Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: The Last Chronicle of Barset


Related Topics
Cat

In the News (Sun 20 Dec 09)

  
  Last Chronicle of Barset, Chs 73 - 78
The last word about her is given by Dalrymple (who we are to assume should know): she is "a bird of prey, and altogether unclean bird" (p.
Last week we talked about the possibility that 19th century readers would also have seen in her assertion she would rather be at peace with her mother a general refusal to bear the lot of married women of her type: endless pregnancies.
As I was typing the chapter headings of the last chapters of The Last Chronicle of Barset I noticed the phrase "finger-post".
www.jimandellen.org /trollope/lastchronicle.73-78.html   (3834 words)

  
  LAST CHRONICLE OF BARSET|THE - Sumner & Stillman
LAST CHRONICLE OF BARSETTHE - Sumner & Stillman
I was never quite satisfied with the development of the plot, which consisted in the loss of a cheque, of a charge made against a clergyman for stealing it, and of absolute uncertainty on the part of the clergyman himself as to the manner in which the cheque found its way into his hands.
THE LAST CHRONICLE OF BARSET first appeared in these 32 weekly parts, beginning on December 1, 1866 and ending on July 6, 1867; included in each part is a full-page plate plus an opening vignette, by George H. Thomas.
www.sumnerandstillman.com /Catalog/sumner.cgi/9005   (313 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Penguin Classics Last Chronicle Of Barset: Books: Anthony Trollope,Sophie Gilmartin   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Of the former, the last and longest is "The Last Chronicle of Barset".
THE LAST CHRONICLE OF BARSET is one of the great novels in the English language, and yet it is not widely read.
The reason for this is obvious: it is the LAST novel in the Barsetshire series of novels, and a relatively small number make it all the way through the previous five volumes.
www.amazon.ca /Penguin-Classics-Last-Chronicle-Barset/dp/0140437525   (1698 words)

  
 The Last Chronicle of Barset Summary
The Last Chronicle of Barset by Anthony Trollope
The Last Chronicle of Barset is the final novel in Anthony Trollope 's series known as the" Chronicles of Barsetshire ", first published in 1867.
The Last Chronicle of Barset concerns an indige...
www.bookrags.com /The_Last_Chronicle_of_Barset   (130 words)

  
 The Barset Novels
The Warden forms the first part of the six Barchester Chronicles which Trollope wrote between 1854 and 1867, and which are perhaps the author's most loved works.
This, the fifth of the six Barchester Chronicles, concerns Lily Dale and her sister Bell, living with their widowed mother in The Small House at Allington, supported by old Squire Dale.
He said of The Last Chronicle of Barset that 'I regard this as the best novel I have written...
www.trollopesociety.org /barset.htm   (2363 words)

  
 Chronicles of Barsetshire - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The "Chronicles of Barsetshire" is a series of six novels by the English author Anthony Trollope, set in the fictitious cathedral town of Barchester.
They concern the dealings of the clergy, and the politics that go on behind the scenes.
Of all the chronicles, Barchester Towers is the most popular.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Chronicles_of_Barsetshire   (104 words)

  
 Corporate Calling Cards - The Last Chronicle of Barset (Penguin Classics)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The fall of Mrs Proudie could hardly be more satisfying, even sad, and I was moved to tears to see the last of Mr Harding.
There are the innumerable characters of marriageable age, whose names are perhaps more memorable than their characters, whose charming dialogues and relationship problems are deftly laid out and interwoven.
Above all, there is master story-teller Anthony Trollope, admitting finally that for him Barset has been a real place, a place where he as been induced to wander too long by his "love of old friendships, and by the sweetness of old faces".
www.inccenter.com /amazon-buy-0140437525.html   (571 words)

