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 Short Stories
"The Devious Bachelor"
Information Plot/Description
Information
- First published:
- September 1953 issue of
Colliers
- Also known as:
Plot/Description
This is one of my favorite Dahl stories, and the one
with (I think) the most potent twist in the tail of all. It's not until
the very last sentence that you understand the true story.
Spoiler warning! Lionel Lampson is a wealthy
older gentleman who enjoys fine art and the company of the upper classes.
One night he escorts a vulgar woman named Gladys Ponsonby home from a
dinner party. Gladys, who is a little drunk, shows off a new portrait of
herself that she had commissioned. She tells Lionel a secret - the artist,
John Royden, paints all his subjects first in the nude, then in their
underwear, and lastly in their clothes. He is shocked and correctly
deduces that this is why all the wealthy women in town are rushing to have
their portraits painted by him. Gladys then changes the subject and asks
Lionel about his relationship with a young beauty named Janet de Pelagia.
Lionel is embarrassed until Gladys relates that earlier that afternoon
Janet had called him a "crashing bore". Lionel is outraged and forces
Gladys to repeat the entire conversation. He is so upset to hear what
Janet thinks about him that he swoons. The next day he wakes and vows
revenge. He hits upon the perfect plan and calls up this artist Royden. He
tells him that he'd like a picture of Janet, but doesn't want her to know
about it. He pays Royden a handsome amount for his services, and then goes
off to Italy for four months. By the time Lionel returns, Royden has
finished the painting and it's the talk of the Royal Academy. Royden
delivers it to Lionel, who can't wait to move on to the second part of his
plan. He is an expert clearner and restorer of paintings, and very
carefully he begins to remove the top layer (the clothing) of the
painting. By the time he has finished, Janet de Pelagia is standing before
him almost life-size in nothing but her underclothes. Lionel then invites
Janet and all the top members of society to his home for a dinner party.
He keeps the dining room dark and they eat by candlelight. At the very
end, he has the maid turn on the light. As he slips from the room, he has
the pleasure of seeing on Janet's face the "surprised,
not-quite-understanding look of a person who precisely one second before
has been shot dead, right through the heart". As the outraged guests begin
to exclaim over the painting, Lionel gets into his car and speeds off to
his other house. Two days later, he receives a phone call from Gladys
Ponsonby that kills his good mood. She tells him that all his old friends
are against him and have sworn never to speak to him again. Lionel begins
to feel quite bad. Then, in the post arrives a letter from Janet forgiving
him and saying that she knew it was a joke and that she's always loved
him. She also sends him a jar of his favorite food, caviare. As the story
ends, Lionel mentions that he might have eaten too much of it, as he isn't
feeling too well right now. In fact, he says, "come to think of it, I
really do feel rather ill all of a sudden."
(If you don't get it, she sent him poisoned caviare as
her revenge.)
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Created and maintained by Kristine Howard, © 1996-2008
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