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The Penguin English Library edition of North and South by Elizabeth
Gaskell 'How am I to dress up in my finery, and go off and away to
smart parties, after the sorrow I have seen today?' Elizabeth
Gaskell's compassionate, richly dramatic novel features one of the
most original and fully-rounded female characters in Victorian
fiction, Margaret Hale. It shows how, forced to move from the
country to an industrial northern town, she develops a passionate
sense of social justice, and a turbulent relationship with
mill-owner John Thornton. North and South depicts a young woman
discovering herself, in a nuanced portrayal of what divides people,
and what brings them together. The Penguin English Library - 100
editions of the best fiction in English, from the eighteenth
century and the very first novels to the beginning of the First
World War.
One of Elizabeth Gaskell's best known novels, sometimes called an
industrial novel or social novel, about the industrialization of
cities in northern England in 1800's.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfectionssuch as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed
worksworldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the
imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this
valuable book.++++The below data was compiled from various
identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title.
This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to ensure
edition identification: ++++ Cranford Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell,
Anne Thackeray Ritchie Crowell, 1892 Country life; England
HarperCollins is proud to present its new range of best-loved,
essential classics. 'But the cloud never comes in that quarter of
the horizon from which we watch for it.' When Margaret Hale is
uprooted from Hampshire and moves to the industrial town of Milton
in the North of England, her whole world changes. As her sympathy
for the town's mill workers grows, her sense of social injustice
piques and she passionately fights their corner. However, just as
she disputes the mill owner, John Thornton's treatment of his
workers, she cannot deny her growing attraction to him.
Highlighting the changing landscape of nineteenth-century Britain
and championing the role of women in Victorian society, Gaskell
brilliantly captures the lives of ordinary people through one of
her strongest female characters in literature.
Pearson English Readers bring language learning to life through the
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and keep our interest page after page. Pearson English Readers
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North and South (Paperback, New edition)
Elizabeth Gaskell; Introduction by Patsy Stoneham; Notes by Patsy Stoneham; Series edited by Keith Carabine
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With an Introduction and Notes by Dr Patsy Stoneman, University of
Hull. Set in the mid-19th century, and written from the author's
first-hand experience, North and South follows the story of the
heroine's movement from the tranquil but moribund ways of southern
England to the vital but turbulent north. Elizabeth Gaskell's
skilful narrative uses an unusual love story to show how personal
and public lives were woven together in a newly industrial society.
This is a tale of hard-won triumphs - of rational thought over
prejudice and of humane care over blind deference to the market.
Readers in the twenty-first century will find themselves absorbed
as this Victorian novel traces the origins of problems and
possibilities which are still challenging a hundred and fifty years
later: the complex relationships, public and private, between men
and women of different classes.
Forced to move from the rural tranquillity of southern England to
the turbulent northern mill town of Milton, Margaret Hale takes an
instant dislike to the dirt and noise that seems to characterize
her new home and its inhabitants - even the handsome and
charismatic cotton mill owner, John Thornton. But as she begins to
settle in, and to understand the nature of the surrounding poverty
and injustice, events conspire to throw her and Thornton together.
Amidst the chaos of industrial unrest, they must learn to overcome
the prejudices of class and circumstance and admit their feelings
for one another. One of literature's greatest romances, North and
South by Elizabeth Gaskell is both an incisive social commentary
and an electric portrayal of all-conquering love. This Macmillan
Collector's Library edition of North and South features an
afterword by Kathryn White. Designed to appeal to the booklover,
the Macmillan Collector's Library is a series of beautiful gift
editions of much loved classic titles. Macmillan Collector's
Library are books to love and treasure.
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Tales of Mystery & the Macabre (Paperback)
Elizabeth Gaskell; Introduction by David Stuart Davies; Series edited by David Stuart Davies
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With an Introduction by David Stuart Davies. 'In the great mirror
opposite I saw myself, and right behind, another wicked fearful
self, so like me my soul seemed to quiver within me, as though not
knowing to which similitude of body it belonged'. Elizabeth Gaskell
is better known today for her pioneering social novels such as Mary
Barton (1848) but she also wrote some fascinating tales of the
supernatural and the macabre, which are collected here in this
volume. The real charm of this dark anthology is its variety.
Unlike so many writers of this kind of material, Gaskell allows the
story to fit the style rather than the other way around and as
result there is a charming freshness to each tale. This remarkable
author uses different voices, tones and topics to engage her
readers and as you turn from one story to the next you cannot be
quite sure what to expect.
