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Average rating4
The Small House at Allington introduces Trollope's most charming heroine, the betwitching Lily Dale, onto the Barsetshire scene. She so endeared herself to readers of the Cornhill Magazine, where A Small House was first published in serial form, that Trollope was bombarded by letters begging him to marry her to her lifelong adorer Johnny Eames. Lily is the niece of Squire Dale, an embittered old bachelor entrenched in the "Great House" at Allington. His sister-in-law lives at the adjacent "Small House" with her two daughters Lily and Bell, and the action centers on the relations between the two houses and on the romantic entanglements of the two girls. We also meet Sir Raffle Buffle, the bullying head of a government department, the heartless Lady Dumbello, and the shallow Adolphus Crosbie, who gets his just deserts in the form of the frigid Lady Alexandrina de Courcy. Trollope's characteristic theme of the invasion of a pastoral, conservative world by brash and progressive forces from London gives him an opportunity in this novel for vivid, contrasting descriptions of gracious country living, with croquet and tea on the lawn, and of the cut and thrust of London life in the 1860s. - Back cover.
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The most difficult of the Barchester chronicles I've read, this time I found the plot and the characters quite difficult to get into and it's taken me nearly a year to finish it (admittedly this has been an eventful year). Probably not the time to appreciate it. I appreciate the ending, however. I agree that Lily Dale is maddening for her decision, but so many novels of this period seem to take the easy route (Dickens I'm looking at you). So far, I haven't found that Trollope's women can compare to say Henry James or Hardy (although it's been a while since I read Trollope's later novels), I don't think Lily has that kind of depth, but it's a good beginning and Eames seems better written (apart from the harping on about his ‘hobbledeyhoyhood' which just seems rather overused).
Featured Series
6 primary booksChronicles of Barsetshire is a 6-book series with 6 primary works first released in 1855 with contributions by Anthony Trollope and Andrew Maunder.