Search Results

Found 1 results for "da68d8133555ed1f2ddedcbcd4a2b33f" across all boards searching md5.

Anonymous /lit/24522200#24522707
7/5/2025, 9:30:04 AM
>>24522486
you may enjoy "a country doctor" by sarah orne jewett, then. her prose isn't half as good, but the vibes are similar. the only woman whose prose i have found comparable in quality to cather's is wharton, though their style and subject matter is very different. wharton's work is very flowery (often literally, she never misses a chance to describe flowers) and she writes only about the rich. even so, i did enjoy "the age of innocence". excerpt:
>:For the first time he perceived how elementary his own principles had always been. He passed for a young man who had not been afraid of risks, and he knew that his secret love-affair with poor silly Mrs. Thorley Rushworth had not been too secret to invest him with a becoming air of adventure. But Mrs. Rushworth was "that kind of woman"; foolish, vain, clandestine by nature, and far more attracted by the secrecy and peril of the affair than by such charms and qualities as he possessed. When the fact dawned on him it nearly broke his heart, but now it seemed the redeeming feature of the case. The affair, in short, had been of the kind that most of the young men of his age had been through, and emerged from with calm consciences and an undisturbed belief in the abysmal distinction between the women one loved and respected and those one enjoyed—and pitied. In this view they were sedulously abetted by their mothers, aunts and other elderly female relatives, who all shared Mrs. Archer's belief that when "such things happened" it was undoubtedly foolish of the man, but somehow always criminal of the woman. All the elderly ladies whom Archer knew regarded any woman who loved imprudently as necessarily unscrupulous and designing, and mere simple-minded man as powerless in her clutches. The only thing to do was to persuade him, as early as possible, to marry a nice girl, and then trust to her to look after him."