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Cranford & Selected Short Stories (Paperback)
Elizabeth Gaskell; Introduction by John Chapple; Notes by John Chapple; Series edited by Keith Carabine
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With an Introduction and Notes by Professor Emeritus John Chapple,
University of Hull. The sheer variety and accomplishment of
Elizabeth Gaskell's shorter fiction is amazing. This new volume
contains six of her finest stories that have been selected
specifically to demonstrate this, and to trace the development of
her art. As diverse in setting as in subject matter, these tales
move from the gentle comedy of life in a small English country town
in Dr Harrison's Confessions, to atmospheric horror in far
north-west Wales with The Doom of the Griffiths. The story of
Cousin Phillis, her masterly tale of love and loss, is a subtle,
complex and perceptive analysis of changes in English national life
during an industrial age, while the gripping Lois the Witch
recreates the terrors of the Salem witchcraft trials in
seventeenth-century New England, as Gaskell shrewdly shows the
numerous roots of this furious outbreak of delusion. Whimsically
modified fairy tales are set in a French chateau, while an engaging
love story poetically evokes peasant life in wine-growing Germany.
Presents a collection of linked short stories about the inhabitants
of the eponymous small provincial town. Interweaving comic episodes
with social comment, this title is a celebration of the better side
of human nature, in which kindness and generosity of spirit triumph
over adversity.
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Ruth (Paperback, New Ed)
Elizabeth Gaskell; Edited by Angus Easson; Introduction by Angus Easson; Notes by Angus Easson
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In Ruth Elizabeth Gaskell set out to portray, not 'the Condition of England' already famously addressed in Mary Barton, but the nature and sensibility of a fallen woman. Her orphaned heroine Ruth, apprenticed to a dressmaker, is seduced and then abandoned by wealthy young Henry Bellingham. Shamed in the eyes of society by her illegitimate son, and yet rejecting the opportunity to marry her seducer, Ruth finds a path that affirms we are not bound to repeat our mistakes. When Ruth, Elizabeth Gaskell's second novel, appeared in 1853 its first reviewers were less scandalised than moved and intrigued. In considering a 'fallen woman', Gaskell explores the worlds of nineteenth-century experience concerned with women and family, sexuality, love and religion. She declared of her critics - 'It has made them talk and think a little on a subject which is so painful it requires all one's bravery not to hide one's head like an ostrich'.
'I am sure the more fully she - Charlotte Brontë - the friend, the daughter, the sister, the wife, is known - the more highly she will be appreciated.' Mrs Gaskell was quite clear about her priorities when she began to set down the facts of a 'wild, sad life and the beautiful character that grew out of it'. The result was one of the greatest of all English biographies. The book itself was not to be without its stormy passage: Mrs Gaskell, as well she knew, ran up against Victorian shibboleths of propriety and sexual prudery. However, not even the amendments and cuts she was obliged to make in the second and third editions could destroy its overall unity or her psychologically convincing vision of the suffering, emotionally starved and tortured Charlotte Brontë whose life and pitiful death still grips and appalls us. The present text follows the controversial first edition throughout, while all the variations which appeared in the third edition have been recorded in notes and appendices.
This Norton Critical Edition of her best-selling novel is annotated
and edited by preeminent Gaskell scholar Alan Shelston. "Contexts"
includes contemporary reviews and correspondence related to North
and South, along with the full text of Gaskell s 1850 short story
"Lizzie Leigh," which, like North and South, is set in industrial
Manchester and deals with strong working women. This topic is
further addressed in Bessie Rayner Parkes s essay on Victorian
working women. "Criticism" collects eleven assessments of the
novel, among them Louis Cazamian s 1904 study of industrial fiction
and Hilary Schor s recent study of North and South in the context
of discourse analysis. A Chronology and Selected Bibliography are
also included."
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Mary Barton (Paperback)
Elizabeth Gaskell; Introduction by Sally Minogue; Notes by Sally Minogue; Series edited by Keith Carabine
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Elizabeth Gaskell's first novel depicts nothing less than the great
clashes between capital and labour, which arose from rapid
industrialisation and problems of trade in the mid-nineteenth
century. But these clashes are dramatized through personal
struggles. John Barton has to reconcile his personal conscience
with his socialist duty, risking his life and liberty in the
process. His daughter Mary is caught between two lovers, from
opposing classes - worker and manufacturer. And at the heart of the
narrative lies a murder which implicates them all. Mary Barton was
published in 1848, at a time of great social ferment in Europe, and
it reflects its revolutionary moment through an English lens.
Elizabeth Gaskell wrote her first novel about the world in which
she lived - Manchester at the height of the industrial revolution.
As the wife of a Unitarian minister she was solidly middle-class;
but she also had close contact with the working classes around her,
sympathised with them, and represented their extreme distresses in
her fiction. She is radical in taking on their dialect, imagining
the realities of their lives, and placing a working woman at the
centre of her fiction. If to our eyes her vision remains limited,
it was an honest vision, for which she was much criticised in her
own time, by her own class.
