-aware, tells a sober and unresponsive Ross about a story
he “heard of a fellow the other day who was carrying on with his kitchen wench,
serious, I mean, not for a lark.” (R.P. p.284)
May 30th-
Jim Carter, arrested for poaching several days earlier, stands trial in Truro,
and despite Ross’s attempt at defensive lawyering, is found guilty and
sentenced to two years. Ross buys a bottle of brandy at the Fighting Cocks Inn
and sets about drinking it.
- - Demelza’s
father, Tom Carne, shows up at Nampara a reformed man – in looks anyway- and
asks her about “sin” between her and Captain Poldark (R.P. p 299); he then
informs her that he has come to take her home. She is given a few days to talk
to the captain and prepare for the return to Illugan. (He and his new wife need
their own kitchen wench for their expanding family…)
- - After
Demelza gets rid of her father, and in a fit of exploding emotions, comes to
realize that she “adores” Ross (R.P. p 303) and that “she can’t leave him” for
her father’s home. (R.P. p 298) – (She has known of the rumors about her and
Ross for a long time and has dismissed them as idle chatter. (R.P. p 304)). Her choice becomes very clear; her mind is made up and un-changeable.
- - With no "dutch courage" for confidence, a determined Demelza seduces Ross on his return from Truro.
June 1st
-Ross proposes to Demelza that they should marry.
Book Three
June 24th
– Ross Vennor Poldark weds Demelza Carne at the church of St. Sawle; he is age
27, she is 17 (but gives her age as 18).
August,
first week – The Pilchard Run comes in and Ross takes Demelza out in their boat
to watch the shoals of slight silver fish
caught-up by the seining nets
in the light of the night.
The harvest becomes a reawakening experience
for Ross’ heart.
- neither of them drink that much, but Ross first feels love for his wife.
September -
Uncle Charles Poldark, the grand patriarch, dies at Trenwith.
September,
end of – October, first week – Verity comes to Nampara for 3 weeks. During the awkward-at-first
visit to Nampara, Verity and Demelza become friends, and go shopping in Truro. (Demelza’s 4th visit ever to the town) Demelza buys: things
for the house- like a clock, her first “lady’s” dress and orders her first nice lingerie, aka
“small clothes” (R.P. p 414).
October, 3rd
– 4th week of - last days of Verity’s visit at Nampara; Demelza
tells Verity that she believes herself to be pregnant- perhaps six – eight
weeks along.
Monday, December
24th – Christmas Eve - Ross and Demelza are invited to Trenwith for
the night. They attend and while Demelza changes upstairs, Elizabeth
confidentially asks Ross to find out for her “if Francis is going with another
woman” (R.P. p 420). Later that evening Elizabeth plays several pieces on her
harp, but does not sing, followed by Demelza, who sings two Cornish folk songs: one
the sultry sweet I d’ Pluck a Fair Rose
for My Love and then the saucy As
Pretty a Piece of Mischief as Never I Saw. Aunt Agatha’s says (R.P. p. 410) she is
“ninety-one. Last Thursday sennight.” – marking her birthday, therefore, (If I
am correct in my reading) as Sunday, December 13th, 1696. (Fun Fact:
Julian calendar, not Gregorian). Agatha dubs Demelza "Bud" as in flower bud. John Treneglos takes a shine to Demelza and also calls her "Bud". Ross is humored and pleased with Demelza's social debut. Up in their room at Trenwith later that night, both a little far gone in liquor, bot not too far, they share an intimate hour with petals removed.
December 25th, Christmas Day - Ross and Demelza walk home to Nampara and Ross is briefly, truly and completely happy.
“If a
man has vitality let him increase his own soul, not set about owning other
people’s.” (R.P. p 430) - Ross Poldark
Demelza
1788
Book One
May 16th,
Friday – Julia Grace Poldark is born to her parents Ross and Demelza Poldark.
July 22, Tuesday - Julia is christened at St. Sawle Church with her godparents Verity and Francis
Poldark in attendance, followed by a christening party at Nampara. The first of two christening parties planned: one for the "high folk" and one for the "low folk" (D. p. 26). The party afterward at Nampara begins admirably, but goes south fast when Demelza's aggressive and abrasive father shows up (a day early!!!) and makes religiously snide remarks about Ruth (Teague) Treneglos's expansive bosom.
-Joan Pascoe brings a new young
man in the district to the christening party; his name is Dr. Dwight Enys.
July 23rd -
Second christening party held for the village neighbors with a performance in
the Nampara Library afterward by the traveling theatrical company, Aaron Ottway’s Players. An alluring young woman named Karen is among them. Jud wishes he could kiss Char Nanfan, but is denied.
Verity is 29
and Elizabeth is 24.
August,
beginning of month - Jud and Demelza go to Falmouth for the day to find Captain
James Blamey. Demelza is a woman on a mission and her quest is to deliver Verity her happiness. Happiness in and with her own life (Not the happiness of being useful to other's lives, but the happiness of creating your own life, love, family, home, and community for you and yours...)
August, end
of month - Mark Daniels, Ross’s childhood friend, weds the traveling player,
Keren Smith, after he builds a cottage for her on Nampara land in less than a
week’s time. The little house is called Reath Cottage. Keren is almost satisfied with Mark's efforts.
September - The
Carnmore Copper Company is founded. Shareholders are: Lord Devoran, Sir John
Michael Trevaunance, Bart., Alfred Barbary, Esq., Ray Penvenen, Esq., Ross
Vennor Poldark, Esq., Peter St. Aubyn Tresize, Esq., Richard Paul Cowdray
Tonkin, Esq., Henry Blewett, William Trencrom, and Thomas Johnson.
October 20th
– Verity re-meets Captain Andrew Blamey after four years of separation. There are grain
riots in Truro.
October,
late in the month - Jud and Prudie are fired after Jud drinks too much of Ross’s
liquor from the cellar and allows his mouth to run away with him while –
unbeknownst to Jud - Ross is in earshot. Jud has slandered Jinny Carter, whose husband is locked up in prison, and Ross, who is not.
October, end
of month - Jane and John Gimlett (age 40-ish) are hired to replace Jud and
Prudie- they are a revelation in quality of service.
November 12th
– After sustaining numerous severe losses at the gaming tables, especially at
those hosted by George Warleggan, and predominantly to a well-to-do miller
named Mathew Sansom, Francis must face his greatest loss yet: Grambler Mine.
The 188 year-old Trenwith Poldark mine is closed, after operating continuously
since about 1600. This sets the Trenwith Poldarks into an economic tailspin.
1789
Book Two
Ross is 29.
Winter,
early in the year - Verity and Captain Blamey are secretly courting; their
correspondence is carried by a loyal friend.
March - Keren
Daniel, Mark’s hard-to-satisfy young wife, sets her libidinous sites on the
young, terribly handsome, and single Dr. Dwight Enys.
April 3rd -
Carnmore Copper Company makes their first purchase of raw ore at the ticketing
in Truro.
-The Nampara Poldarks are invited
to the Kings Recovery Celebration Ball and the pre-party at the Warleggan’s
Truro town house.
April, early
in the month- Keren Daniel has wriggled her way into the soft heart of Dr.
Enys.
April,
mid-month - Demelza is 19.
April 17th-
Ross splurges on Demelza in Truro: he first buys her a gold and ruby brooch set
with seed pearls (D. p. 222) followed by a fashion forward, sexy and showy,
silver silk damask gown.
-evening- Ross and
Dwight arrive by 7 pm in Launceston to inquire after the health of Ross’s
servant, Jim Carter, who is still in jail on a two-year poaching sentence (his
release should have been set for May of this year). They find Jim, with
difficulty, in an overcrowded and fever plagued gaol (prison). They “release”
him.
April 18th-
in Launceston, Jim, suffering from fever and a gangrenous arm cannot be saved
despite Ross and Dwight’s best efforts. Jim dies and is buried.
April 22 -
Ross and Dwight arrive back home in the morning. Ross, despondent, has been
consuming brandy for some time.
-Jinny Carter, widowed mother of three, attempts suicide by hanging.
April 23rd -
Despite Ross’s self-loathing aversion to going to the King’s Recovery
Celebration Ball in Truro, he agrees to take Demelza and they attend.
- Looking at herself in the new shimmering gown before the
ball, Demelza thought, “it wasn’t decent”, but goes forth into the evening
nonetheless. Wearing “the frock” and brooch she finds she must fend off fawning
– and mostly very unimpressive - men. An angry Ross is nowhere to be seen for most of the night. Demelza learns later that the Lord Lieutenant
“asked who she was” (D. p .306) (Fun fact: Ross paid £90 for the brooch in 1789, but in 2017 the cost would be £12,510.00).
-Verity is there also, and meets Captain Blamey, but Francis
also sees him and a fight nearly ensues. Blamey is forced to make a quick
departure from Truro and from Verity yet again.
-George flirts with Elizabeth.
-Ross drinks, then plays cards with Mathew Sansom. While not really
enjoying the gaming, Ross privately discovers that Sansom is a card sharp, and
chooses to reveal the fact to the other guests who are watching their late-night
high-stakes game. Ross tosses Sansom into the tidal Truro river, which,
according to Ross, “was not at home” (D. p. 300). Ross also learns- after the fact- that
Mathew Sansom is George Warleggan’s cousin.
April 24th-Keren
Daniel seduces Dwight.
May 2nd -
Warleggan informers have given Cary Warleggan a report on the rival Carnmore
Copper Company and its shareholders: Warleggans now know a few of the players- Travaunance,
Poldark and Tonkin…enough to begin the squeeze. George and Uncle Cary’s motivation,
though not Father Nicholas’s, is in part pure revenge against Ross for publicly revealing
the card cheating of cousin Mathew.
Book Three
July 26th,
Sunday – Verity runs away with Captain Andrew Blamey.
-Francis and Elizabeth discover
Verity’s planned elopement and Francis is beside himself with rage.
-George Warleggan
arrives at Trenwith-coincidentally- to offer £1200 in reimbursement of Francis’s debt to Mathew Sansom and Cary
Warleggan- £600 in cash and £600 to pay down loans. Francis, in his state of
shock and fury from the news of Verity’s elopement (not to mention he’s been drinking
for a few hours), is startled and stunned by this show of magnanimity from
George. He shares with George his belief that Ross facilitated Verity’s
departure and in his anger, chooses to make a “grand recognition” to George’s
“friendship.” He gives the names of the Carnmore Copper Company shareholders,
knowing full well that in so doing, “the scheme need necessarily fail.” (D. p.
349)
July 27th, Monday - around 1
o’clock in the morning, there
is a black powder accident at Wheal Leisure involving Mark Daniels. He leaves
his pitch early on his core and goes home to tend his wounds and confront Keren
about her infidelity. He has suspected it for a very long time, but until now, has not wanted to believe.
-Keren Daniel is discovered dead in her kitchen window by
little Charlie Baragwanath, the gardener’s boy at Mingoose, about 4:30 in the
morning.
-at 11 in the morning, in Falmouth, Verity Poldark weds
Captain James Blamey at the Church of King Charles the Martyr.
-late afternoon, Ross receives letter from Elizabeth sharing
the news of Verity’s elopement. He rides to Trenwith to console with them and is
completely surprised to discover Francis’ suspicions of his and Demelza’s
involvement. Ross believes that he and Francis “have broken for a long time.” (D. p. 383)
July 28th,
Tuesday, 6 pm - Captain McNeil of the Scots Greys and his 5 dragoons arrive at
Nampara for a chat about sea worthy vessels.
July 29th,
Wednesday, before 1 am - Mark Daniels flees Cornwall in Ross’s small cutter,
bound for France.
July 31st, Friday - Ross goes to Place House at Travaunance Cove
for a meeting of the Carnmore shareholders and bumps into Captain McNeil along
the way. McNeil offers Ross a friendly bit of advice about giant black squids.
-The meeting of the shareholders
does not go well: 3 of the shareholders have received letters from Warleggan’s
Bank inexplicably calling in their loans without notice. Pressure has reached a
peak against the young company and Ross begins to fear that they will not
survive.
-Demelza ventures to Trenwith to
confess to Francis her own solitary hand in Verity’s elopement. He throws her
out.
-Demelza confesses to Ross her
involvement with Verity’s courtship and marriage to Captain James Blamey and
that she had taken the news to Francis also. They have their first heated quarrel;
Ross’s fury comes slowly at first, then breaks with meanness. He shortly gains some perspective and allows
his anger to subside as he realizes that this information is tied to Francis’
behavior and the struggles of the Carnmore Copper Company.
Late in the
year- Old Ramoth, Joshua’s blind old horse, dies.
Book Four
December 24th,
1789, Christmas Eve - A letter from Verity arrives describing her new life as a
success, but allowing that she misses her family. Carolers arrive at 9 pm and
Ross finally returns at 10 pm. Ross and Demelza have a quiet Christmas at home
but there is now a permanent constraint between them and his love is altered
toward her. She suffers a painful and guilt ridden awareness that her actions
on Verity’s behalf have led to Francis’ betrayal against Ross (and the other men
of Carnmore), and that it has cost her a portion, or quality, of Ross’s love for
her. There are few carolers at their door as many are sick.
December 26th,
Boxing Day - Ross and Demelza venture to Werry House for the afternoon. There is a sick monkey and it is isn't Sir Hugh.
December 28th,
Monday - Ross and Zacky go to Truro for the last copper ticketing for Carnmore.
-Zacky tells Ross as they ride
into town that his daughter, Jinny Carter, 23 year-old widowed mother of three,
is being courted by Whitehead Scoble, a miner at Wheal Leisure.
-morning-Dwight sees Ross on his way into town, relaying to him
that illness is at Trenwith; Morbus Strangulatorius. Cornwall last suffered an
epidemic of the disease in 1748 with many fatalities. Ross debates with himself
briefly whether to go or not, but Dr. Choake appears and negates the
information, assuring Ross that all is well at Trenwith.
-mid-afternoon- after the failure at the copper ticketing,
George finds Ross to casually rub salt in his wounds regarding the impending demise
of Carnmore. They share colorful words.
-Carnmore members gather in the afternoon and decide to kill
the company (some shareholders have made deals on the side with the Warleggans,
rather than sink in the mire.)
-Ross walks the docks of Truro Harbor and sees a stately new
ship readying to set sail, the Brigantine Queen
Charlotte, and Mathew Sansom boarding her. He learns from Harris Pascoe,
his banker, that she is a Warleggan vessel. More salt.
-Demelza learns of the illness at Trenwith, debates the
safety and value of her going to offer aid, but her conscience prods her firmly
to go. The news is that Geoffrey Charles is already near death.
-Pascoe tells Ross his debts from Carnmore are at £1000, Ross refuses
to sell his Wheal Leisure shares to the Warleggans, preferring any other
solution. Ross stays the night with the Pascoes to lick some of the salt out of
his wounds. Ross is aware that some of the shareholders are worse off than him,
and as a result, though he is by no means solvent, he loans Blewett £250 as a five-year loan at four
per cent.
“Failure puts an
edge on one’s tongue.” – Ross Poldark (D. p. 466)
December 29th, Tuesday - While
still in Truro Ross receives a usurer’s loan through Mr. Notary Pierce for £1000 at a rate of 40% interest. A little
more salt, please.
-Ross departs Truro
after dinner and by darkness meets Demelza heading home from Trenwith. He does
not tell her of the £1000 loan; she tells him of going to the sickhouse at
Trenwith. He is disturbed, but remembering his own actions towards Jim Carter,
says nothing.
1790
January 1st - Demelza and Julia show symptoms of an illness.
January 2nd - Demelza and Julia are diagnosed with the
malignant sore throat, Morbus Strangulatorius.
January 3rd, Sunday - Snowing at Nampara. Late in the
evening, Julia Grace Poldark, age 16 months, dies from Diphtheria. Her mother,
Demelza, is in fever and unaware.
January 4th, 4 pm -
Demelza comes out of fever. She is not told by Ross of Julia’s death.
January 5th - A very weak Demelza is told of her daughter’s
death and collapses.
January 6th, Wednesday - A funeral at St. Sawle is held for
Julia Grace Poldark. Six young girls carry her coffin the mile-and-a-half from
Nampara to St. Sawle: two Martins, two of Paul Daniel’s, and Jim Carter’s
younger sisters. 350 villagers and gentry from the surrounding district attend,
many standing outside the church to do so on a cold winter day. Ross, due to Demelza’s still fragile
state at home, and being unprepared for such a show of support from the
community, is unable to offer “victuals” to the mourners. He inwardly rails
“against Heaven and circumstance”, feels the “inescapable pain” and perceives
it all to be “hardly believable and hardly bearable.” (D. p. 489, 515)
January 7th, Thursday - early morning - A frigid, stormy,
tumultuous day greets Ross, who has barely slept 10 hours the past week sitting
in the chair beside Demelza’s sick bed in old Joshua’s room. He wakes to
Gimlett telling him of a struggling vessel coming ashore on Hendrawna Beach.
After viewing the impending wreck -with his father’s spyglass- from his bedroom
upstairs, he learns the ship is the Queen
Charlotte and calls for Gimlett to saddle Darkie. Ross rides to alert the
villagers that a wreck might soon be scavenged. He appears to Gimlett to have seen a vision, "But not a holy one." (D. p. 495)
-morning- Ross
directs the villagers in their reclamation efforts on Hendrawna Beach.
-mid-morning- Zacky
sees that “there was savagery in Ross” as he commands the villagers and
physically leads many of the more dangerous tasks in the recovery.
-mid-day- with tide high, Ross takes a break back at
Nampara and drinks much, then returns to the beach as the swells recede. He
swims through rough surf to the grounded, lurching ship first and carries a
rope so that others can more safely come after. He finds the body of a drowned
Mathew Sansom. He is unmoved. He directs others, but takes no goods for himself.
-evening
approaches- Ross, who has been out with the wreck and the scavengers all day,
takes another meal back at Nampara (and sits for a while with Demelza) after
dusk, then again returns to the scene. “The restless devil inside himself was
not appeased; the pain and the fury were not gone. He went out again in the
gathering windy dark (D. p. 504).”
-night-fall- Word has come that Illugan miners and men
from St. Anns are fast approaching the cove and are hungry for a share of the
spoils. Then, a second ship is seen to be coming ashore off Damsel Point. The
wreck is watched by all. The Pride of
Madras from East India. “The gale had grown again.”
-Later in the evening- As the drunken miners converge-
with rivalry against one another in their hearts- Ross backs out of the fray to
watch, but take no part. There are 2000-3000 people on the swarming violent
beach.
-Late evening, prior to midnight- Crew and passengers
from the Pride of Madras come ashore
and are set upon by the miners. Half of the crew, and eight passengers, led by
the First Mate, depart the beach to seek shelter. The Captain and rest (crew
and passengers) stay put; Ross offers them shelter at Nampara and twenty-two
(“19” in J.P. p. 119) go with him to stay at Nampara. As they climb off the
beach they encounter twelve military troopers coming down to guard the ships.
Ross warns them of the mob’s dangerous aggression. There are seven dead from
the Queen Charlotte, 2 other survivors have been taken to Mellin.
January 8th - Ross wakes early. His leg limp, gone for so long,
is back from the previous day’s exertion. It is the first time in a week that
he has slept through the night, undressed, and in his own bed (seven hours). He
hasn’t shaved in as much time. But with the morning, the pain and enormity of
Julia’s death comes back upon him. He joins Demelza at her sickbed and carries
her back up to their bedroom.
He thinks, “Although she was the woman and he a fierce and sometimes
arrogant man, hers was the stronger nature because the more pliant.”
Jeremy Poldark
Book One
1790
February - Ross, age 30, is called to a deposition in Truro
investigating the drowning death of Mathew Sansom and the matter of the looting
of the shipwrecks on Hendrawna Beach on the night of January 7, 1790. Ross is
little concerned with the tone he sets or the answers he gives, being still
fully in grief over the loss of his daughter. The Crown does not care for his
tone and decides to pursue a case against him in the matter.
Early in the year - Jinny Martin Carter remarries Whitehead Scoble, a
bachelor aged 30-ish.
April – Demelza is 20 years old.
August 17th, approx. - Ross takes a walk on Hendrawna Beach,
as he has done daily since February, (Although sometimes he takes their new
boat and sails to St. Anns). These walks give him “proportion for the rest of
the day’s tasks (J.P. p. 24).” He notes that the death of Julia, laid out and compared with all
the other failures and leaden disappointments of the past year, “still hit him
hardest.”
-Tankard, a new
solicitor for George Warleggan, who also is “acting for the Crown”, seeks
witnesses for the prosecution in the case of Rex vs. Poldark in the village of
Sawle; he is conveniently offering bribes as well. Jud Paynter finds the gold
intriguing.
August 18th – Demelza takes a morning ride to Place House in
Trevaunance Cove to pay a call on Sir John Trevaunance, former co-investor with
Ross in the Carnmore Copper Company. He has a cow that ails; Demelza offers
bovine cures of a most curious allium sort (she also seeks information re: the
case against Ross, who the judge might be, his disposition, etc..). As she
departs for home she passes Sir John’s younger brother, Unwin Trevaunance, age
36, wanna be MP, who deems her “a dangerous woman.” Damn right.
-Dwight, age 26, checks
on his patients in Sawle: Charlie Kempthorne, a recuperating consumptive (TB)
that appears to be fully on the mend. (A former miner, Charlie’s condition no
longer allows him to go below ground. Dwight finds him stitching sails – as
part of his new career in sail making- for Mr. Trencrom’s vessel, The One and All, used in the “trade”.)
He also visits the Carkeets, young Betty and Ted, where he first hears rumors
of a possible informer - spy living among them who seems to be giving the
“revenue men” tips on smuggling runs.
August 24th, Monday - Ross goes to Truro to speak with his
attorney, Mr. Notary Pierce, settle his accounts, write is will, and take
dinner with Harris Pascoe. That seems like a cheerful day.