  
 Amazon.com: The Last Chronicle of Barset (The World's Classics): Books: Anthony Trollope,Stephen Gill
The Last Chronicle is the longest of the Barsetshire novels--and the best, considerably better in style than the more popular "Barchester Towers." Trollope's characterizations are, as usual, superb, among the very best in all literature.
THE LAST CHRONICLE OF BARSET is one of the great novels in the English language, and yet it is not widely read.
Of the former, the last and longest is "The Last Chronicle of Barset".
www.amazon.com /Last-Chronicle-Barset-Worlds-Classics/dp/0195208099   (1460 words)

  
 The Last Chronicle of Barset eBook
Mrs Crawley sat by his side, utterly impotent as to any assistance, just touching him with her hand, and waiting behind her veil till she should be made to understand what was the decision of the magistrates.
This was at last communicated to her—­and to him—­in a whisper by Mr Walker.
Mr Crawley must understand that he was committed to take his trial at Barchester, at the next assizes, which would be held in April, but that bail would be taken;—­in his own bail in five hundred pounds, and that of two others in two hundred and fifty pounds each.
www.bookrags.com /ebooks/3045/59.html   (553 words)

  
 Last Chronicle of Barset Essays, Postings, Threads from Conversations on Trollope-l
It was at the close of June 2000 that our Barsetshire Marathon reached the last of the Barsetshire cycle, The Last Chronicle of Barset.
The Last Chronicle of Barset was first published as a book in 1867 (Volume I, March, Volume II, July) by Smith and Elder.
July 23: Chapters 23-27 (Instalments 9 & 10): Anticipatory; In Defense of Thomas Hardy; Last Chronicle of Barset: The Cathartic Experience; The Sentimental; Artistic Episodes in Trollope; The Reappearance of the Lily and Crosby Plot.
www.jimandellen.org /trollope/lastchronicle.show.html   (1068 words)

  
 Amazon.de: The Last Chronicle of Barset (Everyman's Library (Paper)): English Books: Anthony Trollope,David ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
A new edition of the last volume in Trollope's popular series.
"The Last Chronicle of Barset" is surely one of the most successful and satisfying of the whole Barset and Palliser series, illustrating perhaps better than any of the former Trollope's admirable gift for creating multi-dimensional characters that are as recognizable to us today as they were in his time.
The Last Chronicle is the longest of the Barsetshire novels--and the best, considerably better in style than the more popular "Barchester Towers." Trollope's characterizations are, as usual, superb, among the very best in all literature.
www.amazon.de /Chronicle-Barset-Everymans-Library-Paper/dp/0460872346   (610 words)

  
 Last Chronicle of Barset, Chs 28 - 33
Last Chronicle of Barset, Chs 28 - 33
Re: Last Chronicle of Barset: Mr Toogood and the Rev Crawley
I think that the conflict between the Archbishop and his son is less important as the usual father-son situation, and more to show up the Archbishop, how he is once again won over, how he is softened and made more humane.
www.jimandellen.org /trollope/lastchronicle.28-33.html   (4162 words)

  
 Last Chronicle of Barset, Chs 7 - 11
This is the first time I have read the Last Chronicle and I must say, I was a bit taken a back to see so many of them come surging out of the pages.
I had been meaning to post a message about chapter IV of The Last Chronicle, where we are told something of the way that Mr Crawley's £130 a year is spent.
And it does seem that lawn tennis and bicycle-riding were socially acceptable for women from their inception as a popular social activity at the end of the 19th century.
www.jimandellen.org /trollope/lastchronicle.7-11.html   (13087 words)

  
 Last Chronicle of Barset, Chs 34 - 38
The Last Chronicle is not a complacent celebration of 'old green England'; it was written by the same man who wrote The Way We Live Now.
Trollope makes it perfectly clear in Chapter I of LCB (p.6 of the Trollope Society edition) that she is nineteen, and so of a very marriageable age.
In the next chapter, it is the Archdeacon who, in one of his dressing room discussions with his wife, calls her 'A child about sixteen years of age!'.
www.jimandellen.org /trollope/lastchronicle.34-38.html   (5349 words)

