Literature of Colonial South Asia: A Digital Archive

Summary of B.M. Croker, "Diana Barrington"

Tags: Romance fiction, Cursed jewelry, marital troubles, infidelity, illness

B. M. Croker’s 1888 novel, Diana Barrington: A Romance of Central India, chronicles the transformation of Diana "Ranee" Barrington, an English girl raised in profound isolation in a remote jungle bungalow by her scholarly father and a devoted Irish nurse. Her sheltered existence is changed by the arrival of a British shooting party and her father's gift of the "Begum’s Necklace," a set of diamonds rumored to carry an ill-omened "Evil Eye".

Upon entering the social station of Gurrumpore, Diana falls under the influence of Mrs. Vavasour, who eventually confesses to being Diana's long-lost mother. Exploiting their biological bond, Mrs. Vavasour coerces Diana into pawning her diamonds to settle a history of debt and blackmail, a secret transaction that leads Diana’s husband, Hugh Fitzroy, to suspect her of infidelity. This misunderstanding drives Diana into a near-fatal brain fever, but her honor is eventually restored through Mrs. Vavasour’s deathbed confession following a tragic carriage accident. The novel concludes with Diana reconciled with her husband, having finally "seen the world."


Summary created with NotebookLM and subsequently edited by a human
 

This page has paths:

  1. Detailed Summaries of Works of Fiction Amardeep Singh

This page is referenced by: