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Title: Shirley
Series: ———-
Author: Charlotte Bronte
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Classic
Pages: 743
Words: 215K
Synopsis: |
From Wikipedia
Robert Moore is a mill owner noted for apparent ruthlessness towards his employees. He has laid off many of them, and is apparently indifferent to their consequent impoverishment. In fact he had no choice, since the mill is deeply in debt. He is determined to restore his family’s honour and fortune.
As the novel opens Robert awaits delivery of new labour-saving machinery for the mill, which will enable him to lay off additional employees. Together with some friends he watches all night, but the machinery is destroyed by “frame-breakers” on the way to the mill. Robert’s business difficulties continue, due in part to continuing labour unrest, but even more to the Napoleonic Wars and the accompanying Orders in Council, which forbid British merchants from trading in American markets.
Robert is very close to his cousin Caroline Helstone, who comes to his house to be taught French by his sister, Hortense. Caroline worships Robert. Caroline’s father is dead and her mother has abandoned her, leaving her to be brought up by her uncle, Rev. Helstone. To keep himself from falling in love with her Robert keeps his distance, since he cannot afford to marry for pleasure or for love.
Caroline realises that Robert is growing increasingly distant and withdraws into herself. Her uncle does not sympathise with her “fancies”. She has no money of her own, so she cannot leave, which is what she longs to do. She suggests that she might take up the role of governess, but her uncle dismisses the idea and assures her that she need not work for a living.
Caroline recovers somewhat when she meets Shirley, an independent heiress whose parents are dead and who lives with Mrs Pryor, her former governess. Shirley is lively, cheerful, full of ideas about how to use her money and how to help people, and very interested in business. Caroline and Shirley soon become close friends. Caroline becomes convinced that Shirley and Robert will marry. Shirley likes Robert, is very interested in his work, and is concerned about him and the threats he receives from laid-off millworkers. Both good and bad former employees are depicted. Some passages show the real suffering of those who were honest workers and can no longer find good employment; other passages show how some people use losing their jobs as an excuse to get drunk, fight with their previous employers, and incite other people to violence. Shirley uses her money to help the poorest, but she is also motivated by the desire to prevent any attack on Robert.
One night Rev. Helstone asks Shirley to stay with Caroline while he is away. Caroline and Shirley realise that an attack on the mill is imminent. They hear the dog barking and realise that a group of rioters has come to a halt outside the rectory. They overhear the rioters talking about entering the house, but are relieved when they decide to go on. The women go to the mill together to warn Robert, but they are too late. They witness the ensuing battle from their hiding place.
The whole neighbourhood becomes convinced that Robert and Shirley will marry. The anticipation of this event causes Caroline to fall ill. Mrs Pryor comes to look after her and learns the cause of Caroline’s sorrow. She continues her vigil even as Caroline worsens daily. Mrs Pryor then reveals to Caroline that she is Caroline’s mother. She had abandoned her because Caroline looked exactly like her father, the husband who tortured Mrs Pryor and made her life miserable. She had little money, so when her brother-in-law offered to bring up the child, she accepted the offer, took up the name of Pryor and went off to become a governess. Caroline now has a reason to live, since she knows that she can go and live with her mother, and begins to recover.
Shirley’s uncle and aunt come to visit her. They bring with them their daughters, their son, and their son’s tutor, Louis Moore. He is Robert’s younger brother and taught Shirley when she was younger. Caroline is puzzled by Shirley’s haughty and formal behaviour towards Louis. Two men fall in love with Shirley and woo her, but she rejects both of them because she does not love them. The relationship between Shirley and Louis, meanwhile, remains ambivalent. There are days when Louis can ask Shirley to come to the schoolroom and recite the French pieces she learned from him when she was younger. On other days Shirley ignores Louis. However, when Shirley is upset the only person she can confide in is Louis. After a supposedly mad dog bites Shirley and makes her think that she is to die early no one except Louis can make her reveal her fears.
Robert returns one dark night, first stopping at the market and then returning to his home with a friend. The friend asks him why he left when it seemed so certain that Shirley loved him and would have married him. Robert replies that he had assumed the same, and that he had proposed to Shirley before he left. Shirley had at first laughed, thinking that he was not serious, and then cried when she discovered that he was. She had told him that she knew that he did not love her, and that he asked for her hand, not for her sake, but for her money. Robert had walked away filled with a sense of humiliation, even as he knew that she was right. This self-disgust had driven Robert away to London, where he realised that restoring the family name was not as important as maintaining his self-respect. He had returned home determined to close the mill if he had to, and go away to Canada to make his fortune. Just as Robert finishes his narration his friend hears a gunshot and Robert falls from his horse.
