Doctor Thorne

Doctor Thorne remains indisputably one of Trollope’s greatest achievements. Paradoxically, it was not a favourite with its author, but then, as so often, he was a poor judge of his own work. Interestingly, the plot was devised not by the author but by his brother Tom with whom he was staying in Florence when, as he confessed, ‘I was cudgelling my brain for a plot’.

Frank Gresham is heir to Greshamsbury Court, once a very rich estate but now much depleted, mortgages on the estate being held by the self-made millionaire Sir Roger Scatcherd. Frank is consequently under a great deal of pressure to marry money; particular pressure is applied by his mother, the snobbish sister of the Earl de Courcy, but Frank is in love with Mary Thorne, niece of the eponymous Doctor with whom she lives. However, it is known only to Doctor Thorne that Mary is in fact Sir Roger’s eldest neice, albeit illegitimate: Sir Roger, a stone-cutter who has made his fortune through ruthless business dealings and has been ennobled because of his success, is paradoxically a drunkard and an ex-convict, a result of killing his sister’s seducer, Mary Thorne’s father, many years before. Sir Roger is unaware of Mary’s true identity, or even that she survived.

In this, the third Barchester novel there are very few clerics – Mrs Proudie, for example, having what amounts to a cameo appearance – and this is chiefly because the author found himself more concerned with the county families. The happy result is the widening of the series’ scope in unexpected directions, most notable in the portrayal of Frank’s selfish mother Lady Arabella Gresham, the slightly enigmatic figure of Dr Thorne, and particularly the depiction of Mary Thorne herself, Trollope’s heroine.

"1100566946"
Doctor Thorne

Doctor Thorne remains indisputably one of Trollope’s greatest achievements. Paradoxically, it was not a favourite with its author, but then, as so often, he was a poor judge of his own work. Interestingly, the plot was devised not by the author but by his brother Tom with whom he was staying in Florence when, as he confessed, ‘I was cudgelling my brain for a plot’.

Frank Gresham is heir to Greshamsbury Court, once a very rich estate but now much depleted, mortgages on the estate being held by the self-made millionaire Sir Roger Scatcherd. Frank is consequently under a great deal of pressure to marry money; particular pressure is applied by his mother, the snobbish sister of the Earl de Courcy, but Frank is in love with Mary Thorne, niece of the eponymous Doctor with whom she lives. However, it is known only to Doctor Thorne that Mary is in fact Sir Roger’s eldest neice, albeit illegitimate: Sir Roger, a stone-cutter who has made his fortune through ruthless business dealings and has been ennobled because of his success, is paradoxically a drunkard and an ex-convict, a result of killing his sister’s seducer, Mary Thorne’s father, many years before. Sir Roger is unaware of Mary’s true identity, or even that she survived.

In this, the third Barchester novel there are very few clerics – Mrs Proudie, for example, having what amounts to a cameo appearance – and this is chiefly because the author found himself more concerned with the county families. The happy result is the widening of the series’ scope in unexpected directions, most notable in the portrayal of Frank’s selfish mother Lady Arabella Gresham, the slightly enigmatic figure of Dr Thorne, and particularly the depiction of Mary Thorne herself, Trollope’s heroine.

32.99 In Stock
Doctor Thorne

Doctor Thorne

by Anthony Trollope
Doctor Thorne

Doctor Thorne

by Anthony Trollope

Hardcover

$32.99 
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Overview

Doctor Thorne remains indisputably one of Trollope’s greatest achievements. Paradoxically, it was not a favourite with its author, but then, as so often, he was a poor judge of his own work. Interestingly, the plot was devised not by the author but by his brother Tom with whom he was staying in Florence when, as he confessed, ‘I was cudgelling my brain for a plot’.

Frank Gresham is heir to Greshamsbury Court, once a very rich estate but now much depleted, mortgages on the estate being held by the self-made millionaire Sir Roger Scatcherd. Frank is consequently under a great deal of pressure to marry money; particular pressure is applied by his mother, the snobbish sister of the Earl de Courcy, but Frank is in love with Mary Thorne, niece of the eponymous Doctor with whom she lives. However, it is known only to Doctor Thorne that Mary is in fact Sir Roger’s eldest neice, albeit illegitimate: Sir Roger, a stone-cutter who has made his fortune through ruthless business dealings and has been ennobled because of his success, is paradoxically a drunkard and an ex-convict, a result of killing his sister’s seducer, Mary Thorne’s father, many years before. Sir Roger is unaware of Mary’s true identity, or even that she survived.

In this, the third Barchester novel there are very few clerics – Mrs Proudie, for example, having what amounts to a cameo appearance – and this is chiefly because the author found himself more concerned with the county families. The happy result is the widening of the series’ scope in unexpected directions, most notable in the portrayal of Frank’s selfish mother Lady Arabella Gresham, the slightly enigmatic figure of Dr Thorne, and particularly the depiction of Mary Thorne herself, Trollope’s heroine.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9786057861696
Publisher: E-Kitap Projesi & Cheapest Books
Publication date: 01/01/1900
Pages: 624
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

About The Author
Anthony Trollope became one of the most successful, prolific and respected English novelists of the Victorian era. Some of Trollope's best-loved works, known as the Chronicles of Barsetshire, revolve around the imaginary county of Barsetshire; he also wrote penetrating novels on political, social, and gender issues and conflicts of his day.

Trollope has always been a popular novelist. Noted fans have included Sir Alec Guinness (who never travelled without a Trollope novel), former British Prime Ministers Harold Macmillan and Sir John Major, economist John Kenneth Galbraith, American novelists Sue Grafton and Dominick Dunne and soap opera writer Harding Lemay. Trollope's literary reputation dipped somewhat during the last years of his life, but he regained the esteem of critics by the mid-twentieth century.

Table of Contents

The Greshams of Greshamsbury

Long, Long Ago

Dr Thorne

Lessons from Courcy Castle

Frank Gresham's First Speech

Frank Gresham's Early Loves

The Doctor's Garden

Matrimonial Prospects

Sir Roger Scatcherd

Sir Roger's Will

The Doctor Drinks His Tea

When Greek Meets Greek, Then Comes the Tug of War

The Two Uncles

Sentence of Exile

Courcy

Miss Dunstable

The Election

The Rivals

The Duke of Omnium

The Proposal

Mr Moffat Falls into Trouble

Sir Roger Is Unseated

Retrospective

Louis Scatcherd

Sir Roger Dies

War

Miss Thorne Goes on a Visit

The Doctor Hears Something to His Advantage

The Donkey Ride

Post Prandial

The Small End of the Wedge

Mr Oriel

A Morning Visit

A Barouche and Four Arrives at Greshamsbury

Sir Louis Goes Out to Dinner

Will He Come Again?

Sir Louis Leaves Greshamsbury

De Courcy Precepts and de Courcy Practice

What the World Says about Blood

The Two Doctors Change Patients

Doctor Thorne Won't Interfere

What Can You Give in Return?

The Race of Scatcherd Becomes Extinct

Saturday Evening and Sunday Morning

Law Business in London

Our Pet Fox Finds a Tail

How the Bride Was Received, and Who Were Asked to the Wedding

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