Having grown up in London and rural southern England, Margaret Hale moves with her father to the northern industrial city of Milton. She is shocked by the poverty she encounters and dismayed by the unsympathetic attitude of the textile-mill owner John Thornton, whose factory workers are engaged in an acrimonious strike. Against this backdrop of social unrest, the relationship between the two is tumultuous, and it takes further upheaval and tragedy for them to see each other in a different light. First serialized in Dickens's magazine Household Words in the same period as Hard Times, North and South shares its famous counterpart's concern with the inequality and hardship generated by the Industrial Revolution in northern England, while at the same time creating one of the nineteenth century's most memorable and engaging female protagonists in Margaret Hale.
Wives and Daughters, Elizabeth Gaskell's last novel, is regarded by
many as her masterpiece. Molly Gibson is the daughter of the doctor
in the small provincial town of Hollingford. Her widowed father
marries a second time to give Molly the woman's presence he feels
she lacks, but until the arrival of Cynthia, her dazzling
step-sister, Molly finds her situation hard to accept. Intertwined
with the story of the Gibsons is that of Squire Hamley and his two
sons; as Molly grows up and falls in love she learns to judge
people for what they are, not what they seem. Through Molly's
observations the hierarchies, social values, and social changes of
early nineteenth-century English life are made vivid in a novel
that is timeless in its representation of human relationships. This
edition, the first to be based in the original Cornhill Magazine
serialization of 1864-6, draws on a full collation of the
manuscript to present the most accurate text so far available.
About the Series: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has
made available the broadest spectrum of literature from around the
globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to
scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of
other valuable features, including expert introductions by leading
authorities, voluminous notes to clarify the text, up-to-date
bibliographies for further study, and much more.
The Penguin English Library Edition of Wives and Daughters by
Elizabeth Gaskell "Eh, miss, but that be a rare young lady! She do
have such pretty coaxing ways ..." Seventeen-year-old Molly Gibson
worships her widowed father. But when he decides to remarry,
Molly's life is thrown off course by the arrival of her vain,
shallow and selfish stepmother. There is some solace in the shape
of her new stepsister Cynthia, who is beautiful, sophisticated and
irresistible to every man she meets. Soon the girls become close,
and Molly finds herself cajoled into becoming a go-between in
Cynthia's love affairs. But in doing so, Molly risks ruining her
reputation in the gossiping village of Hollingford - and
jeopardizing everything with the man she is secretly in love with.
The Penguin English Library - 100 editions of the best fiction in
English, from the eighteenth century and the very first novels to
the beginning of the First World War.
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Cranford (Paperback, New)
Elizabeth Gaskell; Revised by Elizabeth Porges-Watson; Introduction by Dinah Birch; Notes by Dinah Birch
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'A man ... is so in the way in the house!' A vivid and affectionate
portrait of a provincial town in early Victorian England, Elizabeth
Gaskell's Cranford describes a community dominated by its
independent and refined women. Undaunted by poverty, but dismayed
by changes brought by the railway and by new commercial practices,
the ladies of Cranford respond to disruption with both suspicion
and courage. Miss Matty and her sister Deborah uphold standards and
survive personal tragedy and everyday dramas; innovation may bring
loss, but it also brings growth, and welcome freedoms. Cranford
suggests that representatives of different and apparently hostile
social worlds, their minds opened by sympathy and suffering, can
learn from each other. Its social comedy develops into a study of
generous reconciliation, of a kind that will value the past as it
actively shapes the future. This edition includes two related short
pieces by Gaskell, 'The Last Generation in England' and 'The Cage
at Cranford', as well as a selection from the diverse literary and
social contexts in which the Cranford tales take their place. ABOUT
THE SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made
available the widest range of literature from around the globe.
Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship,
providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable
features, including expert introductions by leading authorities,
helpful notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for
further study, and much more.
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Gothic Tales (Paperback, [New Ed.])
Elizabeth Gaskell; Edited by Laura Kranzler; Introduction by Laura Kranzler; Notes by Laura Kranzler
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'"The curse - the curse!" I looked up in terror. In the great mirror opposite I saw myself, and right behind, another wicked, fearful self' An encounter with the supernatural in an everyday setting accentuates its strangeness; a truth used to eerie effect in Gaskell's Gothic tales. A portrait turned to the wall, a hidden manuscript, a mysterious child that lives on the freezing moors, a doppelganger formed by a woman's bitter curse: all of these things hint at male tyranny and woman as avenging angel - or devil. Gaskell was fascinated by the dualities in women's lives and the way in which fact and fiction merge. 'Disappearances', a mix of gossip, legend and fact, relates stories of mysterious vanishings, 'Lois the Witch', based on an account of the Salem witch hunts, shows how sexual desire and jealousy lead to communal hysteria and persecution, while 'The Grey Woman' explores a common Gothic theme, the way in which the ghosts of the past always return to haunt us. This edition includes an introduction, chronology, explanatory notes and an appendix giving a reader's response to 'Disappearances'.
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