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Tenant Of Wildfell Hall Audiolivro

de Anne Brontë
idioma: inglês
Editor: The Copyright Group, junho de 2013 ‧
8,60€
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Audiolivro para WOOK READER
When a beautiful young woman, thought to be recently widowed, suddenly moves into the half ruined Wildfell Hall with her five year old son, young squire Gilbert Markham and the local residents are intrigued. Gilbert meets the aloof newcomer Helen Graham by chance, falls in love with her, and she with him. Their passion is held in check by her mysterious relationship with the handsome but cruel Arthur Huntingdon. Her dramatic flight from him is revealed in her journal - a story within a story. 1. A MYSTERIOUS STRANGER. Wildfell Hall, long unoccupied, now has tenants - a beautiful young artist and her child. Mrs. Markham, a neighbour, and her daughter Helen Graham, the new arrival, but are snubbed. In church, Gilbert Markham decides that he prefers Helen at a distance. Soon after, he rescues Arthur, her small son, from a tree. Helen appears hostile, but a month later Gilbert visits her socially. In Helen's studio he examines her painting while she is out of the room. He turns over one which is facing the wall and admires the portrait of a handsome man. 2. LOVE'S CROSSED PURPOSES. As the months pass, Gilbert and Helen become ever closer friends. He is upset, however, by the scandalous gossip which is beginning to circulate about her, the result of her reticence about herself. One evening, he offers to defend her reputation and proposes marriage, but she refuses him. She hints at secrets to be told and warns him that her formal life may shock him. A meeting at the moor is arranged when Helen will divulge her past to Gilbert. He leaves, ecstatic that she loves him, but turning back for one last look, overhears her talking intimately to Frederick Lawrence, the owner of the hall. Furious, Gilbert refuses to see Helen. 3. A YOUNG GIRL'S STORY. Gilbert reads in her diary that as a young girl Helen was brought up by her aristocratic relatives. In London her uncle's rich and odious acquaintances makes unwelcome advances and this upsets her. One evening, however, she meets debonair and handsome Arthur Huntington, and soon he is courting her. Helen falls in love with him, but he makes her miserable by teasing her and seeming to prefer the pretty coquette Annabelle Wilmot. Finally, having reduced Helen to tears, he proposes. 4. MISERY. Helen's uncle consents to marriage because Arthur is rich, but her aunt has reservations. Helen becomes Mrs. Huntingdon of Grassdale manor, but is quickly disappointed in her marriage. Arthur lacks her intellectual interests and is miserable when he cannot hunt. He treats her in cavalier way and shocks her with stories of his former affairs. Two months into their marriage, a joint visit to London proves joyless. Arthur becomes dissipated and asks Helen to return to Grassdale Manor without him. Only her baby son gives Helen any pleasure. 5. BETRAYED. Arthur continues to be absent from home for much of the time. When he does return, he is restless and drinks. He expects Helen to be at his beck and call, and even refuses to let her attend her father's funeral. Arthur invites a party of his drinking cronies to the Manor. With them come Lord Lowborough and his new wife Annabelle, nee Wilmot. Oddly, Arthur drinks less while his guest are staying. Pleased at this, Helen overhears one of them apparently talking about her hold on Arthur. Out in the garden at dusk, she happily surprises her husband with an embrace. He grasps her, first in passion then in strange horror. Next day, she sees Arthur and Annabelle clasped together on the shrubbery. Appalled at such betrayal, Helen confronts Arthur. He bluntly refuses her request for a divorce and she swears henceforth to be his wife only in name. 6. ESCAPE AND RETURN. Helen's diary ends with an account of her escape to Wildfell Hall, a sanctuary provided by Frederick Lawrence, her brother. Gilbert then revisits Helen but is desolated by her announcement that they must never meet again, for she remains a married woman. Later, he disc...

Tenant Of Wildfell Hall

de Anne Brontë

Propriedade Descrição
ISBN: 9781780002392
Editor: The Copyright Group
Data de Lançamento: junho de 2013
Idioma: Inglês
Tipo de produto: Audiolivro
Tamanho Ficheiro B
Formato e Compatibilidade:
Classificação Temática: eBooks em Inglês > Outros
EAN: 9781780002392

SOBRE O AUTOR

Anne Brontë

Anne Brontë nasceu a 17 de janeiro de 1820, em West Yorkshire, Inglaterra. Sendo filha de um pobre clérigo irlandês na Igreja de Inglaterra, Anne Brontë passou a maior parte dos seus primeiros anos com a sua família na paróquia de Haworth, em West Yorkshire. Deixou Haworth para se tornar governanta entre 1839 e 1845, depois de passar muitos anos num colégio interno. Antes de publicar o seu primeiro livro de poesia, em conjunto com as suas irmãs, Anne passou a maior parte da sua vida a trabalhar. Ela e as suas irmãs, que também usavam pseudónimos, eram bem conhecidas na comunidade literária londrina quando, em 1848, finalmente se pronunciaram publicamente sobre o seu uso de pseudónimos masculinos. Anne Brontë há muito que era celebrada por críticos literários pelo seu retrato do sexismo e da violência contra as mulheres na Grã-Bretanha vitoriana. A mais nova das três irmãs Brontë é, ainda hoje, amplamente considerada como a autora do primeiro livro feminista realmente revolucionário. A republicação das suas obras foi interrompida pela sua irmã Charlotte após a sua trágica morte por tuberculose latente em 1849, aos 29 anos de idade. Por este motivo, Anne Brontë é frequentemente ignorada em favor das suas irmãs mais célebres.

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