-on his way to see
Pascoe, he encounters Francis, for the first time in a year. He is polite, but
feels an ugly, burning resentment toward him - for the undermining and
destruction of Carnmore (which also financially ruined nearly half of the
investors in Carnmore); for the death of Julia; and for Francis’s friendship
with George - the architect that Ross sees behind a couple of his more structured misfortunes.
~ “Resentment and bitterness and old grudges were dead things which
rotted the hands that grasped them.” – Ross Poldark (J.P. p. 41)
His
estate at the time stands thus:
He has a mortgage on Nampara (from his father's time) of £2,300 at 7% interest.
A loan of £1000 at 40 % interest. 😨
He has a credit of £180.
Income of £300 per year net. 😕
This is what Harris Pascoe might call, "a poor prospect."
He has a mortgage on Nampara (from his father's time) of £2,300 at 7% interest.
A loan of £1000 at 40 % interest. 😨
He has a credit of £180.
Income of £300 per year net. 😕
This is what Harris Pascoe might call, "a poor prospect."
-Francis returns to Trenwith the evening
of his meeting with Ross in Truro; with him he has brought a broadsheet (pamphlet)
he found being distributed by the hundreds in town. It is full of salacious
lies about Ross designed to influence the jury, describing him as: a lawless
man, a seducer, the father of numerous bastards, guilty of murder, and just for
good measure, there are unkind details (exaggerations) about Demelza.
September 2nd, Thursday - Ross presents himself to the jail
in Bodmin to await his trial.
September 3rd, Friday - Ross meets with his legal counsel,
Mr. Jeffrey Clymer, KC.
September 4th, Saturday - Bodmin, Demelza and Verity arrive
together by coach and take lodging at the George & Crown. To Verity,
Demelza looks “years older…and thinner and pale.” Demelza readies herself later
in the evening and ventures through the election crowds (a seat in Parliament
is up for election on the 6th) to the Queens Head where she hopes to
“meet” by “chance encounter” Sir John Trevaunance. She is successful and there
also meets Ms. Caroline Penvenen, age 18, potential fiancé of Unwin. Demelza’s
goal is to attempt, by any means acceptable, to assist Ross’s case by reaching
out to any stakeholders or men of influence and speak on Ross’s behalf (She is
aware that the Crown’s side is pulling out all legal and not-so-legal stops to
get him convicted.). She aims to do the same with the stops, but not her stays, in the opposite cause.
September 6th, Monday - The Bodmin Assizes begin. Ross has
his final meeting with his barrister, Mr. Clymer.
-Dwight arrives in
Bodmin as witness for the accused, stays at the London Inn near the church. He is
introduced to Caroline Penvenen, heiress, due to a minor difficulty her Horace is
having. Horace is her pug. Dwight thinks she should have called a farrier.
September 7th, Tuesday - Heavy rain in Bodmin. Because Dwight
is a curious kind of guy, he goes to visit the lepers- at the Lazar House- just
outside of town, after he has met with Ross’s barrister.
- the election for
MP is held. Unwin does not win, but he comes in second.
-evening- At the
supper after the election Demelza has a pleasant conversation -orchestrated by
an introduction through Sir Hugh- with Judge Wentworth Lister. They talk of
Church music.
-meanwhile, Dwight
visits the local hospital and Francis shows up at Dwight’s room at the London
Inn to make unpleasant use of the lodging. He fails.
September 8th, Wednesday - The trial of Rex vs. Poldark for
Riot and Assault opens at the Bodmin Assizes held in the former Franciscan
father’s enormous Refectory. If Ross is found guilty of the crimes he may be hanged
or sent for transportation (criminal relocation to Australia; 7-14 year
sentences were common). Counsel for the crown is Henry Bull, KC. He is handsome
with dark olive skin, and amber brown eyes, which “suggest a touch of the tar
brush”- (does this imply that Mr. Bull is multi-racial (J.P. p. 109)?)
-near the close of the trial Ross speaks
on his own behalf and afterwards, upon reflection, feels offended with himself
because he views his behavior as an apparent show of conciliation. Many others
in the courtroom are moved and impressed, however.
-Ross is declared not
guilty by a jury of his peers (all men of property). After the verdict, Judge Lister says
to Ross that he will “leave this court a free man – free to rejoin your
deserving wife, and to begin a new life with her. Your able defense- and your
reputation in other fields- marks you as a man of talent and capacity.” (J.P. p. 135)...foreshadowing...
-Ross and Demelza leave Bodmin at 6:30 pm and arrive at Nampara around
10:30 or 11 that night. Demelza is aware that Ross, nine months after Julia’s
death, after his acquittal of earlier in the day, is “spiritually…still at the
most- a convalescent.” (J.P. p. 138)
-Demelza also knows herself to be with child, but does not share the
news with Ross, for he “wants no more fodder for the epidemics…I should not
want them (children) at all yet.” So she
keeps quiet and suddenly feels her pregnancy to be something “tawdry and
inferior and unwanted.” (J.P. p. 141)
"There is always the danger of a suspicion becoming an obsession." - Nicholas Warleggan
Book Two
September, late in the month - A letter from Verity arrives seeking a
reconciliation from Ross towards Francis, in which she says, “I beg you to be
accommodating- if not for his sake then for mine.”
December - Ross is aware of a “chill” that has come over his and
Demelza’s relationship, but lacks the emotional energy to learn the cause, thus
accepts.
-Ross’s
interest on his debt (£ 400) is coming due, thus he and Demelza go on a
craigslist– posting spree: her brooch; Caerhays, her horse; a rug; some
furniture; the clock and virtually all their livestock is sold.
-Along with Dwight,
Ross and Demelza are invited to Trenwith for Christmas. A bitter Ross
reluctantly agrees to go, in part due to a sudden urge to see Elizabeth again.
December 24th, Friday - Ross, Demelza and Dwight arrive at
Trenwith and immediately Demelza notices that Elizabeth is dressed to kill
(wearing the gorgeous red velvet frock she last wore to Julia’s christening - Really???!!!).
Elizabeth is overly gracious and warm towards Demelza; Demelza, though, notices
an artifice in her behavior. Having seen genuine, deep appreciation from
Elizabeth when the Trenwith Poldarks had the Putrid Throat, Demelza now realizes, “What a fool I’ve been.” Elizabeth sets about, through idle and faint
conversation with Demelza, to preen her family history as though to burnish a
jewel (even though her parents are now in residence at Trenwith because of
their own poverty). Elizabeth is 26 years old.
-Ross and Francis,
once the ice between the cousins begins to thaw, rediscover their mutual
respect and admiration for one another; the roots of their old friendship.
-Dwight is called
away for a medical concern at Killewarren, the home of Ms. Caroline Penvenen;
it is a complaint of severe sore throat…which turns out to be not Morbus Strangulatorius, but a fish bone.
-late that night,
after midnight, Elizabeth gently flirts with Ross while he helps clear the
table things away. She is coy and demure while he is affected. He returns to
bed troubled, but says nothing to Demelza who is also troubled and feeling
unloved. She is five months pregnant. (Please note just how observant Ross is at this time...)
December 31, Friday - Dwight receives a letter from Ms. Penvenen
requesting his presence. (He has been having a lovely day testing poisons on
himself for their possible medicinal value.) During his visit with her he
shares his flirtatious discovery that the residents of Sawle are suffering from scurvy. Oh my love, tell me more! And do they have scorbutic fever also??!!
1791
January, first week - Quarterly Wheal Leisure meeting. One share has
been sold to a Mr. Coke (stooge of Warleggan) and Mr. Trencrom visits Nampara
to make a proposition. He is a tea totaler.
-Demelza tells Ross
of their impending new family member. He is angry and only displeased, so he
says, that she took so long to tell him, though he admits to himself that he
feels “a sense of insult” that she kept it from him. He is aware that touching
Demelza “is permissible, pleasurable,” but that touching Elizabeth at Trenwith
the week before, there had been “electricity in the touch.” He wonders, does he
“love Elizabeth more…or does he simply know her less?” (or might he simply be
angry at the world and taking it out on the closest thing to him, while at the
same time keeping “things” on pedestals…remember
when life was perfect??? And there were rainbows every day, and perfect women
were like both Aphrodite and the Virgin Mary?? Ahhhh…)
January, the next day - Dwight receives a mysterious shipment of
Oranges…one “hundred dozen.”
March, early in the month - Ross and Henshaw go spelunking in Wheal
Grace. They take tea laced with brandy…my kind of a hike.
-Demelza realizes
when he returns that she cannot tell what he is thinking, but she can tell what
he is feeling (J.P. p. 228). She- for the first time- quite “clearly” –
realizes “the need that Ross had for some continuing activity of mind and body.
He was essentially a person who wanted to be planning and moving ahead.”
March 23, Wednesday - Ross decides to put half his shares in Wheal
Leisure on the open market (knowing a stooge will buy them).
March 25th, Friday (probably) - the first smuggling “run” is
made into Nampara Cove.
-Demelza has been
secretly fishing by boat in Nampara Cove for a while, to add to their meager
rations now that finances are so tight. Ross would forbid it, due to her
“condition”, so she doesn’t tell him: “he could not have been more thoughtful
for her, but sometimes all the restrictions and prohibitions oppressed her and
made her feel caged and constricted.” (The number of lies and secrets the two are keeping from each other is reaching Pinocchio proportions.)
March 26th, Saturday -The Wheal Leisure shares have been
sold. Ross meets with Francis and invites him into a new venture- the
re-opening of Wheal Grace- using his Leisure funds to start the new enterprise.
Francis agrees (and has money for the investment too!) and the cousins drink on
it. Of course they do. (Francis offers to tell Ross “something that is past”
but Ross declines the offer- suspecting that the confession has to do with the
failure of Carnmore.)
April 1, Friday - Jud is killed by assailants.
April 6th, Wednesday – Prudie hosts Jud’s “fiddy” funeral feast, with lots of gin.
April 6th, Wednesday – Prudie hosts Jud’s “fiddy” funeral feast, with lots of gin.
-Jud is not dead.
But Prudie spent the gold that was found in his pocket on a great dinner party!
Jud is grumpy, as usual- but several doctors, surgeons and apothecaries come to
investigate his miraculous revival over the next week. So at least Jud-the-Wonder
gets his fifteen minutes of fame thing, and that’s something... “I’m not dead
yet!”
May 3rd, Friday- Ross and Francis ride to Truro to have the
deed for their new partnership in Wheal Grace formalized and have lunch with
Tonkin at the Red Lion. Francis has his shares in Grace written-up in Geoffrey
Charles name- to prevent George Warleggan from getting at Ross through
squeezing out Francis at some later date.
-Francis leaves for a quick errand, while Ross heads
down the stairs of the public house with Tonkin. He encounters George Warleggan
and they have a high-flying tete-a-tete. Why? Because Ross took “a dislike to his
neckcloth”. Inside George’s psyche “the
sense of inferiority in the depths of George’s consciousness was one that Ross,
more than any other man, could call up.
It was altogether the strongest element in his lust for power and far
more important as a cause of his hatred for Ross than any of the more obvious
reasons.”
-Demelza goes
laboriously fishing in Nampara Cove. She almost gets breached.
- Ross does some
anti-anxiety shopping for Demelza and then waits at the Seven Stars Tavern for
the return of Francis. Captain Andrew Blamey, Verity’s husband, having brought
a ship upriver, encounters Ross. Ross conducts détente between Andrew and
Francis.
- With Dr. Dwight Enys, in attendance, a little before
seven pm, Jeremy Poldark is born to his parents Ross and Demelza. Ross arrives
home from Truro some minutes afterwards to find mother and child coming ‘round,
but neither exactly thriving.
May 4th, Saturday - Verity meets her step-children, James and
Esther for the first time.
June 1st, approximately - Party at Nampara – to welcome
Jeremy, launch Wheal Grace and celebrate the family reconciled. In attendance
are Verity and Captain Blamey, Francis and Elizabeth, Ross and Demelza, and
Dwight (Caroline Penvenen has left Cornwall). Near the end of the gathering
Francis rises from the table to propose a toast to their hostess, saying among
other things, “There’s not one among us- unless it’s young Enys here (which it
wasn’t)- who has not had some special benefit from her coming…But if it wasn’t
for her there’d be none of us gathering here together today- and if there’s any
merit in being a united family, then the merit’s not the family’s but hers. It
isn’t where you’re born in this world, it’s what you do.”
“Was any future, anyone’s future, unfraught by hazards of some sort?
The only security was death. So long as one wanted to go on living one had to
accept the risks. Well, she accepted them…” - Demelza Poldark (J.P. p. 281)
“Human beings were blind, crazy creatures, he thought, forever walking
the tightrope of the present, condemned to ever changing shifts and expedients
to maintain the balance of existence, not knowing even as far ahead as tomorrow
what the actions of today would bring. How could one plan a year ahead, how
influence the imponderables?... Within the radius of his own endeavor he
accepted the challenge.” – Ross Poldark (J.P. p. 283)
Demelza is 21, Ross is 31.
Warleggan
Book One
1792
Demelza is 22 and Ross is 32
May-
Francis is a frequent tea drinker (and brandy, and rum) at Demelza’s parlour,
finding an enjoyment in her company that Ross and Demelza both notice and neither
discourage.
May,
mid-month - George Warleggan pays a call at Trenwith and informs Elizabeth, oh
so casually, that his Uncle Cary, just happened to have come into the ownership
of Ross’s promissory note, with a debt of £1000 plus 40% interest, coming due
in December… Elizabeth does not tell Ross this fact.
-Dwight, age 27, makes a house
call at the Hoblyn’s house in Sawle and treats Rosina, age 19, daughter of
Jacka and Polly, sister to Parthesia, after seeing her fall on the cobbles and
realizing she has a knee out of joint. Tis a bit of a mystery, but she’s a
pretty little thing, even if she hobbles. And Charlie Kempthorne, recovered
consumptive, notices the little thing too.
May 24, Thursday - Ross and Demelza have been invited to a rare event: a
supper party at Sir John Trevaunance’s home, Place House, where all the neighborhood
have gathered. (Wee Jeremy is now 1 year-old and safe at home with the
Gimletts.) Ross is charmingly affectionate before the party.
-While at Place House,
Ross is seated between Lady Constance Bedrugan and Elizabeth and across from
the hitherto unknown Miss Caroline Penvenen; Demelza is wedged at the opposite
end of the table between Sir Hugh and Captain McNeil of the Scots Greys, who is
back in the district on injured reserve.
-During the dinner,
Elizabeth, quietly referencing to Ross their long-lost “engagement” -and their
youth- confesses, “I thought I loved Francis better…and then I discovered my
mistake… Is it such an astonishment that a woman who changed her mind once
could change it twice?” The confession floors Ross and he soon realizes that
the issue between Elizabeth and himself “was not in the very least a dead one.” ...And it was so very kind of her to share this news with Ross (W. p. 30-33).
-Caroline Penvenen, ginger-headed,
feisty and striking, age 20, the star of the party who was to have celebrated
an announcement of her betrothal to Unwin Trevaunance, instead chats up Ross
and comes to the able defense of Dwight’s reputation. Unwin, yet again, does
not win.
-near the end of the
evening both Francis and Ross have subtle, yet quietly direct confrontations
with George Warleggan. The cousins
demonstrate their skill with words.
June - Having not allowed Unwin to win, and
instead allowing the neighborhood to notice her “friendship” with Dwight, Uncle
Ray sends Caroline out of Cornwall to Oxfordshire until she comes of age on
October 26th (W. p. 62).
-Wheal Grace, the
Poldark cousin’s grand last gamble (or you could call it an investment) of a
mine continues to not put out (pay out, excuse me). Ross is anxious to find Mark Daniels, missing
since the death of his wife, Keren, because Mark insisted that he saw “money in
that mine” the night he hid in Grace before escaping Cornwall in July of 1789.
September 15th, Saturday - Ross receives a friendly warning
letter from his friend and banker, Harris Pascoe- the man with a bead on all
rumors in Truro, despite being a very friendly, low key and honorable guy: The
Warleggans have his £1000 promissory note. Ross rides directly to Truro to talk with
Pascoe and learn more about how and when Mr. Notary Pearce sold the loan.
-Francis stays with
Demelza after Ross leaves for Truro. He is eager to stay in her friendly and companionable company, and finally makes the confession he has long wanted
to make about Carnmore and the information he gave to George two years before; but then he tells
Demelza, “For we can none of us separate ourselves from the consequences of our
behavior.” Francis then rises from Nampara’s fireside and goes back up to the
mine. While on an exploratory search of Wheal Grace late that afternoon,
Francis Poldark slips into a deep pool of water, and unable to swim, drowns “like a dog
in a well.” Yes, I know he was fully redeemed, but really??? What a sucky end to a
really witty guy…
“One bad thing does not outweigh many
good. 'Tis the balance that counts.” Demelza Poldark to Francis Poldark (W. p, 67.)
Book Two
Autumn - Dwight cures Rosina Hoblyn of her frequently dislocating knee.
He is hailed as a miracle worker by the community villagers. They line up
fourteen deep at his door.
October, late - Ross is served notice from Cary Warleggan that his promissory
note is due and will need to be paid by December 31- at least the £400 interest. (In 2017 that would be £59,059.24)
November 15th - Caroline Penvenen, age 21 and newly
financially independent, returns to Cornwall and offers “highway man” Ross a
lift after Darkie throws a shoe. That night, back in Nampara later, both
Demelza and Ross, Dwight realizes, have been affected by the death of Francis
“with a curious sense of fatality” as if “things had gone wrong…and could not
now be righted.” There is a new, deeper bitterness in Ross and a succumbed,
accepting tone in Demelza. (nowadays, we
call this “grief”.)
November, mid-month - Caroline meets Dwight for a private chat and ride.
Or you could call it a race…or flirting.
November, late in the month - Ross comes to see Elizabeth at Trenwith
for their weekly meetings- as he is co-executor of Francis’s estate and she is
now (because Geoffrey Charles is too young to manage his inherited investment)
co-owner of Wheal Grace. Their conversations are “constrained” but private,
and personal, and yes, businesslike, mostly. (I think Unwin Trevaunance may have gotten his people mixed up when he
spoke of “dangerous women”.)
-The Cache is dug at Nampara to hold smuggled goods.
Demelza is not happy, but holds her tongue (mostly…but body language is
eloquent). Ross, unintentionally, makes mental comparisons between Demelza
and…Oh right, women should be seen and not heard…or was that children? Cache Diggers: Ned Bottrell, Paul Daniel, Ted
Carkeek, Will Nanfan, Whitehead Scoble, and Pally Rogers (plus Charlie
Kempthorne shows up mid-way through to pass word that Ned Bottrell has just
become a father for the fifth time.)
December, early- Ray Penvenen calls Dwight to Killewarren and tells him
he has no chance with Caroline. Period. Dwight disagrees, rather convincingly.
-Caroline spends the
day in Truro making A) the acquaintance of Harris Pascoe and B) an investment
in a long-shot small family holding. She’s a bright girl with a good head on
her shoulders.
December 6th -9th - Ross receives an early letter from Pascoe and
rides directly into Truro- His Warleggan debt has miraculously been paid by an
anonymous benefactor; he still owes on the promissory note, but not now, not
this December. In relief, he buys a few small purchases for the household,
including a pair of “very fancy” stocking garters for Demelza. Ooh la la… he says,
“smiling grimly”, “I must put them on.” Followed by a little bit of parlour
foreplay.
December 21st, Friday - Ross has his regular Trenwith meeting with
Elizabeth -Agatha tells him she is 97. Elizabeth, though invited to Falmouth to
visit the Blamey’s for Christmas (as were the Nampara Poldarks), tells Ross
that she will be going to her parent’s home, Cusgarne, instead, as her mother
is ill.
December 24th, Monday – Ross, Demelza and Jeremy travel to
Falmouth to visit with the Blamey’s for Christmas.
- Dwight tends on nine year-old Lottie Kempthorne, suffering from smallpox.
- Elizabeth travels from Cusgarne to Cardew and spends her Christmas with George Warleggan.
- Dwight tends on nine year-old Lottie Kempthorne, suffering from smallpox.
- Elizabeth travels from Cusgarne to Cardew and spends her Christmas with George Warleggan.
December 27th or 28th – Ross visits with Harris
Pascoe to plan his own generous giving of financial aid to another (Inspired by
his anonymous benefactor): in his case, Ross is anxious to give Elizabeth the £600
that Francis had originally invested in Wheal Grace, before the mine officially
fails, so that his conscience can be clear and Elizabeth should be less poor on
his account. He sells his remaining shares in Wheal Leisure and uses the money
to anonymously offer to buy Elizabeth’s shares in Grace.
- Caroline and
Dwight meet at The Fox & Grapes, a small posting Inn, to discuss their
plans for eloping.
1793
January 2nd 3rd – Ross is called to Trenwith by
Elizabeth (who is wearing a flattering and tight fitting gray dress, not black)
to review an “astonishing” letter she has received from Harris Pascoe: someone
is offering to buy her shares (Geoffrey Charles’, really) in Wheal Grace. With
Ross’s input, Elizabeth decides to accept the £600 and
sell her shares in the totally failing mine.
She notices that Ross’s eyes “light up at seeing her” and after he
leaves Trenwith he is aware that the “old allegiance (is) grievously
reawakened”. He does not tell Demelza about the sale of the shares, or what he has done with the money, and hopes not to be required to for “a long time”.
January 22nd, approximately – Reckoning day at Wheal Grace-
the miners are paid. It’s also a reckoning day for the mine: nearly out of coal
to keep the pump engine running (and the mine free of flooding), Ross must
decide what to do with his last £75- (left over from the sale of his Leisure shares):
pay down his loan, set the cash aside for his interest payment of later in the
year, or buy more coal and keep Grace alive for one more month- hoping to God
that their digging will at last uncover a rich vein of copper?
-The same day Will Nanfan brings word that
the elusive fugitive, Mark Daniel, has been located in Ireland. A vessel will
be going out to the Scillies (islands off the south-west coast of Cornwall)
soon, and Mark can meet them there. Perhaps, finally, they can learn what Mark
saw in Wheal Grace three years previously that made him so strongly believe
that “there was money” in the mine.
