

After a three hundred word
overture of storm description which regular Corelli readers know all too well -
“A heavy storm had raged all day on the north coast of Devon .
Summer had worn the garb of winter in freakish fit of mockery and masquerade…”
- the book begins with the sacking of Lionel’s present tutor, a young man far
too fond of taking Lionel, for the liking of his domineering father, rowing in
the bay and on to cottage cream teas.
Wandering around the churchyard,
Lionel is smitten by a little girl, Jessamine, who is the daughter of the
sexton, Reuben Dale, but the poor lad is soon hauled off by his new tutor for a
holiday at Clovelly. When he returns, Lionel seeks out Jessamine, only to find her
father burying her after she has died of diphtheria. Here is Marie in
overdrive, spraying exclamation marks and dashes with her customary gay
abandon, as Lionel pours out his heart to Reuben Dale.“ No – no! – not dead!
Don’t say it! – not little Jessamine! Oh, you’re not – you’re not going to put
her down there in the cold earth! – not little Jessamine! Oh, hold me! – I’m
frightened – I am indeed! I can’t bear it, - I can’t, I can’t – oh,
Jessamine!...she isn’t dead, - not really – oh, do say she isn’t, - it would be too wicked! – too cruel!...”
Too everything! In his distress
Lionel decides that there is only one way for him to confirm the heresy of the
“mighty atom”. He writes a farewell note to his tutor. “I think that it would
be better for boys like me if you could teach them that the First Cause was
God, and that he loved everybody, and meant to explain the universe to us some
day…”
Later that evening he hangs
himself. “Lionel’s grave was closed in, and a full-flowering stem of the white
lilies of St John
lay upon it, like an angel’s sceptre. Another similar stem adorned the grave of
Jessamine; and between the two little mounds of earth, beneath which two little
innocent hearts were at rest forever, a robin-redbreast sang its plaintive
evening carol, while the sun flamed down into the west and night fell.”

Well, nothing much has changed
there then, but I doubt if Combe Martin remains as Marie knew it. Approaching
the village from inland, there is a long straggle of unattractive cottages,
reminders that Combe Martin was once a mining community. Eventually the little
harbour is reached, which is charming as long as you keep your back turned to
the gift shops and caffs which despoil any seaside resort. The caffs were
packed with ladies with tight grey curls, some escorted by swains in sad
anoraks, and two huge charabancs were drawn up on the quayside. They probably
had travelled from Ilfracombe in Marie’s and Bertha’s footsteps but I doubt
with the same sense of intense romantic discovery. After a cursory look at the
view, a cup of coffee, a slice of cake, and a charity shop or two would
probably satisfy their needs.
Our plan was to walk in a circle
to the outskirts of Ilfracombe and back, via the village of Berrynarbor ,
using as much of the South West Coastal Path as possible. It was a stiff pull
out of Combe Martin as we walked up the A399 but at the top we turned left into
the quiet lane which led along to Berrynarbor. Berrynarbor is a charming
village, sheltered by its surrounding steep hills, and we quickly spotted a
pleasing weather “cock” atop the church in the shape of a fox. We walked down
through the churchyard of St Peter’s with its handsome tower, and turned right,
which took us past the “Globe Inn”.
You need to have your wits about
you to turn left and right to take the Goosewell Lane out of the village,
otherwise you would be in danger of finding yourself back on the main road
within yards of where you left it. This hill will make you puff but perhaps not
quite as much as the horse of the cheery and amply-proportioned lady who passed
us, exercising her nag by cantering it up the tarmac road. He must have had
lungs like the Albert Hall organ pipes and joints of cast iron.
And here began our struggle. At
this point the coastal path is the pavement of the A399 but, as we turned east,
a couple walking in the opposite direction warned us that much of the path
which passes round the coast was closed for repairs. So it proved and, in fact,
virtually the whole coastal path back to Combe Martin was barred to walkers.
The signs cheerily advised us that we could catch the bus if we liked. We did
not like, and I should have followed my lifetime instinct to ignore all signs
of prohibition and to plough on until one fell into an abyss.
We came back into Combe Martin
along the path which led to the beach.
“Turning away
from the principal street of the village they bent their steps towards a small
thatched cottage, overgrown from porch to roof with climbing roses, fuchsias
and jessamine, where an unobtrusive signboard might be just discerned framed in
a wreath of brilliant nasturtiums, and bearing the following device, CLARINDA CLEVERLY PAYNE. NEW LAID EGGS. DEVONSHIRE CREAM.
JUNKETS. TEAS PROVIDED.”
("The Mighty Atom")
We searched for
the grave of James Norman without success, but we may have been misled by the
graveyard index and map we discovered in the church. Subsequent reading
suggests that we were on the wrong side of the church.
There were compensations within,
however, in the form of a splendid rood screen with panels painted in Tudor
times with portraits of the apostles.
Our visit to Marie Corelli’s
Combe Martin had not been a great success, thanks to the prohibitions of Devon
County Council. A better walk would have been eastwards towards Great Hangman,
but we had done this before for our “Exmoor Pubs & Walks” site.
You may find it at http://exmoorpubswalks.blogspot.co.uk/search?q=combe+martin
along with more about the “Pack of Cards”.
For more about Marie Corelli and a walk at Porlock Weir see
the post of October 12th 2013 on this site.