[Written for the Flag of our Union]
The Dedbroke Mystery
by Frances Mary Schoolcraft
The Dedbroke Mystery was a very complicated one, and was, in fact, two distinct mysteries, which finally merged into one. The one that had the most definite shape, originated in the village of Swinebourne. Swinebourne was not far from the sea, and rather above the head of sloop navigation on the Swinebourne River, though small craft did occasionally come up to the village.
A mystery in Swinebourne was a remarkable thing in itself, apart from the circumstances that constituted it; for, generally speaking, nothing was a mystery there. Everybody knew everything about everybody and everything. Outsiders declared that it was a mystery how the settled preacher of the gospel contrived to live, with a wife and seven children, on his small salary; and it really did seem, not merely a mystery, but a positive miracle. But the congregation never cared to raise the question, for fear they should feel compelled to raise the salary as a decent consequence; and the parson himself probably thought it was safer to appeal to Heaven than to the generosity of his flock. But this is a digression.
The mystery had as befitting a local habitation as any one could have selected for it—a deserted house. The house was the old Dedbroke House, which stood on the old Dedbroke Place, a farm of considerable extent, lying on the banks of the river, nearly three-quarters of a mile beyond the village, towards the sea. The farm was a good one, as… Read More