Orley Farm: Anthony Trollope
Aug. 7th, 2015 10:40 amA young woman who has been treated as a sex toy and chattel by her elderly husband urges him to leave some property to their infant son and when he refuses forges a codicil to his will. Twenty years later evidence of her guilt emerges and the matter is raked over for 400 closely printed pages and people say things like "She's so beautiful she must be innocent" and "One must forgive her because that's what Jesus would have done" but nobody- not once- not even the woman herself- ever suggests she was justified in what she did and that it's the system that's wicked and needs smashing.
I find it frustrating. And it's just possible that Trollope- sly dog that he is- wants me to feel that way.
I find it frustrating. And it's just possible that Trollope- sly dog that he is- wants me to feel that way.
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Date: 2015-08-07 11:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-08-07 02:16 pm (UTC)I sometimes think Trollope must be raging at the moral imbecility of his characters- but if he is he's keeping his anger wonderfully under control.
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Date: 2015-08-08 01:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-08-08 06:37 pm (UTC)Personally I think Dr Thorne is one of the weaker novels.
Ditto Framley Parsonage (I had to pick it off the shelf just now and riffle through it to remind myself what is is all about.) The series picks up with The Small House at Allington and The Last Chronicle of Barset- which are excellent- and essentially one novel in two parts.
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Date: 2015-08-08 07:50 pm (UTC)