January, 23rd or 24th – Rosina Hoblyn agrees to marry Charlie
Kempthorne.
January 24th - Luis the Sixteenth is executed by Guillotine in France.
January 25th or 26th – Ross spends his last £75 buying the last supply of coal for Wheal Grace.
January 27th, Sunday – Ross leaves Nampara for St. Ives, and
thence boards The One and All for their voyage to the
Scillies.
January 28th, Monday - The
One and All sets sail with the tide.
-That evening, Dwight
pays a call at Nampara to tell Ross and Demelza about his plans to elope with Caroline,
and Demelza tells him about Ross being gone to the Scillies and why.
January 31st, Thursday – Mark Daniels arrives by Irish Ketch
at St. Mary’s, one of the Scilly Islands. Ross meets him at Hugh Town in an inn. The
two men, once boyhood friends, have both seen such a change in life, but Ross
hardly recognizes his old friend, whose grief and guilt have all but killed
him. They have a conversation about
Wheal Grace and what Mark saw three years in the past. His news is not news for
Ross. Everything Mark saw during that terrible day of waiting has since been
discovered, dug, worked-out, or dismissed. None of his memories are useful to
Ross. Ross conceals his disappointment from the broken man.
February 1st- Ross is picked-up by The One and All, now on her way home with a full load of smuggled
goods for the “trade”.
February 2nd – Ray Penvenen prepares to depart for London
the following morning with his niece, Caroline, who he is determined to get
away from Dr. Dwight Enys and Cornwall.
-Dwight Enys
prepares to elope later in the night with Caroline Penvenen. They are to meet
at 11pm and ride for Bath in her carriage.
Rosina Hoblyn’s
miracle knee dislocates again and Dwight is summoned just before ten pm. He
debates whether to go or no, but decides he can go on his way to meeting
Caroline.
-Customs officer
Vercoe, along with his back-up of Scots Greys, led by Captain McNeil, plan an
ambush of the smugglers returning on The One
and All around midnight.
-Dwight, while
treating Rosina, discovers that Charlie Kempthorne has claimed to be ill and
under treatment by Dwight…which is a patent lie…So Dwight goes to Charlie’s
house to confront him and discovers that Charlie is the spy who has been giving
the customs officer the news of all the trade runs over the past year or more.
Dwight realizes that Ross will be caught in the net on this particular night.
-Dwight rides for
Nampara Cove, aware that Caroline may be sorely disappointed in him, but
feeling he can make no other choice. At Nampara he discovers Demelza already
under house arrest by a dragoon. He makes for the cliffs above the cove and
starts a warning fire just as he sees A) a boat coming into the cove and B) the
customs men and dragoons hidden in the dark along the edge of the cove cliffs.
His action saves the smugglers, but he is arrested.
-Charlie Kempthorne
flees Sawle, abandoning his two daughters, Lottie and May.
- Ross, who has come
ashore with the first run, makes for Nampara amid shouts, shots and ambush; he
encounters Demelza, who has snuck out of the house from the second floor roof,
and learns of the trooper already in Nampara. He says he will hide in the
Library cache.
-Captain McNeil,
none too happy, arrives at Nampara with Vercoe, searching for Captain Ross.
Long an admirer of Demelza, McNeil, who has been shot in the shoulder, is
sorely unhappy to believe she is aiding and abetting her husband. She is none
too happy that he is there to try and incarcerate her husband. There are
metaphorical sparks of an unromantic kind.
-Ross is not found
in the Cache. Ted Carkeet has been killed by a soldier, leaving a widow and two
young children. Ned Botrell, father of five, has been captured along with six
others.
February 3rd, Sunday – Dwight is finally released on £20 bail about 3 pm. He rides straight
for Killewarren and learns that the Penvenens have left for London. A “Dear
John” letter has been left for Dwight.
-Around 7 pm, after
eighteen hours in the cache- hidden in the second secret compartment of the cache- dehydrated, hungry, cramped- Ross
emerges to find Demelza strained with worry, but all soldiers gone.
- February 2nd
becomes known in the District as Black Saturday.
Book Three
February 16 or 17- After sending letters to Caroline that are not
answered, Dwight takes the 5-day coach to London.
February 21 or 22- Caroline refuses to see Dwight in London, but sends
a curtly, blunt letter down to him, from the upstairs to the downstairs. He
returns to Cornwall – on the five-day stage- lest he should miss the quarter
sessions where he is to stand before the judge and answer for his role in Black
Saturday.
February 26 or 27th - Monday or Tuesday- Quarter Sessions
are held in Truro:
on the dock>
Those caught in the act on the night of Black Saturday as participants
in the trade, including:
>Ned Botrell, father of five, sentenced to ten years transportation
to Australia (most of these men never return to England.). Ross thinks that Ned
will take the Navy as his punishment instead.
>Ross is arraigned for his accused role in Black Saturday-
according Mr. Vercoe, the revenue man, Ross assaulted him on the beach that
night in Nampara Cove. Ross has an alibi; he was sleeping with acquaintances at
a farm in Gwithian (who coincidentally are friends of Mr. Trencrom). He is
found not guilty of any crime.
>Dwight is not his usual professional and upright self with the
justices…he gets a fine of £50. Mr. Trencrom offers to pay it, Dwight
declines.
- - The same
night, back at Nampara, Demelza asks Ross about some news she has just heard:
that Ross has sold his final shares in Wheal Leisure. Perhaps what she heard
was a mistaken thing? No, Ross confesses, and gamely, though lamely, explains,
he sold them and used them to discharge a “debt of honor” to Elizabeth.
Demelza, miraculous creature that she is, holds her tongue, but breaks her
sewing thread. Ross’s choice of words are like those of a surrogate husband: it
was about “conscience” and the fact that she “has no man”. Demelza gently, but
firmly, questions this as she has “heard that George Warleggan is being very
obliging to her.” There is an odd (unnoticed by Ross) comparison that he does not hear: when he gave the money to
Elizabeth (who was unaware of where it came from) part of her aching disappointment in her
so-called “poverty” was a grief for her son’s suffering of what was his due. And
Ross wanted to help make amends for that, so he sold his shares and gave the
money to Elizabeth. But now, as Demelza says that she cares not for herself,
“but for Jeremy”, Ross does not seem to hear this echo (for he is here “alive
and active…doing what I can”). Instead, he becomes peevish- internally- when he
learns that Sir Hugh has recently called at the house (to gossip with Demelza of
George’s aid to Elizabeth). (Ross does, however, seem to begin noticing a
growing hypocrisy within himself; an emotional dilemma taking root.)
-
March 12th, Tuesday- Tin is discovered at Wheal Grace by
Ellery.
March 14th, Thursday - Coal is running out, and with it, the
mine will flood in a matter of a day or so. Henshaw, wishing to give the mine
“breathing room” offers £100 towards more coal, if it will keep the mine going.
Ross has no money for even this. He agrees.
-Elizabeth promises
to marry George Warleggan after exactly 6 months of widowhood. It had been a bad day, the pressures of widowhood had been acute, and her poverty was irritating her fiercly. George promises help. It is also
barely two months since Elizabeth received (Ross gave her) the £600 for her son’s
shares in Wheal Grace, money that she so desperately needed...burned it that fast, did you???
March 21st, Thursday - The tin load at Grace expands,
dramatically.
March 28th- At Wheal Grace the vein of rock bearing tin is
such that all other work is abandoned and what timbers they have, or can
re-purpose, are put to use shoring up the ceilings in the pursuit of the new and
ever expanding tin load.
April, early in the month- Verity and her stepson, James, come to
Trenwith to visit Elizabeth and Geoffrey Charles. Elizabeth, it seems, is “innerly
excited.” When Verity and James call at Nampara for Sunday dinner and Verity
asks Demelza whether she knows of any reason for Elizabeth’s new show of
eagerness, Demelza unintentionally reveals her own fears about the private
relationship of Ross and Elizabeth.
-The next day,
Demelza ventures to Werry House to a have a chat with the hairy old Sir Hugh,
and learns the details about George and Elizabeth: George has been seen buying
a wedding suit in Truro. Upon learning this news Demelza realizes that she cannot
be the one to tell Ross, and moreover, due to her own fears, does not even want
to be present when he does hear of it.
May 2nd -Charlie Kempthorne’s body washes up at Trevaunance
Cove with no signs of foul play.
May 5th- Cave-in at Wheal Grace: two men are killed, three
seriously injured; the load is lost under twenty-fathoms of rock- burying with
it the pumping gear. Jim Ellery and Joe Nanfan both suffer terrible injuries
and seem in more than critical condition, but both men survive.
May 7th- Wheal Grace officially closes; to reopen her seems
a bad omen to Ross, who is disgusted with himself for the loss of life, plus,
it would take more than £200 and he doesn't have £2.
May 9th- In the evening after 9 pm, when Ross arrives home
from Truro (where he has spent the day making arrangements for the sale of
Wheal Grace materials), Demelza tells him of a letter awaiting him inside. Elizabeth
has sent Ross a letter informing him of her engagement to George Warleggan.
- Demelza
pleads with Ross not to go to Trenwith, after he has read the letter, and she
sees the hurt and fury in his eyes. He dismisses her.
- - Ross rides
to Trenwith and breaks into the house when no one answers his knock. He begins a
rather strident interview with Elizabeth in her bedroom. It goes downhill fast.
In the end, it is debatable- no matter how many times you read the sections, exactly
what transpired (Especially when overlaid with 1790s cultural norms and 1950s writing
styles.). Rape? Consensual sex fraught with the conventions and morés of 1793?
Consensual sex with an unhealthy dose of guilt, lust and frustration thrown in?
(W. p. 236-237; W. p. 238) “After the initial resistance, there had been no
particular indication that she hated him.” (He thinks this in response to her
evident enmity towards him at the end of Warleggan.) (And again, in Four Swans,
Ross revisits the event of May 9, 1793, in a conversation with Elizabeth, and
somehow the whole thing is still not crystal clear- she describes him that
night three years hence as having “the face and look of the Devil” to which
Ross says “you did not treat me so after the first shock” and then later
Elizabeth refers to herself as having “a guilty conscience.”(4.S. p.136-143)
o
In Ross’s mind it appears he believes that his
crime is in wanting and getting sex from an unmarried woman that he highly
regards- that he lessened her status in this way. To him, he seems to think that in a sense, he treated her like a "light" woman; as though it was an intentional one-night-stand. And then that he never went
back to Trenwith to discuss the issue with her (Because by the next day he had
to confront the reality of Demelza’s visible and real soul-wounded hurt, her
justified anger, and her then apparent and growing depression…all caused by
him.). When he and Elizabeth finally discuss that May night several years later
he simply says, “It was ill done, but until now I have never regretted it.” And
she replies, “I had supposed you might have done – almost at once.” He then
replies, “You supposed wrong. But I could not come to you again – break up
everyone’s life afresh.”
May 10th, 6am – Ross returns to Nampara but does not come
upstairs to his and Demelza’s bedroom. She comes downstairs to find him at the
breakfast table whereupon a stiff, forced conversation takes place that closes
with her intentionally dropping her tea cup on the floor. “Fundamentally there
was nothing meek or mild about her either. She was a fighter, and it showed
now.” (W. p. 241) She then looks directly into his eyes and sweeps her arm across the
table, taking out in one assertive move, the milk jug, sugar basin and two
plates. She does not need to be told what transpired at Trenwith the night before; she is an astute woman.
“If you thought of your husband as God-like and perfect you were a
fool and asking for disillusionment,” Demelza thinks. (W.p.238)
May 16th, Thursday – Ross receives a letter from Tonkin and
Blewitt in Looe- they now own a small ship building company that, due to the
war, is beginning to prosper, and they invite him to visit Looe to see their
workings- he fears they will ask for a loan, similar to what Ross gave Blewett
in 1789. Ross says he will go and spend
one or two nights. (Demelza believes Ross is really going to Trenwith.)
May 17th, Friday – a reminder invite arrives from Werry
House regarding the Birthday Ball that Sir Hugh wishes Mistress Poldark to
attend. Demelza, with limited outlets for her grief, frustration and fury,
accepts the invitation for herself.
-Ross leaves
Nampara for Looe.
May 18th, Saturday - Demelza
attends the Werry House Ball, wearing her beautiful silver gown bought by Ross
for her several years before. While there- with a lashing surge of meanness she
feels towards Ross (an emotion she has never felt before)- she offers herself to
Captain McNeil. The Scottish Captain is still in the neighborhood recovering
from his shoulder wound from Black Saturday, and more than eager for a night
with Demelza. Demelza, however, realizes in the nick-of-time that the
experience will not solve any problems, will in fact make them only worse, and
rescinds her offer. The good Captain is not pleased and tries to force her but
she fights back, biting him hard enough to draw blood. She flees in the night
from the manor house, through a window and down the ivy-covered wall, making
for Nampara in the small hours before dawn. She is utterly in misery.
May 20th, Monday – Ross returns from Looe
in the evening and sups alone- The Mistress has been out all day. As darkness
falls Ross queries where Mistress Poldark may have gone and goes out to find
her walking on Hendrawna Beach. She is hostile and bitter toward him and
all-so-grown-up. He has never seen her like this before. Never. “They were both
desolate people, needing friendship and sympathy and finding none.” (W. p. 270)
Demelza asks him if he wishes for her to leave, saying she wants only to “do
what’s right.” (W. p. 271) He says no, “I’d like you to stay, that’s if you
feel you can.” She agrees to stay, but there is “desolation in her soul.”
-George
receives a letter from Elizabeth requesting a postponement of their wedding day
(which was to be May 23); he rides directly to her and negotiates a one month
delay only.
Book Four
June 4th- with the repaid loan from Blewett of £250, Ross reopens Wheal Grace.
June 20th – Elizabeth Chynoweth Poldark
weds George Warleggan and honeymoons for nearly 2 months. They intend to settle
at Cardew, the new estate of the Warleggans, half-way between Falmouth and
Truro. The elder Chynoweths are settled at Trenwith with Aunt Agatha.
July - with the debris and rubble cleared from the collapse at Wheal
Grace, mining begins in earnest again. The
initial £250 goes fast and Ross
needs to secure more short-term loans to keep it going until the first coinage.
August- Wheal Grace begins to show profit.
-Demelza and Ross,
while living together and functioning as close to normal as possible, continue
to keep separate sleeping arrangements and their conversations are rather
limited.
September, early – George and Elizabeth Warleggan move to Trenwith as
George’s parents, it turns out, are not planning on vacating Cardew, despite
what George told Elizabeth prior to her accepting his marriage proposal. Ross
is not thrilled about his new neighbor in his family’s old home.
-Demelza receives a letter from Verity- “Is it true, do you know that Elizabeth is with child? She
makes no mention of it in her letter.” Verity knows this only because she has
received another letter from a friend of Elizabeth’s mother. Demelza does not mention this letter to Ross.
- After a
particularly stony and silent dinner she confronts him to say that if he is so
miserable in her company then perhaps she should go, but he surprises her with
an apology for his demeaner saying that while, yes, the news of George and
Elizabeth at Trenwith has pretty much made him lose his lunch daily, he is, in
fact, not unhappy at all, but guardedly very pleased: the load at the mine has
split and is more than doubling in size, and moreover, the quality of the ore
is the richest that Henshaw has ever seen. (note: Ross genuinely is sorry for
this discomfort he has caused her by his tone and behavior and apologizes.
Unfortunately, he has still not ever apologized for his infidelity with
Elizabeth.😲)
September, mid-month – Ross, needing and wanting to share with her,
tells Demelza that the load is surpassing expectations, that they will be able
to pay both the interest and half the debt on their loan by December.
While they are both very pleased with their new found burgeoning prosperity, it
is impossible for Demelza to truly feel happiness at this outcome due to the
“division between them (that) was too deep.” (W.p. 285).
October,
late in the month- Ray Penvenen’s doctor, Mr. Sylvane, requests from Dwight a
second opinion in the care of his patient. Dwight agrees to pay a medical call
on Mr. Penvenen and after his examination diagnoses Caroline’s uncle with the
“sugar sickness”, Diabetes.
October 31st
– Andrew Blamey is born to Verity and Andrew Blamey in Falmouth.
November, 15ish - Ross and Demelza go to Falmouth for little Andrew’s
Christening, but Ross returns home the same day due to the mine. Demelza stays
four days but does not share even with Verity any of her troubles, “which she
hoped nobody but herself and Ross and Elizabeth would ever know…it seemed more
than ever important to be absolutely silent about the events of the ninth of
May.” (W. p. 292)
November 23rd,
Saturday, around noon - Ross, after receiving a couple nice, little, warm and
friendly notes from George concerning matters of Francis’ estate, rides to
Trenwith to meet with George. He confirms nearly straight-off what he has heard
about Elizabeth, “Is it true that she is with child?” George answers, “It is
true.” Ross is not thrilled to learn that A) Elizabeth has given power of
attorney to George in the matter of Geoffrey Charles’ estate and B) George and
his solicitor, Tankard, would like to challenge the validity of her sales of
Wheal Grace shares back in January to Ross… with many small rude jibes thrown
in … Ross, not surprisingly, is vocally direct and in opposition to the
suggestion that he should “return” the shares now that the mine is in “rich
country”. George, offensively, then tells Ross, “Go back to your scullery
maid.” This provocation results in a fight that damages much of the new
furnishings and repairs at Trenwith, not to mention injuries to Ross’s tooth and
head (W. p. 294-297).
-Dwight has visited Ray Penvenen five times after his initial
diagnoses and has found some improvement, but has cautioned Mr. Penvenen that
there is no cure for his illness. In the afternoon, he is at Nampara, checking
on a once-again ill Master Jeremy, when Ross returns from his foray to Trenwith
and needs his own doctoring. Dwight reveals that he has learned that Caroline
is to marry a Lord Coniston and that he is pursuing a moderate change in his
career- he is seeking a surgeon’s post with the navy and awaiting word.
-At sight of Ross when he returns from Trenwith, Demelza shrieks
in alarm. This causes Ross to challenge her- after Dwight has left- saying “I
believe you still care for me.” Demelza answers, “Of course I still care for
you, Ross. What a thing to say…” It has been more than six months since his
night with Elizabeth. And longer than that since they had normal, healthy, marital relations.
December 9th, Saturday – Ross and Demelza,
with Ross healed from his latest scrape with George, head into Truro to learn
how to pay down the loan to their miraculous benefactor of the year before and
to go on a shopping spree. Relunctantly, Harris Pascoe divulges to Ross that
Caroline Penvenen is his secret lender. Ross is stunned, as is Demelza, and
their shopping day is heightened by this news. They buy: two pairs of Dantzig
shoes for Demelza, a toy horse, a rattle, and “some fine wool” for a coat for
Jeremy, new neck cloths for Ross and John Gimlett, some striped muslin for
Jane, a dressing table for Demelza, a clock, a two-pedestal legged table with a
fine polish, two Turkey Rugs, a great deal of cloth for various uses
(particularly new curtains), wine glasses, a cane rocker for Demelza, and a
dozen pewter tankards (Ross is defying the new trend toward cloam cups for ale,
and emphatically supporting the tin industry with his purchasing power.). This day marks the first time in over six
months since they have physically been close to one another for a whole day.
Neither finds this miserable. The day ends with Ross planning a trip to London
to thank Caroline in person and a kiss to Demelza that she does not pull away
from.
December 10th, Tuesday – Dwight receives a
letter from the admiralty: he has received his commission as a surgeon aboard
the HMS Trevail. He must depart
Cornwall soon bound for Plymouth and his fleet.
December 11th, Wednesday - Ross leaves
Nampara and takes the stage from Truro. He has dinner in St. Austell and sleeps
at Liskeard.
December 12th, Thursday - Ross’s stage takes
him to the Ferry at Plymouth and on to Ashburton for the night.
-Demelza
begins making new curtains for Joshua’s old bedroom, where Ross has been
sleeping since May, from some of the fabric she and Ross purchased in Truro.
December 13th, Friday- The stage sees Ross
to Exeter for dinner and on to Bridgewater by nightfall.
December 14th, Saturday – In Bath by dinner
time, Ross climbs down from the stage in the trendy city, only to climb back up
soon after and rumble his way to Marlborough for the night.
December 15th, Sunday – A very long
day on the stage for Ross: up before daybreak and on the road, they arrive in
Maidenhead for dinner and finally in London for a late supper around 10 pm. He
lodges at The Mitre in Hedge Lane.
December 16th, Monday - It is a snowy day in
London as Ross calls on Caroline who is living with her Aunt on Hatten Garden
at #5. Caroline accepts Ross’s thanks for the loan, but is reluctant to accept
his advice concerning Dwight.
-Demelza
is invited to Place House for tea by Sir John’s sister, Mrs. Frensham, and
walks with Garrick along the coast to her appointment. Unfortunately, Trenwith
property no longer allows the use of the coastal right-of-way which has been
open to all for centuries. The Harry brothers interrupt Demelza’s walk by
shooting Garrick and ripping his ear partly off. In his fear and anguish,
Garrick bites Demelza. Demelza is incensed, the Harry’s brothers are unmoved.
Master of the estate, George, shows up and he proves to be also utterly unmoved
along with rude and hurtful. Demelza does not make it to tea and must send a
letter of apology, by the long route round... Round the Horn as it were.
December 17th, Tuesday - Ross, sensing a potential weakening in Caroline from the interview of the day before, returns to Hatton Garden and succeeds in convincing her to come with him if only to say goodbye properly to Dwight and to see her ailing uncle back in Cornwall. (He says to Demelza later that he and Caroline left London on Tuesday, but it is more like that they left on Wednesday as he also says to her that he went back to talk to Caroline on “his second visit” and that was when she “took the bait”. It is possible that he had two visits in one day, but more likely that he returned the next day- the Tuesday- and convinced her then of departing with him the next day. Also, on his travel to London, he spent four days on the coach from Plymouth to London, so it is unlikely that he and Caroline would have needed six days for the return. I think Ross just got his days mixed up with all that travel…)
December 18th, Wednesday – Ross and Caroline leave London on the stage bound for Plymouth, Demelza is home nursing a sore wrist, and Dwight departs Cornwall for Plymouth.
