Band 6
A Clergyman's Daughter
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Erscheinungsdatum
26.11.2023
Verlag
E-Kitap Projesi & Cheapest BooksSeitenzahl
400 (Printausgabe)
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1014 KB
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6. Auflage
Sprache
Englisch
EAN
9786257120784
Clergyman's Daughter is a 1935 novel by English author George Orwell. It tells the story of Dorothy Hare, the clergyman's daughter of the title, whose life is turned upside down when she suffers an attack of amnesia. It is Orwell's most formally experimental novel, featuring a chapter written entirely in dramatic form, but he was never satisfied with it and he left instructions that after his death it was not to be reprinted. Despite these instructions, Orwell did consent that to cheap editions "of any book which may bring in a few pounds for my heirs" following his death.
Book Summary:
The story is told in five distinct chapters:
Chapter 1
A day in the life of Dorothy Hare, the weak-willed daughter of a disagreeable widowed clergyman. Her father is Rector of Knype Hill, a small town in East Anglia. She keeps house for him, fends off creditors, visits parishioners and makes costumes for fund-raising events. Throughout she practises mortification of flesh to be true to her faith. In the evening she is invited to dinner by Mr Warburton, Knype Hill's most disreputable resident, a middle-aged bachelor who is an unashamed lecher and atheist.
Chapter 2
Dorothy is transposed to the Old Kent Road with amnesia. Eight days of her life are unaccounted for. She joins a group of vagrants, comprising a young man named Nobby and his two friends, who relieve her of her remaining half-crown and take her with them on a hop-picking expedition in Kent.
Chapter 3
Dorothy spends the night sleeping rough in Trafalgar Square in a chapter presented entirely as dramatic dialogue. After spending ten days on the streets, she is arrested for vagrancy and ends up in a police cell for twelve hours for failure to pay the fine.
Chapter 4
Dorothy believes that her father, distraught at the rumours of her running away with Mr Warburton, has ignored her letters for help. In fact he has contacted his cousin Sir Thomas Hare, whose servant locates her at the police station. Hare's solicitor procures a job for her as a "schoolmistress" in a small "fourth-rate" private girls' "academy" run by the grasping Mrs Creevy. Dorothy's attempts to introduce a more liberal and varied education to her students clash with the expectations of the parents, who want a strictly "practical" focus on handwriting and basic mathematics.
Chapter 5
Shortly after Dorothy steps out of the door of the school Mr Warburton turns up in a taxi to say that Mrs Semprill has been charged with slander, and that her malicious gossip has been discredited. He has come, therefore, to take her back to Knype Hill. On the trip home he proposes marriage. Dorothy rejects him, recognising but disregarding his argument that, with her loss of religious faith, her existence as a hard-working clergyman's daughter will be meaningless and dull, and that marriage while she is still young is her only escape.
Book Summary:
The story is told in five distinct chapters:
Chapter 1
A day in the life of Dorothy Hare, the weak-willed daughter of a disagreeable widowed clergyman. Her father is Rector of Knype Hill, a small town in East Anglia. She keeps house for him, fends off creditors, visits parishioners and makes costumes for fund-raising events. Throughout she practises mortification of flesh to be true to her faith. In the evening she is invited to dinner by Mr Warburton, Knype Hill's most disreputable resident, a middle-aged bachelor who is an unashamed lecher and atheist.
Chapter 2
Dorothy is transposed to the Old Kent Road with amnesia. Eight days of her life are unaccounted for. She joins a group of vagrants, comprising a young man named Nobby and his two friends, who relieve her of her remaining half-crown and take her with them on a hop-picking expedition in Kent.
Chapter 3
Dorothy spends the night sleeping rough in Trafalgar Square in a chapter presented entirely as dramatic dialogue. After spending ten days on the streets, she is arrested for vagrancy and ends up in a police cell for twelve hours for failure to pay the fine.
Chapter 4
Dorothy believes that her father, distraught at the rumours of her running away with Mr Warburton, has ignored her letters for help. In fact he has contacted his cousin Sir Thomas Hare, whose servant locates her at the police station. Hare's solicitor procures a job for her as a "schoolmistress" in a small "fourth-rate" private girls' "academy" run by the grasping Mrs Creevy. Dorothy's attempts to introduce a more liberal and varied education to her students clash with the expectations of the parents, who want a strictly "practical" focus on handwriting and basic mathematics.
Chapter 5
Shortly after Dorothy steps out of the door of the school Mr Warburton turns up in a taxi to say that Mrs Semprill has been charged with slander, and that her malicious gossip has been discredited. He has come, therefore, to take her back to Knype Hill. On the trip home he proposes marriage. Dorothy rejects him, recognising but disregarding his argument that, with her loss of religious faith, her existence as a hard-working clergyman's daughter will be meaningless and dull, and that marriage while she is still young is her only escape.
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Bewertung aus Leipzig am 16.06.2021
Bewertungsnummer: 1435733
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)
Ich hatte mich auf die Challenge gefreut. Normalerweise bin ich jemand, der in den ersten 50 Seiten Feuer fangen muss, sonst lege ich das Buch weg. Oder vielleicht war ich das einfach nur früher?
Denn War and Peace braucht eine Weile, um einen in seinen Bann zu ziehen. Man findet langsam das Gefühl für die Charaktere, für die Situation. Und plötzlich ist man mittendrin und will dieses Universum nicht mehr verlassen.
Der Schreibstil ist ein wenig gewöhnungsbedürftig. Ich hatte oft gelesen, es sei das beste Buch aller Zeiten, was ich so erstmal nicht unterschrieben hätte. Dann las ich zwischendurch mal einen kurzen Abschnitt aus einem anderen Buch - und mir fiel der Unterschied deutlich auf. Der Schreibstil gehört nun mal auch einfach zum Gesamtpaket - und das Gesamtpaket passt.
Tolstoy versucht einem zwischendurch immer wieder, einem seine Philosophie nahe zu bringen. Mich persönlich hat das bis auf die letzten ca. 20 Seiten eigentlich nicht gestört, also hatte ich damit kein Problem.