The Way We Live Now by Anthony Trollope (best fiction novels of all time .TXT) ๐
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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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โAinโt I a friend, Ruby?โ
โA pretty sort of friend, you! When you was going away, you was to be back at Carbury in a fortnight; and that isโ โoh, ever so long ago now.โ
โBut I wrote to you, Ruby.โ
โWhatโs letters? And the postman to know all as in โem for anything anybody knows, and grandfather to be almost sure to see โem. I donโt call letters no good at all, and I beg you wonโt write โem any more.โ
โDid he see them?โ
โNo thanks to you if he didnโt. I donโt know why you are come here, Sir Felixโ โnor yet I donโt know why I should come and meet you. Itโs all just folly like.โ
โBecause I love you;โ โthatโs why I come; eh, Ruby? And you have come because you love me; eh, Ruby? Is not that about it?โ Then he threw himself on the ground beside her, and got his arm round her waist.
It would boot little to tell here all that they said to each other. The happiness of Ruby Ruggles for that half hour was no doubt complete. She had her London lover beside her; and though in every word he spoke there was a tone of contempt, still he talked of love, and made her promises, and told her that she was pretty. He probably did not enjoy it much; he cared very little about her, and carried on the liaison simply because it was the proper sort of thing for a young man to do. He had begun to think that the odour of patchouli was unpleasant, and that the flies were troublesome, and the ground hard, before the half hour was over. She felt that she could be content to sit there forever and to listen to him. This was a realisation of those delights of life of which she had read in the thrice-thumbed old novels which she had gotten from the little circulating library at Bungay.
But what was to come next? She had not dared to ask him to marry herโ โhad not dared to say those very words; and he had not dared to ask her to be his mistress. There was an animal courage about her, and an amount of strength also, and a fire in her eye, of which he had learned to be aware. Before the half hour was over I think that he wished himself away;โ โbut when he did go, he made a promise to see her again on the Tuesday morning. Her grandfather would be at Harlestone market, and she would meet him at about noon at the bottom of the kitchen garden belonging to the farm. As he made the promise he resolved that he would not keep it. He would write to her again, and bid her come to him in London, and would send her money for the journey.
โI suppose I am to be his wedded wife,โ said Ruby to herself, as she crept away down from the road, away also from her own home;โ โso that on her return her presence should not be associated with that of the young man, should anyone chance to see the young man on the road. โIโll never be nothing unless Iโm that,โ she said to herself. Then she allowed her mind to lose itself in expatiating on the difference between John Crumb and Sir Felix Carbury.
XIX Hetta Carbury Hears a Love TaleโI have half a mind to go back tomorrow morning,โ Felix said to his mother that Sunday evening after dinner. At that moment Roger was walking round the garden by himself, and Henrietta was in her own room.
โTomorrow morning, Felix! You are engaged to dine with the Longestaffes!โ
โYou could make any excuse you like about that.โ
โIt would be the most uncourteous thing in the world. The Longestaffes you know are the leading people in this part of the country. No one knows what may happen. If you should ever be living at Carbury, how sad it would be that you should have quarrelled with them.โ
โYou forget, mother, that Dolly Longestaffe is about the most intimate friend I have in the world.โ
โThat does not justify you in being uncivil to the father and mother. And you should remember what you came here for.โ
โWhat did I come for?โ
โThat you might see Marie Melmotte more at your ease than you can in their London house.โ
โThatโs all settled,โ said Sir Felix, in the most indifferent tone that he could assume.
โSettled!โ
โAs far as the girl is concerned. I canโt very well go to the old fellow for his consent down here.โ
โDo you mean to say, Felix, that Marie Melmotte has accepted you?โ
โI told you that before.โ
โMy dear Felix. Oh, my boy!โ In her joy the mother took her unwilling son in her arms and caressed him. Here was the first step taken not only to success, but to such magnificent splendour as should make her son to be envied by all young men, and herself to be envied by all mothers in England! โNo, you didnโt tell me before. But I am so happy. Is she really fond of you? I donโt wonder that any girl should be fond of you.โ
โI canโt say anything about that, but I think she means to stick to it.โ
โIf she is firm, of course her father will give way at last. Fathers always do give way when the girl is firm. Why should he oppose it?โ
โI donโt know that he will.โ
โYou are a man of rank,
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