December 20th- Dwight reports to the HMS Trevail and learns she is not anywhere close to ready for her voyage. He kills time in Plymouth dressing his naval finest.
December 21st- Ross and Caroline’s stage stops at Ashburton for the night.
December 22nd, Sunday - Ross and Caroline arrive in Plymouth. Ross finds that Dwight is staying at the Rising Sun and sends a letter to him inviting him to sup with him at the Fountain Inn at 6pm. - When Dwight arrives he discovers Ross and Caroline at the Inn. Ross comments on Dwight’s appearance, “A handsome uniform, that.” Ross elects to dine elsewhere, alone, and leaves them to privacy, but not before he imparts some advice that he says Demelza would share…that “Life holds only two or three things worth having, and if you possess them the rest don’t matter, and if you do not possess them, the rest are useless.” Dwight and Caroline have an awkward-at-first conversation that quickly turns to reconciliation.
December 23rd, Monday – Ross, Caroline and Dwight take the stage from Plymouth to Truro, probably staying at St. Austell or Liskeard for the night.
December 24th, Tuesday - Ross returns to
Nampara from his London Journey about 6 pm with lots of news: Dwight and Caroline
have returned with him (Dwight is temporarily at the Gatehouse and Caroline is
at Killewarren visiting her Uncle Ray), Nampara is to host a Christmas
celebration honoring Dwight and Caroline (and Caroline’s maid), and Demelza
needs to prepare three guest rooms in one hour. Ross has at least stopped in
Truro to order a goose, beef ribs, and a veal filet for their Christmas dinner
on the morrow.
-Ross
learns of Demelza’s run in with the Harry brothers though she tones the story
down quite a bit. Really, it's just a scratch.
-George and Elizabeth sup
at seven…and are thrilled to have Ross arrive for a brief conversation…They do
not invite him to join them at the meal. Elizabeth is hostile in her attitude
towards Ross, which surprises him, while George is unnerved at Ross’s ability
to just stroll into his house. Ross endeavors to explain politely that as
neighbors George really needs to try to be a little more friendly – especially when it concerns Demelza – and if
not, the villagers in the area might get a little rabble-ish, and certain
private lands might find themselves violated rather aggressively.
- Ross returns to Nampara
in time to greet Caroline and Dwight and a nice evening is had. Late that
night, however, after Dwight and Caroline have gone off to their separate
bedrooms, a conversation that has been in its incubation for half a year occurs
between Ross and Demelza. (Demelza has moved Ross’s things out of Old Joshua’s
box bed room- which she needed as a guest room for Caroline- back either to the
little room upstairs- behind the guest room that Dwight will use- or to HER bedroom…which did she choose???…consider
that forgiveness is a choice, and Six-plus months alone in a big bed isn’t very
warm…especially in December.)
-The
conversation: He’d like to talk over the infidelity, discuss it and be honest-
because he has a confidence in his new-found faith in his marriage- but Demelza
is afraid that what he will tell her will wound her afresh with a long-lingering,
festering wound. She would prefer to go forward and simply find a new normal,
and hopefully, someday, a new love together. He attempts to explain the
difference between putting people on pedestals and actually knowing people. To
explain the difference between a never actualized, BIG TIME infatuation, and a
blood, sinew and tissue marital relationship where someone has to take out the
trash and someone has to change the friggen diapers…not to mention, deal with
the in-laws. He tells her that he has finally come to understand that after the
misalliance with Elizabeth in May, “For a time, after that night, things were
upside down- for a time, nothing came clear. When it did, when it began to, the
one sure feeling that stood out was that my true and real love was not for her
but for you." (W. p. 344)
- In the course of this conversation Demelza
realizes that if she and Ross are going to move forward into a GOOD new normal,
then she has to tell him everything, including about Captain McNeil and the
Werry House party. Ross doesn’t take it very well. Turns out he doesn’t like to
share. Even if he never actually did have to share, that it was only the possibility that he might have had to,
(and with a Scotsman!) but the kibosh was put on it before anyone was doing any
sharing…and Demelza left teeth marks for good measure! …but…still…He ain’t
happy. A row ensues. She packs clothes, tries to saddle a horse, he has to help
her, but he convinces her to come inside for just a moment. How? HE FINALLY,
ACTUALLY APOLOGIZES for his infidelity! It only took seven plus months. He
wants to talk her down, to let go of his own jealousy and she agrees to go back
into the house with him (She even makes a little joke about McNeil’s mustache!).
But the beer bung has sprung and they have a mess to clean up. Which they do, but
then it’s close to midnight and Ross decides to give Demelza a new brooch from
London, very like the one they had to sell, and a garnet necklace, and he wants
to put them on her, and she has no gift for him, but perhaps he thinks of
another gift she might bestow…for they must go to bed somewhere- most likely
together- and perhaps they get warm via friction. (She says in Black Moon, in
reference to how babies are conceived, “Since Christmas it’s been nothing else,
has it?” and Ross says, “Did you want it to be anything else?” with Demelza
responding, “No, thank you.” (B.M. p. 42))
December 25th, Christmas Day – Nampara awakes
with guests in residence and Ross and Demelza reconciled. A lovely dinner of
Roast Goose and Veal Fillet is served. Dwight departs for Plymouth and the
Navy. Caroline stays on at Nampara for another day or so basking in the warmth
of new found friendship.
1794
The Black Moon
Book One
February, early days of the month- Tom Carne dies in
Illugan of Smallpox.
February, first or second week of the month- Ross and
Demelza conceive a child. Ross is 34 years old.
February 13th, Thursday – At Trenwith,
Elizabeth Warleggan, who is known to be eight months pregnant, falls on the steps leading
to her bedroom. Dr. Choake is called to attend her because the man retained,
Dr. Behenna, is unavailable. Dr. Behenna, however, arrives late, but in time for
the actual birth.
February 14th, Valentine’s Day- Valentine Warleggan is born
at 8:15 pm to his parents, George and Elizabeth, at Trenwith. There is a total
eclipse of the moon that night. (George
mentally notes that the price of tin had risen £5 a ton the week before).
-Aunt Agatha,
reportedly age 99, has a new kitten and a dire prediction: “Good seldom come to
a child born under a black moon.” (she also politely suggests a few names for
the baby to George- “Ross” and “Joshua”.)
March 6th-14th- Samuel and Drake Carne, Demelza’s
Methodist brothers, arrive at Nampara looking for work. She has not seen any of
her six brothers in six years. Ross, reluctantly, decides to offer them work at
Wheal Grace. (Sam has been a tributer in Illugan, before the mines there all
closed; Drake has had an apprenticeship as a wheelwright.)
-Later that night,
Demelza tells Ross that there will be “an addition to the livestock,” meaning,
she is pregnant.
April, first week- Caroline Penvenen learns from Unwin Trevaunance, who
she has not seen in about two years, that there has been a naval battle off the
north/western French coast involving British and French vessels: one British
ship has been lost. She flies on horseback directly for Falmouth and Verity
Blamey’s house, hoping for information. With Verity she learns from naval staff
that the skirmish did indeed involve Lieutenant Dwight Eny’s ship, the Travail,
and he is possibly lost at sea or a prisoner of war. The battle took place in
March with Commander Pellew’s Western squadron.
April, early in the month - Sam and Drake Carne move into old Reath
Cottage, built in 1788 and abandoned by Mark Daniels back in 1789 after he
accidentally killed his “moonflower wife” in it. It is somewhat derelict, but
the brothers set about to repair and improve it- in-part so as to host their
Methodist meetings, because they are, “of the connection.”
-Demelza is 24 years
old.
May, first half of the month- Sam Carne is working as a tut worker at
Wheal Grace and Drake is working at Nampara on the grand rebuilding of the
house- an improvement that Ross has long wished for and can finally afford. (A
third level will be added, with old Joshua’s room converted into a Dining Room,
the library moved up a floor and enlarged and modernized, and a few new
bedrooms added above that. Nampara will have eight bedrooms and four servant’s
quarters will continue to be inside the house.
May 31st - Sam and Drake buy a piece of salvaged drift
timber from a ship wreck in St. Ann’s and carry it home to Reath Cottage to
shore up a new roof they are building. On the long way home they elect to take
the short cut through Trenwith lands and encounter Geoffrey Charles and his new
governess, Morwenna Chynowith, out exploring in the grounds. Drake gives
Morwenna a quickly gathered bouquet of blue bells.
June, early in the month - Ross is involved in the formation of a unit
of Volunteers for the Truro district; they are called to support and defend the
Cornish coastline during the war with France.
June 10th, Whit Tuesday – Ross calls on Caroline at Killwarren
on his way into Truro to meet with Harris Pascoe about his accounts and assets.
Caroline has not heard any new news about the Trevail or Dwight’s whereabouts.
- - Ross learns from
Harris that Joan Pascoe, his daughter, has finally become engaged to St. John
Peter, Ross’s second cousin (Ross’s grandmother, Matilda Peter Poldark, was
sister to St. John’s grandfather.)
- - While at the
Truro Whitsun Fair Ross buys a new horse, Judith, and becomes reacquainted with
his father’s old friend, Tholly Tregirls, a one armed, badly scarred,
devilishly selfish bear of a man. He is both piqued at re-meeting him and
somewhat offended.
July, beginning of month – on Hendrawna Beach, Morwenna and Geoffrey
Charles meet Drake. They visit the Holy Well (a sort of artesian spring on the
cliffs) with him.
- - Drake asks
Demelza for reading and writing lessons- one hour a week is agreed on.
- - Ross is away
two nights visiting his business investment in Looe, Blewit and Tonkin’s Boatyard.
July, the first week of the month – Ross, just returned from Looe,
reports to Demelza that there are whisperings along the coast regarding France,
British smugglers, the war, and missing prisoner’s of war who are likely held
captive by the French.
- - George and
Elizabeth have been married one year. Their son Valentine is five months old.
August, middle of the month – Ross learns of the possible demise of
Wheal leisure mine; there are rumors that she will be closed due to low
profits.
- - Setting Day at Wheal
Grace. Renegotiating of bids with tributers at the mine (Their portion of the
value of the ore brought up.) When Grace began working her successful vein of
Tin (Fall of 1793) the tributers were earning 12 Shillings, 6 pence per 1 Pound
Sterling of worth. Now, one year later, the wages have gone to 4 shillings, 6
pence per Pound Sterling- depending on the Tributer’s pitch- some earn more or
less than that depending on the quality of the ore in their pitch.
- - Ross and Demelza
receive an invitation to dinner at Ralph-Allen Daniel’s lavish new Palladian home,
Trelissick, on the Truro River.
August 28th, Friday – Ross and Demelza attend dinner at
Trelissick; on the way there they stop at Killewarren and visit with a dying
Uncle Ray Penvenen, and Caroline privately shares with them a letter she has
received from Susan Pellew, the wife of naval Commander Pellew; the news
confirms that Dwight’s ship was lost during the battle.
- - There are
Royalist French Émigré’s at the dinner, who have fled France and the
Revolution. They are seeking support for their Royalist cause and a
counter-revolution. De Marasei, a French nobleman in attendance, flirts utterly
improperly with a confused Demelza, who can barely understand his thick accent.
- - Ralph-Allen
Daniel attempts to recruit Ross to sit for the bench of Truro as a district
magistrate. Ross declines as he prefers not to judge others. Daniels tries to
explain his views to Ross saying, “It is for men of liberal ideas to try to
interpret the law and to help to run the country, not to withdraw and leave it
to the harsher spirits.” Ross declines the nomination anyway, but feels a
bitterness in doing so, especially when he learns that it will be offered to
George Warleggan instead. Demelza, upon learning of his refusal, is
disappointed. (This irritates Ross.)
September – George Warleggan accepts the written invitation he receives
from the Lord Chancellor, for the nomination as a Magistrate for the Truro
district. He is slightly irritated when he mentions it to Elizabeth and she
seems unimpressed.
September, early in the month – Will Nanfan calls on Ross to tell him
of news he has picked up in France while on a smuggling run for Mr. Trencrom:
there is a Prisoner of War camp in Quimper off the Bay of Audierne, near where
the Naval Battle took place in March.
September 15th - 20th – The Methodist congregants
in the district wish to repair the old meeting house at Sawle (gifted
originally on a “three lives” lease by Charles Poldark) but George, now master
of Trenwith, is opposed to the “subversive” nature of the Methodists and
equates them to the Revolutionaries of France. He chooses to not make a
decision for now so that the applicants will have to wait.
September 18th (or thereabouts) – Demelza’s pregnancy is now
eight months along and no longer concealable (to her frustration). She dislikes
this part of her pregnancies and is surprised “always” that Ross “never seemed
to mind these times.”
October, early in the month – News arrives that the Methodist meeting
house at Grambler will not regain its lease from Trenwith. The faithful,
particularly Sam, immediately approach Ross, through Demelza, asking for a
piece of Nampara land so that they can build a new meeting house on their own
land.
-There is discussion
of the “new wing” at Nampara that is being built. As is typical of a remodel,
the little project of improving the old library has spiraled into a complete
renovation and improvement of the whole house. A draftsman from Truro, Boase,
has been retained to draw up the plans: Joshua’s old bedroom on the “first”
floor will become the new dining room, and the old library will become the new
stairwell up to the “second” floor where the new library will be. On that same
floor, the old bedrooms will remain, and through the old Apple cupboard that was
above Joshua’s old room another new stairwell will be built up to the third
floor and new bedrooms there.
-The baby is doing
well in Demelza’s womb, and Ross plans a trip to Roscoff, France for the
following week to seek info in person concerning the fate of Dwight and the
other P.O.W.s. (Despite the fact that England is at war with France, and France
is still full of violent revolutionaries…)
“Honesty is not a set of rules, it is a standard of ethics.” – Harris
Pascoe (B.M. p. 75)
“I always find that the lesser the gentry, the greater the
pretensions.”
– Ross Poldark (B.M. p 76)
October 12th, a Sunday- Ross leaves Cornwall for Roscoff aboard The One and All.
October 13th, a Monday (Ross confirms this date for us when he speaks to the gendarme and he says - for his date of arrival in Roscoff-_ "twenty-second Vendémiaire", which is the same day as October 13th in the Republican Calendar (B.M. p. 168)) – Ross arrives in Roscoff in the evening. He meets with Clisson, a Frenchman, in the Le Coq Rouge tavern. Clisson offers to seek information for Ross, for a price. He will bring news back on Monday the 19th.
October 14th, Wednesday- The One and All departs Roscoff for home and Ross is not aboard as he is patiently waiting for news from Clisson. Ross spends his time in town staying at the Fleur de Lys and acting the part of a “businessman”.
October, middle of the month- Joan Pascoe marries St. John Peter, second cousin of Ross (and Ross's least favorite relation.).
October 17th, Saturday- The local gendarme officers arrive at Ross’s lodging and casually have him strip down for a search…hmmm…then direct him to leave town ASAP or risk being arrested; plus they fine him. He boards The May Queen in the harbor with absolutely no intention of being chased from town.
October 18th, Sunday night- before The May Queen sets sail, Ross transfers himself to another ship in the harbor, The Edward, with a friendly English crew.
October 19th, Monday night- Ross has himself ferried ashore by a boy that he pays and finds his way back to the Le Coq Rouge, hoping to meet Clisson. At 8:35 pm Clisson arrives and has good news: Dwight is alive. He is being held at camp in Quimper, with 4000 other prisoners. The Breton camp is in a converted convent.
October 20th, Tuesday- Ross is in Cawsand (near Plymouth). From there he travels by pilchard driver (boat) back up to Truro.
October 23rd, Friday – Caroline Penvenen’s 23rd birthday (In Warleggan we are told her birthday is the 26th.) She pays a visit to Demelza at Nampara, a first girl's hangout for the two of them, and learns how to make good bread. But there is, as yet, no news about or from Ross. Ena Daniel, Paul’s sister, works as a maid at Nampara and Betsy Maria Martin works as a kitchen maid at the house.
- Ross -gone for eleven days, not the ten he told Demelza- returns home later that evening after a somewhat protracted journey from France to Cornwall. Demelza immediately sends him to Killewarren to tell Caroline the good news.
Book Two
November 20th, Thursday – Clowance Poldark is born to parents
Ross and Demelza of Nampara. She is their third child and second daughter.
November 27th, Thursday – Ray Penvenen succumbs to the sugar
sickness and dies with his doting niece, Caroline, by his side.
December 1st, Monday – Ray Penvenen’s funeral is held and
attended by many. Ross escorts Caroline while Demelza is at home recovering
from child birth. (Dr. Choake had to deliver the baby…)
December 7th, Sunday - Drake Carne calls on Trenwith, as he
has done the previous many Sundays and “a relationship was sealed that had no
business to begin and no authority to continue.” (B.M. p. 191)
- - At the same time
in Truro, George Warleggan is planning a marital auction, using Morwenna’s life,
and contemplating how best to use her to forge a connection to the Godolphin
family- familiars at the court of the King.
December 23rd- Caroline arrives at Nampara for the Christmas
Holiday and Clowance’s christening.
-Ross has agreed to
give the Methodists a piece of Nampara land for their new meeting house,
despite his lack of interest in their form of religion.
December 24th – Snow at Nampara.
December 25th, Friday, Christmas Day- With her parents Ross and Demelza Poldark in attendance, along with her brother, Jeremy, Clowance Poldark is christened at Grambler
St. Sawle after six inches of snow has fallen the night before. Her God-Parents
are Caroline and Verity (who is unable to attend) and her uncle, Sam Carne
(which did not thrill Ross).
-After the
christening Ross decides to pay a call on Aunt Agatha at Trenwith, knowing the
family has been away for two months and learning she has had very little
company. He takes Caroline with him as “escort”.
December 31, Thursday- The Warleggan’s hold a lavish ball at Cardew.
Unfortunately, due to terrible weather, most of the guests do not attend,
deeply frustrating George.
Sometime during the year, Dolcoath Mine (that once paid for the
building of Tehidy, Francis Basset’s grand estate) is closed.
- - Also, little
Charlie Baragwanath, who found the moonflower-girl body of Karen Daniels all
those years ago, died.
-
“The fault it seems, in any revolution, is that it must always run
downhill. Victory is always for the extremists. There is always someone to say
that the party in power is not ardent enough.”
– Ross Poldark (B.M. p. 71)
1795
January, throughout the month- Ross continues his weekly visits to Aunt
Agatha at Trenwith and ensures that the staff attend to her properly. He is 35 years old.
January, end of the month- The mine owners of Wheal Leisure, now primarily controlled by the Warleggans, decide to close her at the end of February due to
her profit margins being too slim. 30-40 miners will lose their jobs during the
worst winter on record and after a failed autumn harvest.
February, early in the month- Caroline undertakes to lead and organize
a subscription plan - of all of the landowners - in order to raise funds to
purchase a shipment of corn that can be sold at steep discount to the local
mining families that are near to starving due to the harsh winter and lack of
jobs.
-Ross continues his
weekly calls on Aunt Agatha at Trenwith.
February, late – Nick Vigus dies of pneumonia, leaving a widow, a son,
three daughters, two of whom have fatherless children. They all fall on parish
relief while Moses Vigus, the son, comes to work as a farm hand at Nampara.
February 25th- Wheal Leisure is closed.
February 26th, Thursday – Ross hires twenty men from Leisure
to work exploratory shafts of new ground at Wheal Grace.
February 28th, Saturday- the Corn ship arrives in St. Anns.
-Jeremy has Influenza.
Typhus spreads through the villages, followed by smallpox.
March 1, Sunday ( and each succeeding Sunday for some time) -A discount
sale is held in St. Ann’s to distribute corn to the people, superintended by
the landowners, including Caroline and Ross.
March, early in the month- in Truro, Valentine Warleggan is diagnosed
with Rickets (Caused by a deficiency of Vitamin D and/or calcium, and common
among the poor; the disease deforms the developing bones of the child.).
Several enlightened doctors are called in and offer brutal ministrations for
the child including painful “bleeding” episodes. These all fail to cure the
baby and ultimately a mine surgeon is called in who offers pain-free and gentle
treatment that saves the boy. It is believed that any deformity in the baby’s
legs will be minor.
March 5th- Snow at Nampara again.
March, early to mid-month- George occupies his time during Valentine’s
illness courting newly widowed cleric, Osborne Whitworth, as a suitable groom
for Morwenna, who knows nothing whatsoever about any of this. The financial
negotiations between the two men are hawk-like.
For £3000 Morwenna is
sold upriver to the sexually depraved dandy of a minister.
- Floods throughout England as the great thaw begins.
6000 British soldiers die in Holland due to Typhus and the elements.
March 11th, Wednesday- Caroline returns from London with
news: Dwight’s name is indeed on the admiralty’s list of known P.O.W.s in
France. She also has a letter from Dwight which he was permitted to write; the
letter is several weeks old when she receives it. She shares the letter with
Ross and Demelza.
April, first week- Ross, who has been paying visits regularly to Aunt
Agatha since Christmas, notifies the old woman that he will cease visiting her
when George and Elizabeth return to Trenwith, which is expected in the near
future.
April- The building of the new Methodist meeting house begins on the
edge of Nampara land using old stone from derelict Wheal Maiden.
April 9th, ish- Tholly pays a visit to Nampara to check out
the young Cap’n’s wife. And he can’t quite figure her out…friend or fowl???
Moxie vixen or social-climbing, gold-digger??? None of his expectations seem to
fit. He is a bit turned off, but
slightly amused and chastened by her serving him tea.
-At the same time,
Ross is at Killewarren where Caroline is hosting a meeting of French Emigres to
discuss the counter-revolution landing set for Brittany. Ross tells Demelza later that he has learned
more about the prison camp where Dwight is being held (information gained from the smuggler’s
trade) – the conditions at the camp at Quimper have worsened.
April, mid-month- Demelza is 25 years old.