The friend takes Robert to his own home and looks after him. After a turn for the worse Robert slowly gets better. A visit from Caroline revives him, but she has to come secretly, hiding from her uncle and his friend and his family. Robert soon moves back to his own home and persuades his sister that the very thing their house needs to cheer it up is a visit from Caroline. Robert asks for Caroline’s forgiveness.
Louis proposes to Shirley, despite the difference in their relative situations, and Shirley agrees to marry him. At first Caroline is to be Shirley’s bridesmaid, but Robert proposes to her and she accepts. The novel ends with Caroline marrying Robert and Shirley marrying Louis.
My Thoughts: |
I kept going back and forth in my head if this was a 3star or a 3.5star read. There were times that I was really enjoying what I was reading and other times I simply wanted it to be gotten over with. This was very much a romance but with no gothic overtones.
Two women pine away almost to death for love of two brothers and the men manfully overcome their manliness and cultural ideals to marry them anyway. What a heart stopping story!
I can see why this isn’t one of the better known stories by the Bronte’s. At over 700 pages it is just LOOONG and really feels very rambly and voyeuristic into the lives of Shirley and Caroline. Given, that’s what is expected but it just hit me that way.
I can say with some authority that there is no chance I’ll be re-reading this book. I’ve read it and can cross it off the (imaginary) List.
I think the tv show really expanded on Bronte’s vision.
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Oh, which tv show is that?
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Laverne and Shirley.
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Ahhh yes, how could I have forgotten?
An updated classic for the ages.
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It’s what Bronte was trying to do, but couldn’t achieve by writing.
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Some stories just need a built in laughtrack 🙂
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There was a live studio audience in the first edition of Jane Eyre, but it was removed in later editions.
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I can understand that. Eyre isn’t a laughtrack kind of story. It would be really inappropriate when the crazy wife burns up to have a laughtrack going. Really sends the wrong message I feel.
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Wuthering Heights was written with guest spots of Peter Sellers and Candice Bergen, but that idea wasn’t used until The Muppet Show.
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I still think that John Cleese was the best skit/guest star out of everything so far. He really blew me away.
So Sellers and Bergen are going to have to take a back seat.
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Some people have a great way of talking to the Muppets. Michael Caine, Billy Connolly, to name but two.
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You can definitely tell when a guest really throws them self into the show…
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That’s a great synopsis Cap’n, a one sentence says it all! 😀
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Thanks Fraggle. Sometimes boiling a book down to its very essence is a good way to remember it.
Of course, I’m not going to remember this book after about 3 weeks, so I can’t really say it works, hahahahaa 🙂
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I thinkk I’m I would read this, however! I just started The Muppet Show again thanks to you, and I’m loving it. Great read.
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First off, glad the Muppets are working out for you 😀 I just started season 5 and man, it is just good stuff 🙂
What about this draws you to it? Are you a big Bronte fan?
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I read Jane Eyre at college. I need to read more classic literature because when I do, I always enjoy it more than I thought I would.
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743 pages! Wow! I understand that classics have thousands of pages, but ‘meh’ books? Cut it, chump!
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No can do, pal. I’m on a mission to read all of the works of the Bronte sisters and come hell or high water, I’m going to read’em all!
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Ooh. You have my deepest sympathies… 😉
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On my journey through life, one of my goals is to be widely read. This definitely helps me with that.
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I reckon you’re going to achieve that goal, Booky!
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Thanks Otsy.
I’m going to be starting on some Russian classics soon 😀
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I love the Russkies! This should be good!
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I try to sing the song from Hunt for Red October whenever I crack open one of them 😉
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I think we’ve got your theme tune for the Grizzelda fight!
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Never read this one. Not sure I need to. Even Jane Eyre turns into a slog at times.
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Nope, stick with the wikipedia plot synopsis and you’re all good. There’s a good reason why this hasn’t become a “classic” like Eyre…
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Had no idea this existed. With you, I never know what I’m going to get.
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I’d never heard of it either. It’s amazing what one can get up to when digging around the literary graveyard 😀
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I’d probably react the same way too and be happy that I got it under my belt and won’t or want to revisit again hahah
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Some classics just aren’t worth a re-read…..
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