The Gentleman of Fifty and The Damsel of Nineteen (An early uncompleted fragment)
Explore more books like this:
About This Book
A first-person narrator reflects on two decades of sentimental devotion and questions whether steadfastness verged on folly, then shifts to a comic rural episode in which an absent-minded clergyman and his wife tumble waist-deep into a river while a young daughter reacts with extravagant laughter. The narrator watches discreetly, recording the couple's equable exchanges, the mother's insistence on propriety and control, and the girl's irrepressible mirth as they struggle to be rescued; the scene mixes gentle satire of domestic manners with observations on patience, social decorum, and the unpredictable collisions of affection and absurdity.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
A Reading of Life, with Other Poems
by George Meredith
An Essay on Comedy and the Uses of the Comic Spirit
by George Meredith
Ballads and Poems of Tragic Life
by George Meredith
Beauchamp's Career — Complete
by George Meredith
Celt and Saxon — Complete
by George Meredith
Complete Short Works of George Meredith
by George Meredith
You May Also Like
6 picks
The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce, Volume 12 / In Motley
by Ambrose Bierce
My Wife and I; Or, Harry Henderson's History
by Harriet Beecher Stowe
Jane Eyre: An Autobiography
by Charlotte Brontë
The Girl and the Bill / An American Story of Mystery, Romance and Adventure
by Bannister Merwin
Figurák. (Furcsa emberekről furcsa históriák.)
by Géza Gárdonyi
Off Course
by Mack Reynolds