April 21st, Tuesday – The Warleggans return to Trenwith. George
has a pleasant return to his country seat until…
April 22nd, Wednesday- A chorus of frogs is heard coming
from the Trenwith pond that was so meticulously cleaned out and remodeled the
previous year, complete with TFR- total frog removal (apparently George LOATHES
frogs and toads). George, quite displeased, calls the Harry brothers to his
dressing room for aggressive chastisement. The suggestion is put forth later in
the day that, perhaps, someone has brought the frogs back. George orders five
men to guard the pond all night and tells the men (because he suspects Ross of
the childish prank) “A bloodied head and a few broken bones will not be out of
keeping at all.”
April 25th, Saturday – The mystery frogs reappear at
Trenwith.
- - Drake and Demelza
have their weekly reading and writing lesson which is approaching its one-year
anniversary (June).
April, last week of the month- Geoffrey Charles visits Drake at Reath
Cottage and innocently enlightens him on Morwenna’s upcoming nuptials. He also
announces that he will be going away to school. Drake feels the wind leaving
his sails.
- - Tholly Tregirls,
while chatting up customers in Sally Chill-off’s Kiddly, where he has now taken
up residence, deftly tosses into a drunken conversation between customers
(including Jud Painter) that Christ "was a Jew". A brawl ensues and Tholly must
leave his new quarters and the district for one month, “till the fuss has died
over.” (B.M. p. 313)
Book Three
Book Three
May, week of the 18th – Tholly returns from his exile and
Ross invites him to join his French “Liberation” Party to save Dwight from the
P.O.W. camp. Along with Tholly, Ross asks Jacka Hoblyn, Joe Nanfan, John Bone,
Tom Ellery, and Will Jonas (the Miller’s son); all had benefited from Dwight’s
medical skills in some way. The Enys Landing is planned for mid-June.
June 4th – 7th – Methodist Revival in Gwennap
that Sam attends joyfully and Corn Riots in Camborne- Illugan District.
-Aunt Agatha plans
her 100th birthday party for August 11th; George is appalled.
June 6th, Saturday- The Reverend Odgers, hoping for a crumb
of gold from George, brings important news to Trenwith concerning Miss Morwenna
Chynoweth: She has been secretly meeting a Methodist man, “One of the
ringleaders of those rowdies we were able to exclude from the church.” George
brutally insults Morwenna afterward “as having given yourself to this miner”
and no longer having a “pure body and a clear heart.” (B.M. p. 327) Turns out, George has a small repressed lust for Morwenna and is pretty offended to learn she has a taking for a young man of such low station...what the eye admires, the heart (and body) desires.
June 10th, Wednesday- Drake is arrested for the theft of
Geoffrey Charles silver trimmed Bible. He is sent to the small gaol at St. Anns
(the lower room of Mr. Renfrew’s chandler’s shop).
June 11th, Thursday- Ross attempts a plea deal (read -subtle
threat) on Drake’s behalf at Trenwith with George- the first time the two men are alone together in many
years. It is an awkward, strangely intimate encounter.
June 12th, Friday- Drake is surprisingly released from St.
Anns and all charges are dropped.
- -Ross invites a
depressed Drake to come with him to France on their mission of “liberation.”
June 16th, Tuesday- Ross and the Enys Landing group leave
Falmouth aboard a British ship, The Pomone, in the company of some 75 other
British ships sailing in support of the French Royalists hoping to retake
France from the Revolutionaries. Demelza, at home, has become fatalistic about
Ross and his “excursions”. On his leave-taking from Cornwall, Ross says goodbye
to Caroline and gently flirts with her, but not for the first time.
June 16th – 23rd- The fleet sails for the
Quiberon Peninsula and the Enys Landing crew are transferred to a smaller
vessel, The Energetic, while Ross stays on The Pomone with his friend, de
Sommbreuil, and de Marasi (he who would woo Demelza). Ross notices the awkward
difficulties between the two French commanders: Comte Joseph de Puisaye and
Comte d’Hervilly.
June 25th- The fleet anchors off the coast of the Quiberon
Peninsula, allowing the element of surprise to vaporize.
June 27th- After a day of wrangling and debate among the
leaders of the French Royalists a landing is made with the army; at first, they
are greeted as liberators by the common people of the villages.
July 10th, Friday - Nearly two weeks after the
military expedition had begun, it appeared to Ross that it was coming to a tragic
standstill. He decides his only hope of freeing Dwight is to not wait for the
French to march across the country liberating their people (and his friend),
but to embark now on his own mission of reconquest. As he explains and says goodbye to de
Sommbreuil, Ross promises to keep safe a family ring for the French man’s fiancé
who is safe in England. Ross and his men steal a fishing vessel – a luggar- and
sail north to the Odet river near Quimper, France with ten days of food and
water aboard.
July 11th- The Enys Landing crew of eight enter the convent
in Quimper and locate and free Dwight; other men from the prison also manage to
escape in the melee. Joe Nanfan is killed by a sniper and Drake Carne is
wounded by a musket ball in the shoulder. They must leave Joe's body behind.
July 12th- Ross’s crew waits out the light of day and the
turn of the tide before making for their vessel hidden along the river's edge.
July 13th- By dawn’s light, Dwight Enys and his rescuers are
finally able to leave French waters.
July 16th or 17th- After poor winds and rain, the
stolen French vessel with two injured men (Drake and Dwight) and two extra
freed men from the prison (Lt. Hugh Armitage and Lt. Spade), comes into
Falmouth Harbor about 7 pm. Ross takes Dwight directly to Mrs. Blamey’s house,
which becomes an infirmary for Drake and Dwight, and Verity is overjoyed to
play nurse.
July 17th- A wedding is held at St. Sawle in Grambler
village; Morwenna Chynoweth is married to the Reverend Osborne Whitworth
because all her family presses her to, despite her own aversion to the union.
Her new husband sexually assaults her on their wedding night.
July 18th- The injured men are improving and a message has been sent to
both Demelza and Caroline.
July 20th- Caroline arrives because she would not wait at
home “stitching a sampler” to ensure that Dwight will be able “fulfil the
promises he made before he left” for the navy. (B.M. p. 439)
July 23rd, Thursday- Ross, Dwight and Caroline (and probably
much of the rest of the crew) depart Falmouth for home – Ross is not sorry to
depart the city and his new fame, heralded as he has been for his daring
rescue. Drake stays on at the Blamey’s to more fully recover. As Ross enters his own land he is greeted by
a small, running boy who leaps into his arms with elation. Demelza too, runs at
full speed to greet him. He has been away five weeks.
August 5th, Wednesday – The Ross Poldarks enjoy the summer
weather and their reunited family.
- A frail Dwight
Enys rides a horse for the first time in more than one-and-a-half years.
-Agatha Poldark,
planning her 100th birthday party just five days hence, in her bed
with her cat, Smollet, for company, is surprised by George Warleggan in her room
at Trenwith. He startles her with news about her birth and christening, and in
turn she daggers him metaphorically with her words, before succumbing finally
to mortality.
The Four Swans
Book One
September 10th, approximately- Morwenna Chynoweth Whitworth
and her husband, the Reverend Osborne Whitworth, conceive their first child,
six weeks after their wedding.
- Elizabeth Chynoweth Poldark Warleggan is 31 years old. Her son,
Geoffrey Charles is away at school and will turn 11 late in the month (possibly
October 24th). Her son Valentine is not yet 2.
October, early in the month- Dr. Behenna of Truro receives an
unexpected caller at his home: George Warleggan. George has a series of
questions for Dr. Behenna which revolve around the birth of his heir,
Valentine. Dr. Behenna is unnerved by the conversation despite having a solemn
pact with himself never to give the upper hand to anyone.
October, still early in the month- George Warleggan clandestinely meets with George Tabb, formerly a servant at Trenwith from the old Poldark days. Again, his questions are unusual and Tabb is not quite sure what the blacksmith’s grandson really wants, but he dutifully rattles off all the people who use to call on Mrs. Elizabeth Poldark at Trenwith, whether it was day or night.
November 1st, Sunday, All Hallows Day- Caroline Penvenen
weds Dr. Dwight Enys at St. Mary’s church in Truro. The reception for 200 is
held at the Assembly Rooms in High Cross. Demelza meets the somewhat dour third
Viscount Falmouth (aka George Evelyn Boscawen), who is approaching 40 and
recently widowed. Morwenna Whitworth,
attending the wedding with her husband, is quietly suffering from morning
sickness, but says nothing by way of complaint.
-Ross and Demelza
spend the night with Harris Pascoe.
-Caroline and Dwight
return home on their wedding night to Killewarren. Horace is no longer jealous
of Dwight.
December 1st or 2nd- Ross shares with Drake an ad
from the Sherborne Mercury that he has read offering a blacksmith’s shop for
sale. Ross offers to buy it for Drake (to satisfy his need to clear his sense
of obligation to Drake for taking a bullet in France).
December 9th, Wednesday- Ross and Drake attend the auction
in St. Ann’s for the Blacksmith’s place and purchase Pally’s Shop for £232.
January- Ross is 36 years old.
1796
January- Ross is 36 years old.
January 27th- Drake moves into Pally’s Shop, taking a horse
load of hand-me-down household items from Nampara. His new property sits on six
acres and includes a small four room cottage, a Brew House and a Bake House,
along with a Barn.
February, mid-month -Dr. Behenna informs Ossie that he must forego
sexual relations with his wife until after the baby is born due to Morwenna’s
lack of blooming health and Ossie’s inordinate weight. Ossie “reluctantly
acceded”.
February, late in the month- Sam, recently declared Class Leader for
the Methodist sect in their district, meets Emma Tregirls. While seeking aid
for a grief stricken and impoverished family from Grambler village, Sam
encounters Emma who is maid to Dr. and Mistress Choake at Fernmore, the doctor’s small estate near Grambler.
February, also late in the month- Two sisters of Morwenna Chynoweth
arrive in Truro at St. Margaret’s vicarage: one, Garlanda, approximately 17
years old has only arrived as chaperone to her younger sister, Rowella, age 14,
who is coming to stay with the Whitworths as a companion to Morwenna. Morwenna
is half-way through her first pregnancy.
March- The new Nampara Methodist Meeting House is opened and enjoys its
opening festivities with over fifty people in attendance.
March, late in the month- The Poldarks receive an invitation to a one
o’clock dinner in early May at Tehidy, Sir Francis Basset’s grand coastal estate,
eleven miles south-west of Nampara. * (* These dates in the spring of 1796 are best guesses due to a lack of specific dates to work with in the text.)
April, mid- month- Ossie, who has suffered greatly in his forced abstinence, receives good news: Reverend Phillip Webb has died. Mr. Webb was the incumbent vicar of Sawle with Grambler (where he has never preached because he hired out the daily work of the church to poor Reverend Odgers at £40 per year- Reverend Webb, however, collected £200 a year for the preferment).
April- mid month- Demelza is 26 years old.
April, end
of the month- Ossie calls on George to ask George to write letters recommending
him for the newly available “living” at Sawle with Grambler.
- Later that same evening, Ossie accidentally discovers that from his
storage room in the attic he can see into Rowella’s bedroom via a pinhole he
created.
May 3rd – Jeremy Poldark turns five years old.
May 5th, Thursday,
probably - Ross and Demelza ride in the rain to Tehidy and find Caroline and
Dwight also invited. Also at the 1:00 pm party is Lt. Hugh Armitage, one of the
other men from the French prison camp in Quimper that escaped home with Ross
the previous summer. Hugh shows an appreciation for Demelza while Sir Francis
takes an interest in Ross and asks him whether he might be convinced to put his
name forward to stand for a seat in Parliament. It’s a complicated offer, tied
to a “palace revolution” against Lord Falmouth, as Ross calls it, and Ross
thinks he’ll not be their man, as he prefers to be his “own man” (4.S p. 68).
May, 8th
or 9th- Sam receives word that a mining accident has happened back in Illugan
to younger brother, Willie Carne, and that he has been sorely injured. Sam
walks the eleven miles the next day to Illugan and learns it was not Willie,
but Bobby that was injured and that recovery will come. The widow Carne is
doleful and in need of a listener. Sam complies before leaving his weekly
earnings and departing. He stops at the home of his partner, Peter Hoskin, to
deliver kind words and money from Peter. He learns from John Hoskins (Peter’s
brother) and Rosie Samson, a bold ring-leader type, of the formation of a
Miner’s Army, being planned by disgruntled and impoverished miners in the area.
This disturbs Sam.
May 10th,
Tuesday- Ross writes to Sir Francis Basset, informing him of his decision not
to stand for the Parliamentary seat for Truro.
May 11th,
the next day- Sam walks toward home, stopping in St. Anne’s at Pally’s Shop,
and sees Emma Tregirls there (who has come to check out the handsome young
wheelwright that all the girls are talking about.) Sam carries her levering
bar back for her to her disabled brother, Lobb, at his tin stamp in Sawle. Once there,
Sam meets all the Tregirls family, including dangerous Tholly. He is knocked out of
mental joint by the dysfunctional and stark, brutal reality of the family.
May 11th,
Wednesday – Ross visits Wheal Grace for his weekly inspection and learns that
the great tin vein they have been mining is thinning and afterward, notices
that a visitor is at Nampara.
-Hugh Armitage calls at Nampara,
bringing a gift of a young Magnolia tree, and leaves Demelza amorously flustered. Ross
notices, but is charitable to his wife.
May 16th
and 17th- The Burgesses of Truro meet to discuss the upcoming
by-election.
May 18th,
Wednesday – Mr. Nicholas Warleggan and Mr. William Hick wait for three hours at
Tregothnan House for Lord Falmouth to return to his home for their appointed
meeting. He arrives quite late to impart to them his choice for the new MP
candidate for Truro…that they will be expected to vote for on the morrow. Instead, they inform him that there will be a
palace revolt and that instead of his candidate they will be putting forth their own: Mr. George Warleggan.
May 19th,
Thursday- John Conan Whitworth born to his parents, Morwenna and Osborne
Whitworth, in Truro.
-The contested palace-coup
election is held in Truro- George Warleggan is very narrowly elected as MP.
Lord Falmouth is beyond angry about the affront to his position -brought on by
Sir Francis Bassett and Mr. Nicholas Warleggan.
June,
early in the month- Jeremy Poldark is given the “inoculation” against small pox
(which involved cutting into the skin of the patient and dipping a little
cootie in there…ewe…).
June 9th,
or thereabouts (possibly later in the month) - Ross, while in Truro, visits with
Harris to learn about the election and sign his bank account which has £2000 in it (and no debts!!! Yippee!). Afterward, on his way to meet with Zacky concerning the tin coinage coming up, he is called into an impromptu meeting to discuss a new county hospital with Sir
Francis Bassett, Lord Devoran, a Mr. William Molesworth…and MP George
Warleggan. George and Ross sit next to
one another for the first time in many years. Oil and water do not mix and
never shall. The “oil” goes home grumpy and bitter towards his wife, the
“water” goes home and shares the conversation with his wife.
- Demelza and Ross receive an invitation
from Frances Gower, Lord Falmouth’s sister, inviting them to Tregothnan in July
for a party and sendoff for Lt. Armitage, who will be returning to the
navy. Included with the letter is a second
smaller letter addressed to D.P. from H.A.- it is a love poem. Demelza shares
the first, but not the second with Ross.
June 10th,
approximately- Tin Coinage in Truro.
June 19th,
Sunday- Rowella Chynoweth’s 15th birthday.
June,
later in the month - Sam is visited by Methodist Circuit Steward, Arthur Champion,
a firmly stiff man who seems more interested in the financial management of the
little Nampara congregation than in the worthy souls; in addition, he doggedly
prods Sam to avoid the sin of temptation by abandoning any hopes he may have concerning Emma Tregirls, a woman of “ill repute”.
June, that
same week - George leaves Truro for London and his new seat in Parliament;
Elizabeth is not invited to go with him.
June 25th,
Friday – Morwenna continues to suffer from Dr. Behenna’s ministrations (that
include mercurial ointment and “regular bleedings”); she has not recovered from
childbirth and is weak and worn.
-Rowella
takes a bath with a witness.
- Ossie visits his wife’s bedroom
and forces himself upon her.
June 29th,Wednesday
– Elizabeth, breathing freely for the first time in three weeks because her
crabby, suspicious husband has gone to
London, goes to the library and runs into Rowella. She learns that Morwenna has
not recovered from childbirth and is in fact more ill and weak than she ever
was before.
-later that day, Elizabeth calls
on the Whitworths and insists on calling in a new medical man, i.e. Dr. Dwight Enys.
July –
Ross buys two new horses from Tholly Tregirls, Sheridan and Swift. Darkie is
partially retired and Judith becomes a part-time Nampara equine employee.
July 1,
Friday – Dwight calls on Morwenna, much to Reverend Whitworth’s
frustration. Dwight offers a very different treatment from Dr. Behenna's: A strengthening protocol of six raw eggs per day and
two pints of porter as well. Good “Heavens, man, you’ll turn her into a toper!” Ossie says. Dr. Enys also tells a very angry Reverend Whitworth that “marital relations…must
stop…for the time being.” (4.S. p. 130)
July 4th-6th-
Geoffrey Charles Poldark returns home from his first year at Harrow School; he
has matured greatly.
July 9th,
Saturday – Elizabeth and her two sons, Geoffrey Charles and Valentine, return
to Trenwith from Truro.
July 12th,
Tuesday – Elizabeth, after a dinner at Trenwith with the Reverend Odgers
family, encounters Ross at the churchyard at dusk. Since May 9th of
1793 they have not been alone together. Elizabeth’s rage at him is surprising
until she tells him why she believes her husband, George, has been terrible to
her: George suspects that Valentine is not his son, but Ross’s. Clueless Ross is floored, Elizabeth refuses
to tell Ross whether or not the details are true, and after a tense and loaded
conversation they separate somewhat reconciled to their old “friendship”. Ross
chooses not to tell Demelza of the meeting and conversation.
July 26th,
Tuesday- Dinner and a dance at Tregothnan House, Lord Falmouth’s home and the
Boscawen family estate. (Or, Hugh Armitage’s uncle’s estate). Ross, Demelza,
Dwight and Caroline attend. There are about twenty- six people there for the dinner, but about fifty in
attendance for the dance and supper which follow.
- On the way to Tregothnan, which
is south of Truro some miles, Dwight must stop and attend to Morwenna before
the group can travel on.
- At the party, Hugh acts as host
while his uncle avoids much of the festivities, still being in mourning for his
late wife. Hugh is “circumspect” in his public attentions to Demelza, though
quietly flirtatious in all others. There are six Boscawen family members
present: The Earl, Lord Falmouth; his uncle, Colonel Boscawen; the earl’s
sister, Mrs. Gower and her three children; the earl’s two children (John-Evelyn
is the younger); and Hugh Armitage, the earl’s nephew.
-Ross, to his frustration, is
called to the earl’s study for a one-on-one with the Lord of the manor during
the dance. Lord Falmouth has learned of Ross’s choice to decline the nomination
to stand for the “palace revolution” seat in Parliament and wishes to thank
him, plus talk politics, plus get to know the real Ross Poldark, plus thank him
for helping to save his nephew. (Lord Falmouth is only two or three years
older than Ross). Ross leaves the earl’s study grumpy and feeling jealous that
his wife has been left with Hugh Armitage’s attentions for too long. Later that
evening, alone in their room at Tregothnan, he and Demelza have a heart to
heart about her conflicted emotions.
July 26th,
also – Rowella Chynoweth is followed by her brother-in-law, the vicar of St.
Margaret’s church, into her bedroom. Thereupon
actions follow that are still not considered either holy (between in-laws), legal, or
morally ethical within families.
August, first days of the month – Geoffrey Charles visits Drake at his
shop, as he has nearly every day for almost a month, and tells Drake that
Morwenna has had a son.
-Emma Tregirls
visits Sam at Reath Cottage to learn why Sam has recently been avoiding her and
instead receives a proposal of matrimony that she essentially declines.
Book Two
August – Nampara’s remodel is structurally complete: Now a three story
home with between five and seven bedrooms (a few of those for servants), a
formal and modern Georgian dining room, library, revamped parlor, kitchen,
dairy, still room, scullery, cellar, (hidden cache), two barns, and several
other out buildings. All of the little details, however, have not been seen to
yet: no new china, cutlery, glassware, silver service and so on. Demelza
prefers to make the purchases in small batches, “bit by bit” rather than all-of-a
piece. (4.S. p. 178)
August, week of the 1st – Dwight attends to Mrs. Whitworth
and is surprised when the vicar does not throw a hissy-fit at being told he must
keep his paws off his wife a little longer.
-Dwight and Caroline
have their own heart-to-heart at Killewarren: it is acknowledged that Dwight’s
doctoring is taking him too far afield for too many hours, for too many days
each week. Further, he and Caroline are in each other’s company far too little.
It is resolved that changes will be made so that they will be in their own home,
at the same time, for many more hours each week.
August, middle of the month – After having
spent nearly two weeks in Truro (on his return from London and Parliament), avoiding his wife, George returns to Trenwith because he misses and “needs” Elizabeth. (4.S. p. 204)
August, three days later – George has learned that Geoffrey Charles has
been regularly visiting Drake at his Blacksmith’s shop.
August, third week of the month – George, angry that Ross has aided his
brother-in-law, Drake, and appalled at
the possibility of Drake Carne succeeding as blacksmith, instructs his solicitor, Tankard, to find out what they
can do to “discourage him.” (4.S. p. 206)
September – Ebb and Flow come to live at Nampara when Sir Hugh Bodrugan
gifts them to Demelza. They are charming pigs, like their giftor. The grain
harvest is good in England for the first time in four years and Zacky Martin,
the new underground captain at Wheal Grace, is fully recovered from his
eighteen-month illness (because Dwight has been tending to him, as opposed to Dr. Choake).
September, early in the month – The Warleggans are invited to Mingoose
House to dine with the Trenagloses. Rather than ride through Nampara land, they
take a detour up and around, skirting the little valley. Near a high point they
stop as George looks down on the renovated Nampara and busy Wheal Grace. He
derides the house as they ride away.
