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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โThis is so kind of you,โ said Lady Carbury, grasping her cousinโs hand as she got out of the carriage.
โThe kindness is on your part,โ said Roger.
โI felt so much before I dared to ask you to take us. But I did so long to get into the country, and I do so love Carbury. Andโ โandโ โโ
โWhere should a Carbury go to escape from London smoke, but to the old house? I am afraid Henrietta will find it dull.โ
โOh no,โ said Hetta smiling. โYou ought to remember that I am never dull in the country.โ
โThe bishop and Mrs. Yeld are coming here to dine tomorrowโ โand the Hepworths.โ
โI shall be so glad to meet the bishop once more,โ said Lady Carbury.
โI think everybody must be glad to meet him, he is such a dear, good fellow, and his wife is just as good. And there is another gentleman coming whom you have never seen.โ
โA new neighbour?โ
โYesโ โa new neighbour;โ โFather John Barham, who has come to Beccles as priest. He has got a little cottage about a mile from here, in this parish, and does duty both at Beccles and Bungay. I used to know something of his family.โ
โHe is a gentleman then?โ
โCertainly he is a gentleman. He took his degree at Oxford, and then became what we call a pervert, and what I suppose they call a convert. He has not got a shilling in the world beyond what they pay him as a priest, which I take it amounts to about as much as the wages of a day labourer. He told me the other day that he was absolutely forced to buy secondhand clothes.โ
โHow shocking!โ said Lady Carbury, holding up her hands.
โHe didnโt seem to be at all shocked at telling it. We have got to be quite friends.โ
โWill the bishop like to meet him?โ
โWhy should not the bishop like to meet him? Iโve told the bishop all about him, and the bishop particularly wishes to know him. He wonโt hurt the bishop. But you and Hetta will find it very dull.โ
โI shanโt find it dull, Mr. Carbury,โ said Henrietta.
โIt was to escape from the eternal parties that we came down here,โ said Lady Carbury. She had nevertheless been anxious to hear what guests were expected at the Manor House. Sir Felix had promised to come down on Saturday, with the intention of returning on Monday, and Lady Carbury had hoped that some visiting might be arranged between Caversham and the Manor House, so that her son might have the full advantage of his closeness to Marie Melmotte.
โI have asked the Longestaffes for Monday,โ said Roger.
โThey are down here then?โ
โI think they arrived yesterday. There is always a flustering breeze in the air and a perturbation generally through the county when they come or go, and I think I perceived the effects about four in the afternoon. They wonโt come, I dare say.โ
โWhy not?โ
โThey never do. They have probably a house full of guests, and they know that my accommodation is limited. Iโve no doubt theyโll ask us on Tuesday or Wednesday, and if you like we will go.โ
โI know they are to have guests,โ said Lady Carbury.
โWhat guests?โ
โThe Melmottes are coming to them.โ Lady Carbury, as she made the announcement, felt that her voice and countenance and self-possession were failing her, and that she could not mention the thing as she would any matter that was indifferent to her.
โThe Melmottes coming to Caversham!โ said Roger, looking at Henrietta, who blushed with shame as she remembered that she had been brought into her loverโs house solely in order that her brother might have an opportunity of seeing Marie Melmotte in the country.
โOh yesโ โMadame Melmotte told me. I take it they are very intimate.โ
โMr. Longestaffe ask the Melmottes to visit him at Caversham!โ
โWhy not?โ
โI should almost as soon have believed that I myself might have been induced to ask them here.โ
โI fancy, Roger, that Mr. Longestaffe does want a little pecuniary assistance.โ
โAnd he condescends to get it in this way! I suppose it will make no difference soon whom one knows, and whom one doesnโt. Things arenโt as they were, of course, and never will be again. Perhaps itโs all for the better;โ โI wonโt say it isnโt. But I should have thought that such a man as Mr. Longestaffe might have kept such another man as Mr. Melmotte out of his wifeโs drawing-room.โ Henrietta became redder than ever. Even Lady Carbury flushed up, as she remembered that Roger Carbury knew that she had taken her daughter to Madame Melmotteโs ball. He thought of this himself as soon as the words were spoken, and then tried to make some half apology. โI donโt approve of them in London, you know; but I think they are very much worse in the country.โ
Then there was a movement. The ladies were shown into their rooms, and Roger again went out into the garden. He began to feel that he understood it all. Lady Carbury had come down to his house in order that she might be near the Melmottes! There was something in this which he felt it difficult not to resent. It was for no love of him that she was there. He had felt that Henrietta ought not to have been brought to his house; but he could have forgiven that, because her presence there was a charm to him. He could have forgiven that, even while he was thinking that her mother had brought her there with the object of disposing of her. If it were so, the motherโs object would be the same as his own, and such a manoeuvre he could pardon, though he could not approve. His self-love had to
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