Armadale
Описание книги
Wilkie Collins has given us in this novel one more instance of his strange capacity for weaving extra plots. Armadale, from beginning to end, is a lurid labyrinth of improbabilities. It produces upon the reader the effect of a literary nightmare. Miss Gwilt, Mrs. Oldershaw, and Doctor Le Doux of the Sanatorium are enough to make any story in which they figure disagreeably sensational; and Mr. Collins seizes every possible opportunity of working up the horror they inspire to the highest point. If it were the object of art to make one's audience uncomfortable without letting them know why, Mr. Wilkie Collins would be beyond all doubt a consummate artist. To the accomplishment of this object he devotes great ingenuity, a curious genius for arranging and contriving mysteries, and a good deal of what may be called galvanic power. There is a sort of unearthly and deadly look about the heroes and heroines of his narrative, and though it is necessary for the purpose of the plot that they should keep moving, we feel, that every, one of their motions is due, not to a natural process, but to the sheer force and energy of the author's will. They dodge each other up and down the stage after the manner of puppets at a puppet-show, and after watching their twistings and turnings from first to last we come away full of admiration of the strings and the unseen fingers that are directing everything from behind the curtain. An ordinary novelist would let the villains murder their intended victim at once, and have done with it. Not so Mr. Wilkie Collins. A hundred agencies are brought into play to suspend our interest through this long volume. Spies, detective officers, lawyers, and two or three virtuous and watchful amateurs counterplot day and night against the villains. Each dogs the other till he is tired, and when he is tired the other dogs him. They overhear each other's secrets from behind trees, or lurk unsuspected under windows, keeping diaries sometimes of their proceedings. To heighten the absorbing interest of this contest of intelligences, railways, telegraphy, post-offices, presentiments, and dreams are freely used ; and the wonders of science do duty side by side with the marvels of the supernatural world. As a whole the effect is clever, powerful, and striking, though grotesque, monotonous, and, to use a French word, bizarre. There can be no mistake about the talent displayed. What strikes one as wanting is that humor which is the salt of all great genius, and that sense of proportion and beauty which is the soul of all real art.
Оглавление
Wilkie Collins. Armadale
CONTENTS:
PROLOGUE. I. THE TRAVELERS
II. THE SOLID SIDE OF THE SCOTCH CHARACTER
III. THE WRECK OF THE TIMBER SHIP
THE STORY. BOOK THE FIRST. I. THE MYSTERY OF OZIAS MIDWINTER
II. THE MAN REVEALED
III. DAY AND NIGHT
IV. THE SHADOW OF THE PAST
V. THE SHADOW OF THE FUTURE
BOOK THE SECOND. I. LURKING MISCHIEF
II. ALLAN AS A LANDED GENTLEMAN
III. THE CLAIMS OF SOCIETY
IV. THE MARCH OF EVENTS
V. MOTHER OLDERSHAW ON HER GUARD
VI. MIDWINTER IN DISGUISE
VII. THE PLOT THICKENS
VIII. THE NORFOLK BROADS
IX. FATE OR CHANCE?
X. THE HOUSE-MAID’S FACE
XI. MISS GWILT AMONG THE QUICKSANDS
XII. THE CLOUDING OF THE SKY
XIII. EXIT
BOOK THE THIRD. I. MRS. MILROY
II. THE MAN IS FOUND
III. THE BRINK OF DISCOVERY
IV. ALLAN AT BAY
V. PEDGIFT’S REMEDY
VI. PEDGIFT’S POSTSCRIPT
VII. THE MARTYRDOM OF MISS GWILT
VIII. SHE COMES BETWEEN THEM
IX. SHE KNOWS THE TRUTH
X. MISS GWILT’S DIARY
XI. LOVE AND LAW
XII. A SCANDAL AT THE STATION
XIII. AN OLD MAN’S HEART
XIV. MISS GWILT’S DIARY
XV. THE WEDDING-DAY
BOOK THE FOURTH. I. MISS GWILT’S DIARY
II. THE DIARY CONTINUED
III. THE DIARY BROKEN OFF
BOOK THE LAST. I. AT THE TERMINUS
II. IN THE HOUSE
III. THE PURPLE FLASK
EPILOGUE. I. NEWS FROM NORFOLK
II. MIDWINTER
APPENDIX
Отрывок из книги
WILKIE COLLINS
I. THE TRAVELERS. 1
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“Remember how my confidence had been abused; remember how the one good purpose of my life had been thwarted; remember the violent passions rooted deep in my nature, and never yet controlled—and then imagine for yourself what passed between us. All I need tell here is the end. He was a taller and a stronger man than I, and he took his brute’s advantage with a brute’s ferocity. He struck me.
“Think of the injuries I had received at that man’s hands, and then think of his setting his mark on my face by a blow!
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