September – Geoffrey Charles, undoubtedly on his way back to Harrow,
visits Morwenna in Truro and passes on a message from Drake: that he hopes one
day “to bring her some winter primroses.” (4.S. p. 170) This short message gives
a little heart to Morwenna, and it is desperately needed at this time. It transpires later that Morwenna has, almost certainly by this time, “seen you (her husband) creeping
up the stairs to her (Rowella’s) room…” for Morwenna had “just once, pluck(ed) up
the courage to follow” him and see for herself what her husband and sister had
been doing. (4.S. p . 251)
September – Jud Paynter, new grave digger for Sawle parish, buries Old
Aunt Mary Rogers and is thrown out of the kiddly that night for slights on the
deceased. The next day, he attempts a new physical slight on two stray dogs and
they out-fox him, nipping him as they go. Thus embittered and very grouchy, the
next day Jud blithely tells Demelza – as she calls on Prudie and slips small
financial aid to her old servant- that he witnessed Captain Poldark and Mrs.
Warleggan meeting in the graveyard back in July and leaving together “arm in
arm.” (4.S. p. 201)
- Unfortunately,
earlier in the same day, Demelza had received a letter from Hugh (gone on the
high seas) addressed to her and Ross, but with a love poem to her enclosed. She
conceals the verse from Ross. She also does not tell him of her visit to his
mother’s grave (perhaps because she noticed that his mother died on May 9th,
the same date that Ross broke his fidelity to her with Elizabeth?)
October, 5th, Wednesday- Emma Tregirls calls on Drake at his
forge to question the brother of Sam and to – we presume- come to a better
understanding of the man who would wed her if he could.
November 20th – Clowance Poldark is two-years old.
November – January- sometime during these months Ross and
Demelza ride to Truro, Padstow and Penryn on different shopping excursions for
furnishings for the house.
December 21 – Ross and Demelza take the children sea bathing as the day
is lovely and afterward, back in the parlor at Nampara, Jeremy is given his
first taste of spirits and sprawls “on the settle shrieking with laughter.”
Clowance thinks her big brother has gone mad. (4.S. p. 214)
- The French navy
plans an invasion of Ireland and almost succeeds. They are thwarted not by the
British navy, but by…the storms of Christmas.
December 25th, Christmas day- “Snowflakes and a howling
easterly gale” greet the family and stay until almost the new year when the
cold is replaced by mild and beautiful winter weather. (4.S. p. 214)
1797
January- early in the month – Ross is dimly aware that Demelza’s frank
and open companionship with him has become slightly withdrawn and he mistakenly
ties the change only to the last letter from Hugh Armitage in September.
January- mid month – Reverend Osborne Whitworth is appointed to the
living of Sawle-with-Grambler Church to the vast annoyance of Ross Poldark, who is now 37 years old.
January 27th – 31st- The Whitworths travel to
Trenwith and Sawle so that Ossie, who “was indeed satisfied,” can read himself
in as the new Reverend. Ossie is also quite pleased with his little entourage
of “his two women” that attend with him. (4.S. p.217)
January 31st, late that evening – After having his way with
Rowella, Ossie is horrifyingly stunned to learn that Rowella is pregnant with
his child. He considers, for a moment, the possibility of her committing
suicide or perhaps some other man being blamed.
February 11th, Saturday – Rowella proposes to Ossie a way
out of their predicament: marriage for her to Arthur Solway, the Truro
Librarian. But, to help convince Mr. Solway that raising another man’s child is
worth marrying Rowella, she suggests that Ossie may need to offer a “small
present”. (4.S. p. 234)
February 13th, Monday – Arthur Solway calls on Ossie
Whitworth to ask for Rowella’s hand in marriage. Wrangling over the “present”
ensues…and continues for several days.
February, 14th, Tuesday – Demelza receives a letter and poem
from Hugh which she carefully contrives to keep from Ross.
- The Lord and Lady de Dunstanville dine at Nampara
along with Dr. and Mrs. Dwight Enys. Lord de Dunstanville and Demelza are
paired for a walk after dinner and Demelza deftly parries the good Lord’s
investigation into the Warleggan/Poldark feud. She also learns from Lord de
Dunstanville the translation for the Latin inscription on Grace Poldark’s
tombstone: Quidquid Amor Jussit, Non Est
Contemnere Tutum - Whatsoever love hath ordained, it is not fit to despise.
- Valentine Warleggan is three-years old.
- Ross informs Demelza late
that evening that Drake’s business has been suffering odd little difficulties:
a new fence torn down, the property's stream diverted away, repaired tools
broken…could George be behind such petty behavior?
February 16th, approx– Rowella brings Ossie an elucidating
letter written some years before to and about another young minister who got "with child" a young girl…that reverend found himself suspended for three
years (4.S. p. 239). Ossie believes the devil has herself entered his home.
February 17th- Rowella and Ossie settle on £500
for her and Arthur to start their new life.
February 22nd – 28th- The French attempt another landing on British soil,
this time in Wales, and fail, yet the event starts rumors which in turn start a
run on banks. Pascoe’s is just about to go under (in part, because it appears
the larger banks, Warleggan’s and Bassets, have thrown Pascoe’s credit under
the proverbial bus) when Lord de Dunstanville- he who was Sir Francis Basset-
arrives home poste haste from London in time to save the day and save Pascoe’s
Bank.
Late February- Ross grows ever more anxious and chafes at the bit as he
continues to read in his weekly paper about the failures and attacks from the
French. A man of action, he trains and commands a local group of volunteers,
and attempts to rally the landowners for local defenses, but is frustrated by
each group’s lack of dedication (4.S. p.245).
- - Rowella Chynoweth
marries Arthur Solway at the church of St. Margaret in Truro. She is given away
by her brother-in-law, Osborne Whitworth.
- - Later that night,
Morwenna confronts her husband for his infidelity. Ossie has come to insist
that “his wife…consider her duty under the terms of our holy marriage bond,” but
Morwenna tells him “no” and then gives him a powerful and frightening
proposition- one that he feels he must give way to: If he touches her ever
again, Morwenna will commit the unthinkable. He leaves utterly defeated.
Early Spring- Commodore Nelson of the British Navy, new potential hero
for the British, becomes a party topic of conversation amongst those interested
in the war, for his brilliant sea tactics and personal bravery.
April, early in the month- The Warleggans return to Trenwith and Drake
intends to call on Mrs. Warleggan in a most respectful way and tell her of the
persecutions he has suffered at his shop and ask for her intervention on his
behalf.
April 13th, Maundy Thursday- Drakes walks to Trenwith to
make his appeal but is met by Tom Harry and brutally kept from his meeting with
the lady of the house. Luckily, Will Nanfan’s ten-year old son by his second wife,
Char, finds Drake and calls his mother to help.
April 16th - Easter - (Demelza is 27)
April, 21st or so – Demelza learns of Drake’s injuries and is not
pleased to sit idly by.
April 21st or 22nd –– The Warleggans leave Trenwith for
Truro.
April 22nd, or thereabouts – Drake walks (carrying bread and
cheese with him) to Truro intending to call on Mrs. Warleggan- concerning the difficulties that he has been
having at his forge.
April 23rd – Drake calls on the Great House of the
Warleggans in the morning. He states his case privately to the misses and is
then confronted by George Warleggan, who throws him out.
- That night in Elizabeth’s room, she and George finally have it out: she confronts him about his jealous suspicions and behavior toward Valentine and he confronts her about his view that she still loves Ross, among other things… After a bible is put to good use by Elizabeth, they are reconciled and complete their packing.
- That night in Elizabeth’s room, she and George finally have it out: she confronts him about his jealous suspicions and behavior toward Valentine and he confronts her about his view that she still loves Ross, among other things… After a bible is put to good use by Elizabeth, they are reconciled and complete their packing.
April 24th – The
Warleggans depart early, leaving Truro in a post-chaise for London.
May - Ross is often away training with the volunteers; once, on
his return, he tells Demelza that he is thinking of possibly joining the
“fencibles”, who he feels would be more dedicated (they are like our modern
National Guard). In so doing, he would be away even more. She begs to differ
with this way of thinking.
May 3rd - Jeremy Poldark is six years old.
June 13th, Tuesday -
Ross, as Captain of the local volunteers, has gone to Falmouth to meet with military leaders there, including the
governor of Falmouth Harbor, John Melville. Ross expects to be gone one night
and to stay at Verity’s house.
- - Demelza has a
visit from Hugh Armitage, newly discharged from the navy for eye sight
problems. He requests to visit the seal hole cave. She reluctantly takes him in
their small boat. He seduces her prior to their return while on a beach. There
is nothing vague about Demelza’s allowing the events to unfold. Guilt, yes.
Remorse, not fully, but a little…due to a fear of what could be lost if Ross found out. Mostly, Demelza found herself
overwhelmingly attracted to another man, felt pity for him concerning his impending
blindness, and sexual opportunity presented itself (4.S. p. 303). All these
pressures were supported by her latent fears and suspicions about Ross and
Elizabeth and their meeting the past summer in the churchyard at Sawle. (She
still finds herself occasionally wondering if he is seeing Elizabeth.) But, she
thinks she is no “less in love with Ross” because of her infidelity to him
(4.S. p. 305). In her processing of the events with Hugh she slowly unravels
many of her thoughts, and Hugh’s arguments, and comes to realize that trust and
loyalty, possessiveness and jealousy, are “vital part(s)” of love “gathered,
stored, built up over the years, like something growing round love, protecting it, warming it, adding another strength to
it and another savour.” (4.S. p. 307)
Hugh leaves Nampara before dinner.
Book Three
June 14th, Wednesday- Ross spends the day at Falmouth
Harbor with Governor Melville and the night at Pendennis Castle, discussing the
defense of the country.
June 15th, Thursday – Ross and Governor Melville travel to
the POW camp, Kergillack, near Penryn to see how the French POWs are being treated.
From there, the two men ride on to Penrose (probably also in the south of
Cornwall near Porthleven) to meet Mr. Rogers, Lord de Dunstanville’s
brother-in-law. While dining at Penrose a messenger arrives from Tehidy calling
the group hither forthwith- another grain riot is transpiring in Camborne… Or
so the men believe. Once at Tehidy Ross learns that the riot is long over (and
was tamer than implied) but a plan is now afoot by Lord de Dunstanville that he
finds a little distasteful. However, as he is already there, he resigns himself
to assist the Lord in the arrests of the men involved in the rioting- He sets
out with a small group under his command to make five arrests at 1 am and
completes them by 2.
June 16th, Friday – After a brief post-dawn stop at
Killewarren to talk to Dwight, who was also summoned the night before, but
declined to go- Ross arrives home early to find Demelza giving Jeremy his reading
lesson. She greets her husband with
renewed warmth and they have a good night in bed.
“We none of us come to port without risk of shipwreck.” - Ross says,
referring to his own marriage while talking to Dwight.
June 19th- week of – Sam and Drake Carne walk into Sawle to
inspect the first Pilchard catch of the season and make their own bargains for
a small portion of the catch. The persecutions of Drake’s shop, by the
Warleggan lackeys, has stopped and Drake is in a fine mood. While in town
Tholly Tregirls, accompanied by Ned Botrell (who has somehow missed his
sentence of ten years Transportation from 1793), his daughter Emma, his girlfriend
Sally, Tom Harry the A**h**e, and Paul Daniels, proposes that Sam wrestle Tom
at Sawle Feast in the next week. After much back and forth a decision is
reached: Sam will wrestle Tom in a best-of-three-falls wins, but if he wins,
Emma will attend the Methodist meetings for three months.
June 20th or so- Thirty-five of the men arrested for leadership in the
Camborne Riots are let off “lightly”, while fifteen others are sent to Bodmin
to await a rushed trial.
June 22nd - Trial in Bodmin for the Camborne Fifteen. Five
are found not guilty, while ten are found guilty and received various
sentences: three are given imprisonment, four are sent for transportation
(which will mean impressment into the navy), and three are sentenced to death.
Lord de Dunstanville has a private word with the judges and it is decided that
only one need swing: Peter Hoskin’s brother, John.
-Osborne Whitworth
encounters Mrs. Rowella Solway at Kenwyn and notes, to his ultimate
consternation, her lack of a baby bump. As it has been five months since her
wedding he awkwardly asks about her condition and is told that “it does not
appear that” she “was with child after all.” Osborne is put out by such news.
June 23rd, approximately – Ross calls on Lord de
Dunstanville to hopefully plead clemency for John Hoskins, the brother of one
of his employees, but inadvertently arrives during the Lord’s meeting with his MPs
(including our friend, George). A gauntlet bet is publicly thrown down by
George concerning the wrestling match at Sawle Feast: Tom Harry against Sam
Carne for 100 guineas. Ross agrees on the condition that the wager should
benefit the poor and that Lord de Dunstanville should decide which charity the
money should go to. Lord de Dunstanville declares that the £100 should be given toward
building the new hospital. Ross fails to convince Lord de Dunstanville to spare
the life of Mr. Hoskins.
-On his way home to
Nampara, Ross stops at Maiden Chapel to tell Sam the bad news. He also offers
to practice wrestling with Sam. Once home, a frustrated Ross tries to debrief
with Demelza, but finds the process a little less than satisfactory, though they
each drink a couple brandies. Also, it seems, she has had word from Hugh, via
Caroline: Hugh is ailing and wishes for Dwight to come to Tregothnan for an
examination, and bring his lovely wife, Caroline, and, oh, by the way, could
the Poldarks come too? An un-thrilled Ross declines his own part of the
invitation, but says that Demelza should go, if she wishes. They come to no
easy understanding about the space allowed in one’s heart for two loves.
June 24th, Saturday – Demelza rides with Dwight and Caroline
to Tregothnan and arrives about noon. Hugh looks unchanged and his amorous
feelings for Demelza appear the same. Dwight examines Hugh and finds little to
change the London doctor’s diagnosis. Dinner at 1 pm with Lord Falmouth, Mr.
and Mrs. Gower, the three Gower and two Falmouth children, Hugh, Demelza,
Caroline and Dwight. The Honorable Captain Gower has not enjoyed his time in
Parliament this past year as the unwilling partner to George Warleggan. Lord
Falmouth’s feud with Lord de Dunstanville is mentioned and Demelza suggests that
if that were mended Lord Falmouth may again control the Truro seats in Parliament. After a gentle explanation from Demelza, and a suitable interjection from
Caroline, a potential solution is discussed.
-Ross practices a
few wrestling falls with Sam.
June 26th, Monday – Sam Carne and Peter Hoskins leave Reath
Cottage at dusk, walking twelve miles through the night, and arrive at Bodmin
the next day.
June 27th, Tuesday – John Hoskins is hanged in Bodmin with a
spectating crowd of about 300 or more which includes genteel ladies, school children
and vendors hawking goods.
- - The Hoskin family
and friends manually pull a cart carrying the body of John thirty-three miles
back to Camborne for burial. It takes them a day and half to do so, but upon reaching
their district, gatherers and supporters join the walk until it is 1000 strong.
One mile from their destination churchyard, the crowd with their bier comes
upon Lord de Dunstanville exiting a gentleman’s house. The Lord calmly climbs upon
his horse and slowly walks through the throng and on his way.
June 28th, Wednesday – John Hoskins is buried.
June 29th, Thursday, Sawle Feast Day – Wheal Grace has a
holiday.
-11:00 am – Church service
at St. Sawle and the Poldarks attend because Jeremy wants to, though his father
is wholly reluctant. Reverend Whitworth is leading the service and to Ross it gallingly
appears as though “the ungodly had flourished.” (4.S. p. 239)
-Morwenna, totally
offended by Rowella and Ossie’s relationship, both from the incestual-like
infidelity and the notion that her sister would willingly lie with such a man
as Ossie, sits near the front of the church with only loathing in her heart for
the man preaching.
-Ossie’s sermon is full of bile and vehemence and
utterly too long. Ross falls asleep with Clowance on his lap.
-During the same sermon,
a few feet away, George thinks about his stabilized marriage with Elizabeth and
that, since Easter, he has mostly come to believe that Valentine is his son,
but old doubts die hard for him; then he too nods off.
-At the back of the church
Drake sees a very changed and faded Morwenna and feels “sick to look at her and
at that loud-mouthed Cleric standing in the pulpit” (4.S. p. 243). He talks
himself into believing that all between him and Morwenna is gone, like a dream,
“lost forever” but then, after the service, as she walks past him she looks
directly into his eyes and smiles radiantly.
-12:30 ish- Dwight
and Caroline arrive at Nampara for dinner with the Poldarks and Caroline announces
that she is pregnant.
-Drake arrives home
at Pally’s Shop and makes dinner. His brother, Sam, arrives soon after, returning
from the burial of John Hoskins, and is fed by Drake. Late in the afternoon the two walk to Sawle so that
Sam can wrestle Tom Harry.
- 6 pm- the Poldarks and Enyses walk back to Sawle for
the wrestling match. (Paul Daniels has won the earlier wrestling tourneys.)
6:15 pm - George and Ossie arrive from Trenwith for
the match.
-
During the match,
as his body is thrashed and torqued, Sam is aware of his revelation (brought
home to him on the long walk from Bodmin to Camborne) that his own true motives
for agreeing to the bout were two things only: revenge and lust. This does not
sit well with him.
7 pm- The match is finished 2 falls to 1, advantage
Tom Harry.
June 30th, Friday – Ross sends his bank draft to Francis Basset
for 100 guineas. Soon after, he receives a letter from Mr. Tankard “on
behalf of Mr. Warleggan” asking Ross to pay the £100 wager debt. “Ross mixed this with
the pig feed.” (4.S. p. 355)
July – Sam heals from his wrestling bout. Dwight makes medical calls on
Hugh twice more, and Demelza receives a letter from Hugh which is neutral enough
that she shows it to Ross.
-Caroline and Dwight
host a small dinner for four: Lord Falmouth, Lord de Dunstanville, Caroline and
Dwight. A reconciliation between the “little lions”, as Caroline calls them
(4.S. p. 356), is reached.
August 31 – The angry and resentful Reverend Ossie Whitworth sees his
sister-in-law, Mrs. Arthur Solway, nee Rowella Chynoweth, the night after he
may, or may not, have been seen visiting the Truro brothels.
-Demelza goes blackberry
picking with Jeremy and Clowance and meets with Emma Tregirls who is need of
girl talk.
-Emma talks with Sam
afterward and a decision is made for her to leave the area for one year to see
if either she or Sam have a change of heart. Demelza agrees to write to Tehidy
for Emma to see about a position there as a maid.
September, early in the month – Ross, Sir John Trevaunance, Dr. Dwight
Enys, Horace Treneglos and other gentlemen of the district receive letters from
Reverend Whitworth admonishing them to cough up cash to help pay for
improvements at Sawle Church.
September 4th, Monday – Ross receives a letter from Mrs.
Gower kindly requesting that he and Mrs. Poldark join them for dinner anytime
that week as an urgent kindness to her nephew, Hugh, who is now suffering from
a brain fever. A new doctor has been called in.
September 6th, Wednesday – Ross and Demelza travel to
Tregothnan in the drenching rain to visit the now very ill Hugh Armitage. They are given a room and a change of clothes prior to seeing Hugh. Hugh’s
parents, the Colonel and Mrs. Armitage have been summoned from Dorset, but have
not yet arrived. Hugh looks terrible with his head shaved and leeches on his forehead.
Ross and Demelza together stay in the room for only about ten minutes, then
Ross departs per the doctor’s request. He is angrily disturbed and totally depressed;
he had noted Demelza’s look when she first saw Hugh. It betrayed more than he
had known before. He leaves and wanders the halls for a spell before a Gower son
asks him to come and meet with his uncle, Lord Falmouth. Ross meets the Lord in
his study and is offered - again - a seat in parliament for Truro. Ross makes three
stipulations on his agreeing to run:
#1- He has the right to support Pitt on any measures needed for the war effort;
#2 – He has the right to support any measures that appear to be beneficial to the poor;
#3 - He has the right to aid Mr. Wilburforce in ending the slave trade.
Ross, upon returning to the room he and Demelza have been given to dry their clothes, unhappily finds a love poem from Hugh to Demelza. He is confronted by an emotional and angry despair that he has not felt in 15 years. He does not tell her about running for office.
#1- He has the right to support Pitt on any measures needed for the war effort;
#2 – He has the right to support any measures that appear to be beneficial to the poor;
#3 - He has the right to aid Mr. Wilburforce in ending the slave trade.
Ross, upon returning to the room he and Demelza have been given to dry their clothes, unhappily finds a love poem from Hugh to Demelza. He is confronted by an emotional and angry despair that he has not felt in 15 years. He does not tell her about running for office.
September 10th, Sunday – The Warleggans return to Truro from
Trenwith.
September 11th, Monday – The Whitworths dine with the Warleggans
and Ossie delightedly informs George that Ross Poldark will be running against
him for the MP seat. Later that night, in order to guarantee the proper vote, George
meets with his uncle Cary to strategize how best to put pressure on the Aldermen
and the Burgesses.
September 14th, Thursday – There is a general election because
Pitt has dissolved Parliament. In Truro, four men run for office, but only two
MPs will be elected: the candidates are Gower, Poldark, Trengrouse, and
Warleggan. The voting is close, but Gower and Poldark win. After the voting is
over, Ross is greeted and congratulated by a relieved Lord Falmouth, but the lord
also brings news of his family’s grief: Hugh Armitage died the night
before (September 13th).
- - At the Red Lion
Inn after the voting, a celebratory dinner is held without Lord Falmouth. Ross
stays until 6 pm before heading home. Upon arrival, he discovers Demelza has
left the house two or more hours previously- he finds a letter from Mrs. Gower
informing Demelza of Hugh’s death. Rage begins to wash over him as a specific
certainty seems to settle into his mind.
He has no details, no facts, but an ever-growing belief that she has
been unfaithful to him with Hugh- a dead man that he can not confront or
challenge. Demelza, in her own distress, arrives home disoriented and disheveled
from an impromptu and rushed visit that she has made on-foot to Caroline (four
miles each way). Ross endeavors to be supportive after an initial angry and somewhat
cruel reception of her. Through tears she attempts the beginning of an
explanation and a renewed vow of her enduring love for Ross. They both calm
down enough that they go upstairs to read to Clowance together. He does not tell
her he has been elected. Demelza does not apologize for her affections for Hugh (or confess directly to her affair).
