The Way We Live Now by Anthony Trollope (best fiction novels of all time .TXT) ๐
Description
The Way We Live Now is Anthony Trollopeโs longest novel, published in two volumes in 1875 after first appearing in serial form.
After an extended visit to Australia and New Zealand in 1872, Trollope was outraged on his return to England by a number of financial scandals, and was determined to expose the dishonesty, corruption, and greed they embodied. The Way We Live Now centers around a foreign businessman, Augustus Melmotte, who has come to prominence in London despite rumors about his past dealings on the Continent. He is immensely rich, and his daughter Marie is considered to be a desirable catch for several aristocratic young men in search of a fortune. Melmotte gains substantial influence because of his wealth. He rises in society and is even put up as a candidate for Parliament, despite a general feeling that he must be a fraudster and liar. A variety of sub-plots are woven around this central idea.
The Way We Live Now is generally considered to be one of Trollopeโs best novels and is often included in lists of the best novels written in English.
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- Author: Anthony Trollope
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So she went out and made her way into Grosvenor Square. She had heard, but at the time remembered nothing, of the temporary migration of the Melmottes to Bruton Street. Seeing, as she approached the house, that there was a confusion there of carts and workmen, she hesitated. But she went on, and rang the bell at the door, which was wide open. Within the hall the pilasters and trophies, the wreaths and the banners, which three or four days since had been built up with so much trouble, were now being pulled down and hauled away. And amidst the ruins Melmotte himself was standing. He was now a member of Parliament, and was to take his place that night in the House. Nothing, at any rate, should prevent that. It might be but for a short time;โ โbut it should be written in the history of his life that he had sat in the British House of Commons as member for Westminster. At the present moment he was careful to show himself everywhere. It was now noon, and he had already been into the City. At this moment he was talking to the contractor for the workโ โhaving just propitiated that man by a payment which would hardly have been made so soon but for the necessity which these wretched stories had entailed upon him of keeping up his credit for the possession of money. Hetta timidly asked one of the workmen whether Miss Melmotte was there. โDo you want my daughter?โ said Melmotte coming forward, and just touching his hat. โShe is not living here at present.โ
โOhโ โI remember now,โ said Hetta.
โMay I be allowed to tell her who was asking after her?โ At the present moment Melmotte was not unreasonably suspicious about his daughter.
โI am Miss Carbury,โ said Hetta in a very low voice.
โOh, indeed;โ โMiss Carbury!โ โthe sister of Sir Felix Carbury?โ There was something in the tone of the manโs voice which grated painfully on Hettaโs earsโ โbut she answered the question. โOh;โ โSir Felixโs sister! May I be permitted to ask whetherโ โyou have any business with my daughter?โ The story was a hard one to tell, with all the workmen around her, in the midst of the lumber, with the coarse face of the suspicious man looking down upon her; but she did tell it very simply. She had come with a message from her brother. There had been something between her brother and Miss Melmotte, and her brother had felt that it would be best that he should acknowledge that it must be all over. โI wonder whether that is true,โ said Melmotte, looking at her out of his great coarse eyes, with his eyebrows knit, with his hat on his head and his hands in his pockets. Hetta, not knowing how, at the moment, to repudiate the suspicion expressed, was silent. โBecause, you know, there has been a deal of falsehood and double dealing. Sir Felix has behaved infamously; yesโ โby Gโ โธบ, infamously. A day or two before my daughter started, he gave me a written assurance that the whole thing was over, and now he sends you here. How am I to know what you are really after?โ
โI have come because I thought I could do some good,โ she said, trembling with anger and fear. โI was speaking to your daughter at your party.โ
โOh, you were there;โ โwere you? It may be as you say, but how is one to tell? When one has been deceived like that, one is apt to be suspicious, Miss Carbury.โ Here was one who had spent his life in lying to the world, and who was in his very heart shocked at the atrocity of a man who had lied to him! โYou are not plotting another journey to Liverpool;โ โare you?โ To this Hetta could make no answer. The insult was too much, but alone, unsupported, she did not know how to give him back scorn for scorn. At last he proposed to take her across to Bruton Street himself, and at his bidding she walked by his side. โMay I hear what you say to her?โ he asked.
โIf you suspect me, Mr. Melmotte, I had better not see her at all. It is only that there may no longer be any doubt.โ
โYou can say it all before me.โ
โNo;โ โI could not do that. But I have told you, and you can say it for me. If you please, I think I will go home now.โ
But Melmotte knew that his daughter would not believe him on such a subject. This girl she probably would believe. And though Melmotte himself found it difficult to trust anybody, he thought that there was more possible good than evil to be expected from the proposed interview. โOh, you shall see her,โ he said. โI donโt suppose sheโs such a fool as to try that kind of thing again.โ Then the door in Bruton Street was opened, and Hetta, repenting her mission, found herself almost pushed into the hall. She was bidden to follow Melmotte upstairs, and was left alone in the drawing-room, as she thought, for a long time. Then the door was slowly opened and Marie crept into the room. โMiss Carbury,โ she
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