  
 Last Chronicle of Barset, Introduction
The Last Chronicle stands as a sequel to Framley Parsonage, but it also is a sequel to Barchester Towers, Doctor Thorne and The Small House at Allington.
He sets The Last Chronicle in the political and social milieu of its year; the world was changing, becoming more complicated, and the Barsetshire books were beginning to feel obsolete.
The case in point for the end of The Last Chronicle is Trollope's similarly-derived unfair and unsympathetic depiction of the old men in The Warden, one which caricatures them as ridiculous, distasteful, and just plain stupid.
www.jimandellen.org /trollope/lastchronicle.introduction.html   (6728 words)

  
 Annotated Illustrations of Trollope's Fiction: The Last Chronicle of Barset 1878
Annotated Illustrations of Trollope's Fiction: The Last Chronicle of Barset 1878
The elderly man certainly does look like Millais's Crawley; perhaps the figures are too stiff, too austere.
One feels how cold and wet and dreary is the spot they stand on -- the sky and trees are brilliantly made real through many tiny dark lines while for the rain we get tiny elongated tears of white.
www.jimandellen.org /trollope/pictures.LastChronicle.1878.html   (118 words)

  
 Anthony Trollope's Last Chronicle of Barset -- Al Young's Family Reading List   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The Last Chronicle of Barset by Anthony Trollope is the last in a six volume series set in Barchester.
This story, as the last in its series, ties up all the threads of a narrative that runs through the Barchester chronicles.
The fine art prints presented here as companions to Anthony Trollope's Last Chronicle of Barset are not associated with any particular edition of his work, nor are they affiliated in any way with organizations associated with the author or his work.
www.alyoung.com /trollope01.htm   (415 words)

  
 bourdieu.htm
The nearly continuous concentration on exchanges of capital in a novel like The Last Chronicle of Barset belies that novel's most esteemed and truthful character, Mr.
The first purpose of this essay, then, is to theorize and test a model for representing the flow of discourse about capital within mid-Victorian novels, taking The Last Chronicle of Barset as a representative case.
The second purpose is to demonstrate how exchanges of capital are not only thematically significant but actually constitute the plot structure of this novel.
www.ecu.edu /english/TCR/bourdieu.htm   (642 words)

  
 Anthony Trollope : The Last Chronicle of Barset : Chapter XXXVIII. Jael
On the first of March, Conway Dalrymple's easel was put up in Mrs Dobbs Broughton's boudoir upstairs, the canvas was placed upon it on which the outlines of Jael and Sisera had been already drawn, and Mrs Broughton and Clara Van Siever and Conway Dalrymple were assembled with the view of steady art-work.
The artist at last took the matter into his own hand, by declaring that Miss Van Siever would sit the subject much better without jewels, and therefore all Mrs Broughton's gewgaws were put back into their boxes.
At last it was decided that her raiment should be altogether white, and that she should wear, twisted round her head and falling over her shoulder, a Roman silk scarf of various colours.
www.classicreader.com /read.php/sid.1/bookid.1478/sec.38   (3542 words)

  
 LAST CHRONICLE OF BARSET ebook Trollope, Anthony Diesel eBooks   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The final novel of the popular Barset series contains one of Trollope's strongest characters, as well as affectionate farewells to many of those readers have come to know in earlier novels.
In The Last Chronicle, Mr Crawley is accused of stealing when a cheque belonging to the Duke of Omnium, dropped by the Duke's steward during or after a visit to Mr.
Share your thoughts on the ebook The Last Chronicle of Barset with other internet viewers!
www.diesel-ebooks.com /cgi-bin/item/parent-1595473955   (373 words)

  
 Fictionwise eBooks: Last Chronicle of Barset by Anthony Trollope
Fictionwise eBooks: Last Chronicle of Barset by Anthony Trollope
Discounted eBook; added within the last 7 days.
eBook was added within the last 30 days.
www.fictionwise.com /ebooks/eBook25183.htm   (478 words)