September, third week of the month- A celebratory Ball is held for the
new Parliament.
September, end of the month – Lord Falmouth hosts a dinner at Tregothnan
with his council.
October, early in the month- New Parliament is assembled in London. New
MP, Ross Poldark, attends and settles in London in rented accommodations.
November 20th - Clowance Poldark is three years old.
November 20th - Clowance Poldark is three years old.
Sometime during the year St. John Peter takes up with a woman in St.
Austell and begins accruing large debts, to the tune of twelve thousand pounds.
The Angry Tide
1798
Book One
Ross is 38 years old.
Winter of 1798- Ross invites
Geoffrey Charles out for an excursion to Vauxhall Gardens to watch the singers
perform.
February - Sarah Caroline Anne Enys is born to her parents, Dwight and Caroline, and is christened at St. Sawle Church.
February - Sarah Caroline Anne Enys is born to her parents, Dwight and Caroline, and is christened at St. Sawle Church.
Early in the spring- Ross speaks in Parliament for the first time,
promoting a William Wilburforce bill to abolish slavery. He is quoted in the
newspaper and a copy is given to Demelza, which gives her great pride.
- April - Ross travels from
London to Sussex and Kent to inspect military preparations in the event of a
French invasion; to plan for the self-sabotage of bridges, resources, munitions,
etc. rather than allow the French to gain control of any English assets.
April, middle of the month- Demelza turns 28 years old.
May 3rd – Jeremy is 7 years old.
May 14th – Ross returns home to Cornwall. He has spent nearly eight months
away, renting rooms from Mrs. Parkins at #5 George Street (off the Strand, near the Adelphi Buildings), London, while he
attended Parliament. He shares a coach part-way with Ossie, who is returning
from a social visit to the Carlyons at their home, Tregrehan. This does not
improve Ross’s mood. Late that day, in stunned disbelief, Demelza happens to greet Ross’s
arrival (on a borrowed horse) coming across the moors toward Nampara. Over
supper that evening they talk about the time apart, their wounded marriage,
Ross’s near dalliances with prostitutes, and surprise each other later that
night by resuming their healthy, loving, sexual relationship.
-Ossie, meanwhile,
also returning home, is only greeted by three letters: one from his old whist
partner, Nathanial “Notary” Pierce, asking for a visit and another from his
sister-in-law, Rowella Solway, also asking for a visit.
- At the Great House
in Truro, George hosts a lavish one-man dinner party for Sir Christopher
Hawkins, age 40, of Trewithen. Sir Christopher, MP, happens to be the possessor
of 2 parliamentary seats in southern Cornwall.
May 15th- With a new moon barely discernible in the sky,
Ross greets the day at 4:30 am by skinny-dipping in the chill waters of Nampara
Cove. After dressing for the day, he walks to Sawle to greet Captain Henshaw at
6:30 and discusses the reports of the slightly thinning tin load at Wheal
Grace.
Mid-May- Drake, prospering at his forge and diligent in his work
(because he has nothing else in life that he is interested in), receives a note
from his sister asking him to Nampara to install a fireback for them in the new
Library. She also offers him tea.
May 18th – Ossie calls on Mr. Notary Pearce and learns that
the old man, now dying of gout, has a confession to make. Ossie then stops for
a visit at the Red Lion Inn and has a chat with Dr. Behenna about how one can
have one’s wife locked away in an institution (A.T. p.54).
Wednesday, May 23rd – Drake arrives for tea and fireback
installation at Nampara; he is obliged, delicately, into escorting home Rosina
Hoblyn who has been doing sewing work for Demelza. Ross says, “A more flagrant
contrivance I never saw.” (A.T. p.43)
Late May – Ross is busy throughout Cornwall seeing to the region’s
preparations for French invasion, as he did in Kent and Sussex.
June - In Truro, the Warleggan’s hold a family council; George has
been spending a lot of money on land purchases near St. Michaels Mount in far
west Cornwall. George explains that it is “an investment for the future. My
future.” He is buying his own borough, the better to insure himself a permanent
place in Parliament. (A.T. p. 56) At the council, Cary Warleggan also announces
to his nephew and brother that he has “Pascoe’s son-in-law (St. John Peter) in”
his pocket and that Nat Pearce, who is approaching death, will be leaving his
business affairs in legal and financial disaster; this ruin will likely
pull-down Pascoe’s bank. Cary also mentions that the conclusion of all will hopefully
also “wing” Ross Poldark. (A.T. p. 61)
-The same day,
Elizabeth goes shopping with her mother-in-law, Mrs. Mary Warleggan, and afterward
they pay a visit to Elizabeth’s cousin, Mrs. Arthur Solway (Rowella). They are
surprised to see the Reverend Osborne Whitworth emerge from the house.
June- Sarah Enys, first child to Dr. Dwight and Mrs. Enys, is four
months old.
- - The new Miners
Hospital is under construction near Truro, with donated funds from the gentry.
Late June- Ross visits
Harris Pascoe in Truro to sign for his accounts. His main balance is above four
thousand pounds and he has investments in Blewet’s shipyard in Looe and Daniel’s
Smelting Furnaces outside of Truro. Later he meets Dwight and they ride home
together. While ambling home, Dwight asks Ross about his relationship with
Demelza and Ross responds by sharing his unease regarding her affair with Hugh.
He describes his relationship with Demelza as having always been “a fiery one”
saying “in eleven years we have survived a number of storms – most of them,
perhaps, of my making. Now we must try to survive one of hers.” (A.T. p 70)
- - Dwight shares
with Ross, after he is pressed, the terrible diagnosis he has made for his
little daughter Sarah.
June 27th – Ossie resumes his illicit affair with Rowella,
on Thursday evenings at her home…for a price. She wears her new, “not quite
nice” nightgown. (A.T. p.92)
July 10th, Tuesday – Sam calls on his brother, Drake, as he
does every Tuesday. They have a meal and a brotherly conversation concerning
marriage, misery and Morwenna.
July - Napoleon Bonaparte and his armies move through the Mediterranean
and take Egypt.
July 30th – Geoffrey Charles, age 14, visits Drake at his
forge. The old camaraderie is still warmly there, but changed, and a little
awkward. The differences in their life stations are now visible to both.
July 31st- Dwight receives a letter from Dr. Behenna
requesting his opinion in a matter concerning Mrs. Whitworth, at the behest of
Mr. Whitworth.
August 8th, Wednesday – Dwight attends on Morwenna, more as
a psychologist than a medical man. His
assessment is different than Reverend Whitworth’s – which contends that his wife
“is insane, that she is in fact an evil woman” and that this is due to “God’s
judgement upon the wicked.” (A.T. p. 85) Dwight counteracts this argument with
the reminder that the King recently recovered from his bout with insanity and
surely, you are not suggesting that the King has been visited by the
Devil???
August 9th or 10th – Ross and Demelza brew beer and Jeremy
slips the pigs, Ebb and Flow, the beer grounds out of two barrels. The swine
are made drunk as skunks to the amusement of everyone except Jeremy (who fears
he has killed them). Sir Hugh Bodrugan appears amidst the clamor- hoping to
corral Demelza, but thwarted by Ross’s presence- and, like the pigs, finds
himself with the staggers. He also
mentions a grand party to be held at Trenwith late in the month, to which Ross
and Demelza are not invited.
August 29th, Wednesday – A restless Ross joins the village
men on Hendrawna Beach (Zacky, Paul, Jacka, Jud, etc..) for a late-night
fish-netting swim. Naked, he is nearly swept out to sea by a “vellow” (similar
to a rip current), but his calm demeanor (and pride) and recollections of
youthful swims bring him ultimately back to shore safely; Jud, unfortunately,
who had been anchoring Ross’s net on shore, has been drawn into the water and
is seen floating like a cork some distance from land, pipe aglow.
- -Jacka Hoblyn
confronts Ross that same night about Drake and Rosina- is the young man
courting her or not?
August 30th, Thursday – The Warleggans throw a great summer
party at Trenwith with the entire district invited (except the Poldarks) and
Ross “trespasses” on the grounds late that evening to bear witness. He is
surprised to discover Elizabeth out in the garden taking a respite from the
festivities. He quietly begins a conversation with her about her life, her
sons, her husband, but they are interrupted by an arrogant, pale, soldier-of-a-dandy-man
named Captain Monk Adderley who “made the back of my hair stand up” Ross tells
Demelza later. Before retiring to bed late that night she asks Ross if he has
taken this risk of venturing to Trenwith because she had “failed” him? He
replies, “Perhaps we’ve failed each other.” (A.T. p. 115)
October 8th, Monday, morning – Word comes via Ross’s Mercury newspaper that Admiral Nelson
has scored a great victory over Napoleon at the mouth of the Nile; all staff at
Nampara are given a rum toddy and bells peel in London.
- Afternoon - In the attempt to link Wheal Grace with
the old (believed dry) Wheal Maiden workings Sam and his partner, Peter
Hoskins, inadvertently break into the depths of the flooded old mine, causing
flooding at Grace. Led by a calm, decisive Sam, nearly all miners are alerted
and make their way to safety. Two men are lost: Sid Bunt and Tom Spurrock.
- Later that day- When
Sam finally makes his weary way home, adrenaline subsiding, fatigue and
soreness growing, he is met by Beth Daniels who has brought Sam a letter. The
letter (written by a friend for a shilling) is from Emma Tregirls, informing
Sam gently, and with love, that she has married a good man, Ned Artnel, who
also works at Tehidy. She has been gone more than a year. Initially stunned
into silence, he then breaks into weeping.
Book Two
November, early in the month – Elizabeth calls on Morwenna for tea and
comments on the string of unusual nurses that the baby, John Conan has had.
Morwenna explains that it is not her doing, but Ossie’s, and that he “is a
strange man.” (A.T. p. 147)
November, mid-month – Ross, not returning to Parliament until after the
new year due to the flood repairs at the mine, assists in the saving of a
ship’s crew when their vessel wrecks on Hendrawna Beach, but departs the scene
when the scavengers arrive. A second
ship breaks apart on the same beach not long after, releasing it’s supply of
coal all over the beach.
November 20th, Tuesday – Clowance is 4 years old.
Late November – Jeremy comes down with yet another respiratory ailment
and Demelza fears the dreaded Pthisis (Tuberculosis). But Dwight assures her
that it doesn’t appear to be.
November 28th, Wednesday – Sarah Caroline Anne Enys, aged 9
months, dies from complications of a defective heart.
December 3rd, Monday – Sarah is buried at Sawle Churchyard.
December 10th – Caroline tells Dwight that she intends to
leave Cornwall for London, alone. She cannot grieve and heal in Cornwall.
December 24th & 25th, Christmas time – Drake,
Sam and Dwight all spend Christmas at Nampara. All are lonely, depressed men. (Caroline has left for London.) The Blameys
come from Flushing, where they now live, and little Andrew is 5 years old.
James Blamey is now 21.
December 26th - A children’s party (approx. 20 children are
present-Treneglos, Martins, Carters, Scobles, etc…) is held at Nampara. Verity
and Demelza host, with James as Circus Maestro, while Ross and Andrew Sr. take
a walk along the coast. At the border of Trenwith land Ross tests the health of
the wooden fencing…and finds it weak and rotten, a little like the landlord. Ross calls it “enemy
territory” before he throws many of the fence posts and rails over the cliff
and into the ocean. (A.T. p.153)
- - Verity notes that
she sees Ross’s “old wildness” and that his “unquiet” has come back. (A.T. p.
156) Verity is 40 years old.
1799
January, middle of the month- Demelza receives a letter from Caroline
in which Caroline suggests that Demelza should come to London with Ross. Ross
echoes the suggestion, but as he was not originator of the idea, Demelza feels
that perhaps he doesn’t really want her to go and suggests instead that she go
with him in the fall.
January 28th – Ross leaves for London, taking the sea route.
After he is gone Demelza finds Nampara empty as a tomb and regrets not having
gone with him.
February, early in the month – Demelza - who is spending a fair amount
of time with Dwight socially, as both are alone and feeling lonely- walks with
Jeremy to Drake’s forge, after stopping by Sawle Churchyard to lay flowers at
the graves of family (Julia Poldark, Francis Poldark, Uncle Charles Poldark,
Aunt Agatha, and probably baby Sarah Enys too.). At the forge she quietly encourages Drake to consider marriage to
Rosina.
February 12th- Miss Cane, a new nurse, comes to care for
John Conan Whitworth. Her direction is to watch the child day and night because
the boy’s mother, Morwenna, is unfit and has threatened to kill the child. Ossie continues to visit his sister-in-law,
Rowella, every Thursday evening and discreetly dispenses money to said
sister-in-law for small niceties for her home and person (a new rug, new shoes,
new velvet gown, new candlesticks).
February 19th- Demelza receives letter from Ross telling her
that he arrived in London safely.
February 24th, Sunday – Drake proposes to Rosina Hoblyn
after he confides to her of all his old loyalties to and love for Morwenna. She
accepts his proposal. He suggests an Easter (March 24th) wedding.
February, end of the month – Demelza receives letter from Ross. His
letters seem neutral, not warm, but Demelza sees this as Ross’s letter-writing
style, not a necessary reflection of his feelings toward her.
March 4th, Monday – After seeing that Miss Cane is
terrifically suited to her new position of protecting John Conan, Ossie resumes
his pattern (after a nearly two-year intermission) of twice weekly raping Morwenna, Mondays and Fridays. Morwenna makes no attempt on John Conan’s life.
March, early in the month- James Scawen agrees to sell George enough of
his land near St. Michael so that George will have his own borough.
March 7th, approx. - Demelza receives a letter from Ross
saying that he plans to be home in April (returning early) because he has
accepted a commission to train with the militia in August in Kent; that he has
called on Caroline (and seen Monk Adderley there on one occasion). He seems
“detached” in his letter and makes no mention of her coming with him to London
when he returns in the fall. (A.T. p.
168)
March 14th, Thursday – Ossie makes his weekly call on old
Nat Pearce- still laboriously dying- before visiting Rowella for his weekly
lustful indulgence.
- - Arthur Solway
visits his parents home in the evening, as he does every Thursday. While there,
his sister, Tabbie, has a seizure that does not stop. Arthur leaves hurriedly
to find Mr. Royal, the apothecary. Returning to his parents, he goes to his own
home in and effort to warn Rowella that he may be home quite late.
Unfortunately, at his own home he sees much more than he expected.
March 15th, approx. – Demelza receives a fourth letter from
Ross saying he’ll be home the week after Easter, in the first days of April.
March 16th – Cary Warleggan makes an astonishing call on St.
John Peter…but it’s not social, it’s to call in his loans…knowing this will
force St. John to empty his account (and his wife’s dowry) from Pascoe’s Bank.
“Cary pulled his coat around him like a
raven folding his wings.” (A.T. p. 181)
March 21st, Thursday – Ossie considers how successful his season
of Lent has been: he has cancelled the delivery of Porter that Morwenna enjoys
drinking; he has considered the possibility of giving up his liaison with
Rowella; “Once or twice he had checked himself when about to open an extra
bottle of Mountain (red wine from Ronda, Spain).” Then he confidently calls on
Nat Pearce, still hovering at death’s door, before walking to Rowella’s, who is
not remotely at death’s door.
- - That same
evening, Arthur Solway leaves his parent’s house early and walks toward St.
Margaret’s church, a mile outside of Truro, where he patiently waits in the
dark for his wife’s lover, a long, strong stick in his hand.
- - Around midnight,
Osborne Whitworth is found dead, one foot still in the stirrup of his saddle, a
stones-throw from his home.
- - Much later that
night, Arthur arrives back home and in a daze of horror, regret, and rage
confronts Rowella before showing her an uncharacteristic lack of mercy and a
violent physicality.
March 22, Friday – Elizabeth calls on a shell-shocked Morwenna and
finds the elder Mrs. Whitworth holding court, demanding subservience from all
and suffocating the widow Morwenna with her domination.
March 23rd, Saturday -
Elizabeth calls on Arthur Solway at the Truro library to suggest that
Rowella should call on her sister, despite their estrangement. Arthur seems
ghastly ill and explains that Rowella can’t call on Morwenna as she is out of
the area visiting his cousin in Penryn (liar, liar, pants on fire.).
- - Drake learns of
the Reverend Osborne Whitworth’s death. After a period of bewildered
heart-wrenching confusion he walks to Rosina and breaks off their engagement.
He then walks the seven miles to Truro.
- - Nathaniel Pearce
dies.
March 24th, Easter Sunday – Demelza learns there is not to
be a wedding that day for her brother and with emotional frustration says of
Ross, “I do wish he were not always away!”
(A.T. p. 201)
March 25th, Easter Monday – Fifteen-year anniversary of
Demelza and Ross’s first meeting.
- - Funeral for
Osborne Whitworth.
- - Morwenna Whitworth,
after the funeral, thinks “I don’t exist any longer. Nothing of me – it’s all
gone – mind, body, soul even; I am an envelope, a useless sack of clothes from
which has been squeezed all feeling, all reason, all sentiment, all goodness,
all faith.” (A.T. p. 204)
- - Jacka Hoblyn, who
has been drinking continuously for two days with his son-in-law, Art Mullet
(the doltish husband of Rosina’s younger sister, Parthesia), endeavor to think
of a way to punish Drake.
- - Late Easter
Monday- Jacka has switched from Sally Chill-offs kidley to Doctor’s due to a
lack of sufficient sympathy at Sally’s; while there he is joined by the Harry
Brothers of Trenwith (who are not welcomed at Sally’s) and soon, with Tom
Harry’s encouragement, they are marching to Pally’s Shop. Tom Harry
successfully goads the bull, Jacka, into setting the house on fire.
- - Drake has spent the
day and night attending the funeral of Ossie and sleeping under a hedge in
Truro.
- - Ross leaves
London via the sea route but their ship puts in at Chatham (mouth of the
Thames) where it remains due to lack of winds, for eight days; he writes
Demelza to notify her of the delay.
March 26th, Tuesday – morning- Morwenna sees Drake for the
first time in ages. Seeing her alone in a room of her house, he enters through
side doors hoping to offer her consolation and compassion. Instead, after
telling him, “I’m not for you. Nor for anyone. Ever again.” (A.T. p. 212) she
ushers him out when her mother-in-law enters the room. He remains in Truro,
hoping for a second chance with Morwenna, for two more days.
- - Demelza learns of
the fire at Pally’s shop and goes with Sam to investigate. When they arrive
they meet Rosina, also coming to see.
- - Back at Nampara
later that day, Sir Hugh calls and wants to barter with Demelza. She is in no
mood, but finds herself willing as Sir Hugh tempts her with hints that she
finds she can not ignore. She agrees to one kiss if the information is worth
her while. It is: Sir Hugh tells Demelza of rumors he’s heard in Truro- Nat
Pearce is dead; he has embezzled from many clients that he and Harris Pascoe
were the co-trustees for; Pascoe’s Bank is expected to fail as a result-
Demelza should empty the Poldark account ASAP.
March 29th, Friday –In the wee hours of the day, anonymous
letters are slipped under the doors of fifty of Harris Pascoe’s largest
customers (but not the Poldarks). The letter tells of St. John Peter’s debts,
of Nat Pearce’s embezzlement, and warns that Pascoe’s Bank “is now on the verge
of insolvency” (A.T. p.228). A run starts on the bank.
- - Before dawn a
severely crushed and disappointed Drake arrives back at his burned-out forge. Sam, who has
been sleeping there – waiting for his return – greets him and takes him home to
Reath Cottage.
- - Early in the
morning- Demelza, with Sir Hugh’s warning humming malevolently in her head, and
Ross still gone, must make decisions concerning the mine payday on the morrow
and the Poldark bank account at Pascoe’s: She needs £420 for wages which she is supposed to
draw from Pascoe’s bank (with the aid of Zacky or Captain Henshaw, normally),
however, to do so, she fears, will cause further calamity for Mr. Harris
Pascoe. She decides on an epic approach to the problem and with Zacky, Captain
Henshaw and Will Nanfan as aides and confidants she travels to Truro to learn
more. By the end of the day Demelza has traversed the county with her guard of
three, endeavored to avert financial ruin, and carried large sums of money.
March 30th, Saturday – Lady Whitworth sends constables to
call on Drake at Reath Cottage to investigate his possible involvement in the
death of the Reverend Osborne Whitworth. Sam gives evidence of an alibi for
Drake (who is too depressed to care)- that Drake, on the evening of Osborne’s
death, was being fitted for his wedding coat in St. Anne’s. This is confirmed by
the constables.
- - Demelza speaks to
the miners at Wheal Grace and informs them that she can only give them a
quarter of their pay, but that when Ross returns the remainder shall be paid.
April 2nd- Ross finally departs Chatham, unfortunately his
ship loses its mast within the first 36 hours near the Isle of Wight.
April 3rd- or thereabouts- Demelza receives letter from
Ross, sent from Chatham while his ship was awaiting a favorable wind, of his
delay. This does not comfort her or ease her worries.
April 4th- Ross’s ship puts in at The Solent for mast
repairs.
April 6th or 7th – Ross’s ship departs after
repairs are completed at the Isle of Wight.
April 8th, Monday – Demelza rides into Truro, probably with
John Gimlet as groom, to call on Pascoe and learn whether he has weathered the
banking crisis. She finds him removed to his sister’s home in Calenick (a few
miles to the south of Truro), but Joan (neé
Pascoe) Peter is at her father’s home and
meets with Demelza. Through Joan, Demelza learns of the failure of the bank.
Over the course of the run on the bank, Pascoe paid out £29,000,
but needed £37,000.
