Short Stories, Irish literature, Classics, Modern Fiction, Contemporary Literary Fiction, The Japanese Novel, Post Colonial Asian Fiction, The Legacy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and quality Historical Novels are Among my Interests








Monday, February 13, 2012

Silas Marner by George Eliiot

Silas Marner by George Eliot (1861, 210 pages)

Silas Marner is the first work of George Eliot (1819 to 1880-UK) I have ever read.   I picked it as my first Eliot because it is the shortest of her eight novels.   Her great masterwork is, of course, Middlemarch.  Based on my great liking for Silas Marner, I will be over the next few months be reading all of her novels in publication order.   (There is a good article on her life and career here.)

Silas Marner is a weaver.   He is wrongly accused of a crime and he leaves the town he grew up in.   He is a very hard working man, bothering no one.   He lives simply and frugally and manages to save a good bit of money for a working man.   He is robbed.   He then loses most of his interest in life but he goes on until he finds a dead woman in the snow who has left her baby daughter at Silas's door.

Lots going on here in terms of subplots involving two brothers but the girl who he raises sort of  humanizes the rough bachelor and turns into the greatest joy in his life.    I really liked it when the novel flashed ahead in part two sixteen years ahead in time so we could see how things will work out.

There are deep powerfully developed themes here.    Faith, hope, loyalty, faith in God, are among them.   Eliot is a very serious writer and this is a serious book.   It is not hard to read or ponderous, or at least it did not seem so to me.   I liked it so much that I will be reading all of her novels soon, I hope.

I know I have not spoken on other than to mention themes but maybe I will in subsequent posts on Eliot.   Her prose is majestic and her insights are brilliant and may shock a bit with their acuity.   Some might see her as heavy handed in pushing for the moral themes in her fiction and I can see that.   The plot of the two brother is not as strong as it might be but this is a gem of a novel by a a writer from the very center of the Canon of the English novel.

Please share your experience with Eliot with us.

Mel u


4 comments:

Rummanah Aasi said...

This was my second Eliot novel that I've read. "Mill on the Floss" was my first. While I agree that some of the characterizations and development was a bit lacking, I absolutely loved the familial love, which I think is the strongest element in this book and struck a chord with me as a reader. Glad you enjoyed the book, Mel!

Suko said...

Excellent review, Mel! My son recommended this book to me a few years ago; I haven't read it yet, but at least I know we have it.

CharmedLassie said...

I read Silas Marner after Middlemarch and it made me feel a lot better about Eliot! Although I can appreciate the beauty and breadth of Middlemarch, it's highly complex. Silas Marner, on the other hand, is a gorgeous (and relatively short) novel. It was a thoroughly enjoyable read, probably one of the best I read for my undergrad Victorian module.

Mel u said...

Rummanah Aasi -the love of Silas and his daughter is very well portrayed and very moving

Suko-I hope you get the time to read this book soon

Parish Lantern-so many books, so little time