  
 Amazon.com: The Last Chronicle of Barset (Everyman's Library, 208): Books: Anthony Trollope   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Amazon.com: The Last Chronicle of Barset (Everyman's Library, 208): Books: Anthony Trollope
Join Amazon Prime and ship Two-Day for free and Overnight for $3.99.
The Last Chronicle of Barset (Everyman's Library, 208) (Hardcover)
www.amazon.com /Last-Chronicle-Barset-Everymans-Library/dp/0679443665   (338 words)

  
 Plucker Books - Details - The Last Chronicle of Barset   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The Last Chronicle of Barset is #6 in the Barsetshire series.
Contributed by Curtis Weyant (caw.homelinux.net) on 2004-04-17; last updated on 2004-04-18
Plucker Books is a private effort by Curtis A. Weyant and David A. Maddock to provide clean HTML versions of electronic texts, especially for viewing on handheld devices.
dave.pluckerbooks.com /details/2074   (126 words)

  
 AddALL.com - Last Chronicle of Barset
Last Chronicle of Barset - by Anthony Trollope, Flo Gibson - Audio - List $84.90
Last Chronicle of Barset - by Anthony Trollope, Flo Gibson - Audio - List $42.95
Last Chronicle of Barset - by Sophie Gilmartin, Anthony Trollope, Sophie Gilmartin - Paperback - List $10.00
www.addall.com /detail/0679443665.html   (164 words)

  
 The Last Chronicle of Barset (English Library) - Price Comparison   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The Last Chronicle of Barset (English Library) - Price Comparison
You are here: Books > The Last Chronicle of Barset (English Library)
Be the first one to review this product
books.compricer.com /0140430245   (40 words)

  
 The Last Chronicle of Barset eBooks - Anthony Trollope - Visit eBookMall Today!
The Last Chronicle of Barset eBooks - Anthony Trollope - Visit eBookMall Today!
I can never bring myself to believe it, John,' said Mary Walker the pretty daughter of Mr George Walker, attorney of Silverbridge.
Crawley, which makes him by far the most interesting character in the novel sequence, is that he has a tendency toward madness, which starts small - his absent-mindedness about money which makes it impossible to remember where the cheque came from - and grows, tormenting him and his family and friends.
www.ebookmall.com /ebooks/last-chronicle-of-barset-trollope-ebooks.htm   (632 words)

  
 The Last Chronicle of Barset:Anthony Trollope; Stephen Gill:0195208099:eCampus.com
The Last Chronicle of Barset:Anthony Trollope; Stephen Gill:0195208099:eCampus.com
The Last Chronicle of Barset: The Barchester Chronicles
I can never bring myself to believe it, John; said Mary Walker, the pretty daughter of Mr.
www.ecampus.com /bk_detail.asp?ISBN=0195208099   (41 words)

  
 The Last Chronicle of Barset - Anthony Trollope - Adobe Reader PDF eBook
The Last Chronicle of Barset - Anthony Trollope - Adobe Reader PDF eBook
The Last Chronicle of Barset - Anthony Trollope
The Last Chronicle of Barset - Recommend Page
www.ebookmall.com /ebook/121533-ebook.htm   (664 words)

  
 The Last Chronicle of Barset - Trollope, Anthony
The Last Chronicle of Barset - Trollope, Anthony
Light reading wear, including a lightly creased spine.
A smashing end to the Barset novels - Josiah Crawley is accused of theft, compromising his daughter's marriage to Archdeacon Grantly's son; Johnny Eames continues to woo Lily Dale; some of Trollope's most engaging characters meet a dignified end.
www.elpinarillobooks.com /si/D-8618.html   (55 words)

  
 Anthony Trollope : The Last Chronicle of Barset
Anthony Trollope : The Last Chronicle of Barset
Chapter V. What the World Thought of It
Mr Crawley's Last Appearance in His Own Pulpit
www.classicreader.com /booktoc.php/sid.1/bookid.1478   (66 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.