April 12th, Friday -
early in the morning- Ross’s ship docks at Fowey and - unwilling to
re-board the ship for two or three days more of travel - he buys himself (using
virtually all of his money) a mare to finish his route home on horseback; he
travels the 30 miles in one day, arriving long after nightfall. He notes
something amiss in Demelza’s demeanor and is surprised and aghast to learn of
all the misfortunes that have transpired since her last letter to him. In
listening to Demleza’s story, and his questioning of her, he breaks two of his
pipes in anger. But Demelza has her own important question regarding her
efforts for Pascoe’s Bank; “Did I do right or wrong, Ross? I have to
know.” A bitter, weary and heartsore
Ross replies, “You’re worth all of Westminster.” (A.T. p. 244)
April 13th, Saturday – Ross rides to Calenick to call on
Harris Pascoe, who is staying with his sister and her ginger cat.
- - Ross departs Calenick
and sets out on a wide circuit to survey and tap friends and acquaintances of
his and Harris Pascoe: Mr. Henry Andrew, Mr. Hector Spry, Lord Devoran,
Ralph-Allen Daniel, (lunch in Truro at the Fighting Cocks Inn), to Tregothnan,
(but Lord Falmouth is not at home), Mr. Alfred Barbary, and Sir John
Trevaunance.
- - On his way back
home he stops at the Hoblyn hovel to have a word with Jacka about the burning
of Pally’s Shop.
- - He enters Nampara,
saddle-sore and mentally fatigued, about 9:30 pm and after Demelza brings him supper
he finds he does not want food, “I think I just want you.” (A.T. p. 253)
Mid- April- Demelza is 29 years old.
April 18th, Thursday - After paying everyone at the mine their
wages (from a short-term loan courtesy of Ralph-Allen Daniel) - and giving each
man an extra two shillings for their patience- Ross gives all workers at Grace
the day-off, beginning at noon. He and Demelza host an impromptu carouse at Nampara
with a roasted pig, a keg of beer purchased at Sally Tregnothnan’s, and a large
bonfire of old pit props from the mine.
Several men show off their homemade fireworks skills.
April 19th and 20th – Ross meets with other
notable men in Cornwall to canvas their opinions on the failure of Pascoe’s
Bank.
April 22nd, Monday – Ross rides to Tehidy to meet with Lord
de Dunstanville (Francis Basset) and discusses the future of Cornish banking.
“It is a mistake to press too hard from a position of weakness.” – Lord
de Dunstanville
April 26th, Friday – The grand opening of the new miner’s
hospital of Truro, the Cornwall General Infirmary. Ross attends with other
sponsors of the new facility. He and George nearly go for each other’s throats,
but Ross is saved by a fainting fit from Elizabeth…
-Elizabeth realizes
that she is with child, but plans to keep it a secret from George, for now.
- At the event Ross
notes that Dwight is not looking sanguine: he looks older than his years, and
Ross sees that grief seems etched on his friend’s face for both the loss of his
daughter and his wife (though that loss was expected to be remedied relatively soon with
Caroline’s return to Cornwall in July).
May 3rd- Jeremy is 8 years old.
May- Due to Elizabeth’s recurring fainting fits, Dr. Behenna is called
in repeatedly until Elizabeth confesses her pregnancy to George.
Late May- Mr. Howell, MP for St. Michaels, resigns his Parliamentary
seat. George, as owner of the borough, presents himself as candidate and takes
a house in London for the autumn and winter.
May and early June – Ross spends nearly all his time out and about the
county trolling for banking support for Pascoe, working to bring about a
financial institution that can and will stand-up opposite Warleggan’s Bank as
an honorable option.
June 28th, Friday – A series of handbills are distributed
throughout the county and an announcement runs in the Mercury declaring the name change of Basset, Rogers, & Co.,
Bankers of Truro - incorporating Pascoe’s Bank - to the Cornish Bank (New
Brand!). The partners in the new bank are: Baron de Dunstanville, Mr. Rogers,
Mr. Praed, Mr. Stackhouse, Mr. Pascoe, and Captain R. Poldark. This event “clouded” George’s horizon. (A.T.
p. 276)
Book Four
July – Rebuilding work begins on Pally’s Shop – probably directed by
Ross.
July, early in the month – Caroline returns home to Cornwall, her
husband, and a Killewarren without baby Sarah.
She hosts a small “party” for Ross and Demelza and all agree that in the
fall the four will go together to London.
July 18th – Ross visits Drake at Reath Cottage to cajole him
into returning to his forge. Drake, with some reluctance, agrees to return to
his work.
July 21st – Ross leaves Nampara for Canterbury (Barham Downs
– a race track - where the militia training and preparations for invasion of
Holland will take place.). Ross will be training new recruits.
July 25th, or 28th approx. – Demelza travels to
Falmouth to visit Verity for several days. The two talk about Ross’s recent
successes (MP and Bank of Truro), but Demelza avoids the BIG issues, despite
longing to debrief with her. Verity tells Demelza about the rumors of the large
army training where Ross is and the belief that an invasion of the continent
may be likely. This is not happy fodder for Demelza’s mind.
August 27th – The British Army successfully invades Holland
and Demelza fears that Ross has gone with the army.
September 6th – Ross returns home from Kent, having not gone
to Holland. (Whew!) However, the Army’s victory in Holland means that
Parliament needs to pass a quick bill to insure the funding of the war. Ross
informs Demelza that they will need to depart for London in ten days or less.
September 8th- Caroline leaves Cornwall for London- to
assist her aunt with the great reception that will be held in celebration of
the reopening of Parliament.
September 14th- Ross and Demelza leave Cornwall for London.
September 16th- Dwight leaves Cornwall for London.
September 18th, Wednesday – Ross and Demelza arrive in
London late in the evening at the lodgings of Mrs. Parkins at #6 George Street.
Ross undresses Demelza.
September 19th- Ross and Demelza sleep in, then are late to breakfast
due to a comfortable floor, a twisted sheet, and two parents without children
to interfere. Their first five days in London are “unalloyed happiness” (A.T.
p. 297)
September 20th – 22nd – Ross and Demelza tour
London, its four bridges, St. Paul’s, Westminster Abby, and they walk to
Islington and Ranelagh.
September 23rd- Caroline takes Demelza to her dressmaker’s
shop to order a ready-made dress in the latest Empire fashion. Demelza worries
that the dress seems not respectable.
Ross calls it a petticoat.
- - Dwight arrives in
London.
September 24th- Dwight, Caroline and Demelza attend the
Royal Procession from Whitehall while Ross goes to Parliament.
- - Reception at
Portland Place hosted by Caroline’s aunt, Mrs. Pelham, and Mrs. Tracy. The
Warleggan’s arrive in the company of Monk Adderley and Andromeda Page. Monk enthusiastically notices Mrs. Poldark. George
suggests a wager to Monk that works like this:
o
Demelza’s virtue-
intact- Monk loses and pays George £10.
o
Demelza’s virtue-
not intact- Monk wins and George pays Monk £100.
- - Monk attaches
himself to Ross and Demelza at the dinner, startling Demelza and vastly
annoying Ross. “Drommie” Page cluelessly
goes along. Demelza attempts to tame the boorish snake while Ross wishes to shoot
the snake.
September 26th, Thursday- Ross and Demelza attend the
theater at Drury Lane to watch The
Revenge, by Edward Young (a tragedy) and must endure Monk and Drommie in
their box. Caroline and Dwight are in the neighboring box. Ross would like to box
something. Afterward, Monk tries to corner Demelza into agreeing to go to
Vauxhall Gardens with him on Monday. Caroline negotiates Demelza’s removal from Monk’s presence.
September 27th, Friday- Monk sends flowers to Demelza and
Ross asks to throw them away. Demelza begs not to, but only because they are
pretty and unusual…they include dahlias.
September 29th, Sunday – Ross, Demelza, Caroline and Dwight
go riding out beyond Hampstead and have a lovely day.
September 30th, Monday- More flowers arrive for Demelza …
-That evening, Demelza
attends the theater at Covent Garden with Caroline and afterward goes back home
to George Street for supper. Unfortunately, she finds Monk Adderley in her
rooms. Ross is not present. Monk is
overtly and euphemistically sexual in his conversation with her before he
leaves- as she threatens to call Mrs. Parkins.
- When Ross returns
home later he is a trifle peeved at the (toned-down) news and takes it out on
Mrs. Parkins, who let the snake in.
October 1 & 2nd- The Poldarks visit the Royal Academy
and the British Museum…but their exchanges are somewhat strained. The monk is
in the room, metaphorically.
October 4th, Friday – Ross and Demelza dine with Lord
Falmouth and the very kind Lady Falmouth, his mother, on Audley Street. The Viscount is dryly humorous…and one hopes
that no one brought up Hugh Armitage in conversation, although, as Hugh was the
vivacious Lady’s grandson…it’s is likely.
A similar, but different elephant is now in the room.
October 7th, Monday – Treaty debate in Parliament to discuss
the Russian Alliance. Notable orators are expected to speak so Ross wishes to
be in attendance. He arrives early. A bill for the care of disabled military
men is presented. To vote, the Ayes must walk out and return to the chamber- in
order to be voted walking in. When Ross
re-enters the House, Monk Adderley has taken Ross's seat and sat upon his gloves. Adderley is patronizing to Ross and then makes a clear but degrading
and oblique reference to Demelza. A dozen men witness Ross swiftly grab Monk by
the throat (He really doesn’t like uptight neck cloths) and reclaim his gloves.
Ross departs the chambers after issuing a curt and official sounding apology
for the kerfluffle.
- - Two hours later,
after Ross had arrived home, a letter from Monk arrives with a formal challenge.
October 8th, Tuesday – Ross, Demelza, Dwight and Caroline
ride to Strawberry Hill, the former home of Horace Walpole, to tour the house
and gardens and complete the day attending the theater. They sup afterward at
Mrs. Pelham’s house in Hatten Garden.
October 9th, Wednesday, 6 am – Ross and Dwight meet Adderley
and Mr. John Craven at Hyde Park. Ross has accepted Adderley’s challenge to a
duel.
“Flesh and its frailty was not as important as will and its integrity.” – Ross Poldark (A.T. p. 340)
The first shots appear to miss both marks, but Adderley immediately
raises his second weapon for a second shot (which had not been discussed) and
Ross instinctively follows suit. Ross is
hit in the right wrist/forearm area; Adderley is wounded in the groin.
- - 9 am – Ross is
back at #6 George Street where he arrived by 8, but Demelza, sick and horrified
at what has occurred, is tending Ross when Dwight arrives from treating Adderley.
Surgery is performed to removed parts of splintered bone- without painkillers
or numbing agents. Demelza can not absolve Ross of this sin.
October 11th, Friday, before noon–Monk Adderley dies from his wound.
- afternoon- Via Mr. John
Craven, Adderley sends Ross a dying request/requirement: that Ross pay off Adderley’s
debt to Mr. George Warleggan for £10, with no explanation given.
- - - Mr. George Warleggan and many others have learned of the duel. An inquest
regarding the duel is called for- and George is very much in favor of a charge of “murder” being leveled against Captain Poldark (who it is rumored was involved).
October 12th, Saturday- An inquest is held at the Star Garter Inn
regarding the death of Captain Monk Adderley. George Warleggan attends, notes
that Dr. Dwight Enys is a witness, and firmly connects in his mind Ross’s
involvement in Adderley’s duel. The inquest finds insufficient evidence to lay
blame on anyone and declares the incident “death by misadventure” (A.T. p.349). George is incensed that Ross will walk free, but little
moved that Adderley has died.
- - Ross’s initial
fever from the injury to his hand has begun to abate.
October 14th, Monday – George calls on Mr. Henry Bull K.C.
(the very same Henry Bull that some 8 years previously had been the prosecuting
attorney in the case of Rex vs. R. Poldark for riot and theft following the
wreckage of two ships on Hendrawna Beach.). Mr. Bull, whose career has
advanced, declares that there is no evidence or witnesses to support a case
against Captain Poldark. George becomes determined to find, or create, evidence
and spends the next week on the task.
October 14th – 20th – Ross and Demelza host a
steady stream of visitors at Mrs. Parkins’ who call on Ross to offer him their
best wishes due to his unfortunate
accident "of shooting himself while priming his pistol" (A.T. p. 354) . (There seems to be little mourning for Captain
Adderley- at least from this group of people, none of whom even mention the
duel.) Ross is still suffering great pain from the injury and is unable to
venture outside. Demelza personally attends to his needs to avoid household
staff knowing too much.
October 28th - 30th, approx.- Ross and Demelza receive a special caller:
Geoffrey Charles, who has heard of his uncle’s condition and wishes to also
offer consolation…and who gleefully tries to get the real story, without success.
-later, after
leaving Ross and Demelza, but before returning to Harrow, Geoffrey Charles
calls on his mother and Stepfather George. While there he notes with joy how
his little brother, Valentine, who is animatedly playing on his rocking horse, is
“the very spit and living image of Uncle Ross!” (A.T. p. 360)
November 3rd – 5th – Ross’s injury begins to look
as though it is not healing properly.
November 6th, Wednesday- Dwight fears that Ross may have
blood poisoning and discusses with Demelza the possibility of amputation of the
hand. Demelza chooses to run the risk, feeling that Ross would prefer death to
the loss of his hand.
November 9th, Saturday – Dwight, who has not changed Ross’s
bandages in some time, for fear of inviting in some negative outcome, removes
the wrap and wadding from the wrist and finds no mortifying flesh, much to his
and Demelza’s relief (Ross had not been told of the possibility of blood
poisoning). The hand now appears to have passed the danger threshold and is
truly on the mend (although very stiff). Demelza’s relief is enormous.
- - It has been one
month since the duel.
November 10th – Ross leaves the house for the first time in
a month and calls on Lord Falmouth to offer his resignation from his
parliamentary seat. Lord Falmouth declines the offer.
November 12th, Tuesday – Mrs. Tracy, Caroline’s Aunt's best friend, calls
on Elizabeth at Grovesnor Gate- No.14 King Street- and finds the household “most unpleasant” and Elizabeth “looking ill." (A.T. p. 367)
November 11th – 17th- Ross and Demelza venture
back out into London society, although Demelza is terribly nervous about the
risk of inciting Ross’s jealousy by being viewed as too friendly (i.e.
flirtatious). She finds herself instead, being (what she feels is) rude.
November 16th, Saturday- Ross and Demelza attend a soiree with Dwight
and Caroline and see Elizabeth and George, who appear to be stoically
miserable. The Poldarks are informed by Caroline, who has it via Mrs. Tracy,
that the Warleggans, as a couple, are faring poorly.
November 18th, Monday – Ross attends Parliament and when he
encounters George in a passageway of St. Stephens Chapel, he decides to
complete Monk Adderley’s request by paying the £10 debt. In his attempt,
George, with eyes full of rage and fury, flings the coins back into Ross’s
face, causing small cuts and bruises. A stunned and offended Ross is calmed by
(shocked) parliamentary friends who offer to donate the £10
to charity. Upon his return home to Mrs. Parkins’ house, Ross lies to Demelza
and tells her that street urchins throwing stones caught him in their
crossfire, leaving him with the small facial lacerations.
November 19th,
Tuesday – Demelza leaves London with Dwight, bound by coach, for Cornwall. She
departs early in the morning without informing Ross, leaving only a note.
- - Elizabeth pays a visit to Dr. Franz
Anselm and makes inquiries regarding options that could alter the birthdate of a
baby. The doctor sends her on her way with a prescription.
November
20th – Parliament adjourns, but Ross delays his departure at
Caroline’s request. He uses his spare time tidying up Monk Adderley’s accounts
and debts.
-Clowance is 5 years old.
November 23rd
or 24th– Dwight and Demelza make their return to Cornwall, where Clowance
and Jeremy are overly delighted at their mother’s unannounced arrival.
November
30th- Ross and Caroline depart London via coach for Cornwall.
December 1st- The Warleggans arrive in Truro from London.
December 1st
or 2nd – Ross and Caroline spend an extra day in Marlborough due to
heavy rains.
December 3rd
ish – Sam calls on his sister at Nampara and informs her that A) Drake has
returned to Pally’s shop, B) Morwenna appears to want nothing to do with Drake,
and C) Emma Tregirls has wed a man at Tehidy.
December 5th
– Demelza walks the five miles to Pally’s shop in St Ann’s to visit Drake, then
makes the return trip home.
- - Not long after his sister’s departure,
Drake has another visitor: a very bedraggled Morwenna who has walked and hitched
rides from Bodmin, nearly twenty miles away. She arrives with nothing but the
clothes on her back. She has left “Ossie’s son” with his grandmother.
-
- Elizabeth takes Valentine to Trenwith while
George remains in Truro.
December 6th,
Friday – Demelza receives a note from Drake regarding Morwenna and hurries to
his shop; later, she and Drake visit the Reverend Odgers.
December 7th
– Sam visits Pally’s shop.
– Ross and Carolline spend an extra night at Plymouth at the Fountain Inn due
to heavy rains. They have a frank and
important conversation.
December 8th,
Sunday – The banns are read at Sawle church for Drake and Morwenna.
- - Ross and Caroline are in Plymouth for
their last night of their roadtrip.
December 9th,
Monday – Ross and Caroline leave Torpoint by 7:15 am and by 8 am are in
Liskeard.
- Drake
and Demelza ride to Bodmin to try to get a special license so that Drake and
Morwenna might wed ASAP. They leave St. Anns at 8 am.
- - Elizabeth – having heard the banns
called the day before at St. Sawle- calls on Morwenna in St. Anns. Morwenna,
walks with Elizabeth back to Trenwith and is cajoled to stay for dinner. George
arrives about half-way through the meal and is cruel to everyone, especially
Morwenna and “that child” (Valentine) (A.T. p. 425).
- - About 1 pm Drake and Demelza have
succeeded in Bodmin.
- - About 4 pm, Ross arrives home to
Nampara.
- - Demelza and Drake arrive back about
5pm or so.
- - Later that evening, Ross and Demelza
have a reconciling talk while sitting out on the wall above Hendrawna Beach. Over
the previous fifteen years they have each become fairly adept at having these
conversations. Ross gives Demelza her enameled cameo.
- - At about the same time, Elizabeth and
George have it out regarding his disparaging treatment of both Morwenna and
Valentine. It is not altogether as
successful a chat as the Poldarks. After George finally admits to her about
Aunt Agatha’s metaphoric dagger of six years prior, Elizabeth – very
uncharacteristically- finally loses it in a fit of slightly unhinged humorless
laughter. Afterward, there is some
resolution between them, George retires from her room, and Elizabeth chooses to
take her medicine.
December
10th, Tuesday – around noon- Dwight is called to Trenwith to attend
on Elizabeth.
- - 2:30 pm- Drake Carne marries Morwenna
Chynoweth Wentworth at the Church of St. Sawle.
- - 3 pm – Ursula Warleggan born to her
parents Elizabeth and George. Elizabeth
is given a sleeping draught of Laudanum.
- - Later that evening, George checks on
his wife and a true reconciliation takes place; he also tells her that a
knighthood is almost surely coming his way in the new year due to his “solitary
and only request” to Mr. Pitt following George’s generous financial
contributions and his promise of full support to Pitt’s war effort (A.T. p. 449).
Dr. Behenna is now in attendance at Trenwith.
December
11th, Wednesday, 3 am- Elizabeth awakens with great pain in her
extremities. Dr. Behenna is on site and administers care for a “gouty
condition”. (A.T. p. 455)
December
12th, Thursday, a full moon night- Dwight is summoned to Trenwith
about 9 am where he confers with Dr. Behenna regarding the perceived “gouty
condition of the abdominal viscera” and the patient’s spasms that are
cramp-like in the limbs. (p.455) Upon entering Elizabeth’s room Dwight notices
that she appears ten years older and that there is an odor in the room. Her
tongue is swollen and coated with a reddish stain of blood. Dwight recognizes a
condition that he saw at Quimper, when he was a POW. (It is probably at this
time that either Elizabeth tells Dwight her secret -as Dr. Anselm had suggested-
or that Dwight simply deduces correctly what has occurred. (S.F.S. p. 140))
December
13th, Friday- Ross is in Truro all day for a meeting of the partners
of the Cornish Bank. He stays the night with Harris Pascoe in Calenick (at Harris’
sister’s house.)
December
14th, Saturday, mid-day - Ross arrives back at Nampara and Demelza
tells him that she has learned from Caroline that Elizabeth is gravely ill at
Trenwith, but the new baby daughter is doing well.
- - About 2 pm- The Nampara household sits
down to dinner, but Ross quietly rises early after telling Demelza that he
feels he must ride to Trenwith. She agrees, and he goes.
- - He arrives at Trenwith about 3:30 or 4
pm and is not welcomed.
- - Elizabeth had died about 2:30 pm. (In
S.F.S. p. 70 her death date is given as 12/9/1799)
- - Ross goes to Elizabeth’s bedroom,
nonetheless, to see her corpse. He is sickeningly horrified and clearly
recognizes that gangrene has been either the cause of/ or an outcome of her death.
He flees Trenwith, unable to mount his horse for the return to Nampara.
- - Demelza meets him at the halfway-point
-Maiden Chapel- having heard the news herself and wishing to bring support and
consolation to Ross. They walk to Nampara together.
- - Later in the evening, after a couple
hours fireside with brandy, Ross decides to go for a beach walk alone. He walks
until nearly dawn the next morning.
December
15th, Sunday, predawn – Ross arrives back at Nampara and finds his
wife curled up in a chair in front of the fire in the parlor, having spent the
night awaiting his return. He confesses his fears of the future, and death, and
she lovingly chides him to face the fear, to accept it and boldly continue forward
into life.
“It is the
memory - and the fear- of the loss of all love that bites deepest.” ~ Ross
Poldark (A.T. p.474)
“Of course
there has to be an end. For that is what everyone has faced since the world
began… One cannot – must not – fear a certainty.
All we know is this moment. At this moment, now,
we are alive and together. We can’t ask more. There isn’t any more to ask.” ~
Demelza Poldark (A.T. p. 476)
December
1799 or January 1800- Ross is 40 years old.
“That was
what all men lacked. Humility and perspective.” – Ross Poldark (A.T. p. 471)