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Silas Marner (Wordsworth Classics)
Silas Marner (Wordsworth Classics)

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Author: George Eliot
Publisher: Wordsworth Editions Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £1.99
Buy Used: £0.01
You Save: £1.98 (99%)



New (23) from £0.01

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 15 reviews
Sales Rank: 15158

Media: Paperback
Edition: New Ed
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 176
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 4.9 x 0.6

ISBN: 1853262218
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
UPC: 001853262218
EAN: 9781853262210
ASIN: 1853262218

Publication Date: October 1, 1994
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: Paperback. Same isbn, different cover. Stamp to first page. Tight and clean copy. Light wear. No damage. VG condition.

Similar Items:

  • "Silas Marner" (York Notes)
  • The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories
  • Middlemarch (Wordsworth Classics)
  • Haroun and the Sea of Stories (Puffin Books)
  • Jacob's Room (Oxford World's Classics)

Customer Reviews:   Read 10 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars WOW!   March 4, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Awesome book, simply awesome to the max. The kind of book that's so thrilling, you can't help but jump in the air and exclaim your glee with extreme volume every other page - indeed, I was thrown off the train for that very reason. I finished reading the book at the station in a feast of jumping and yelling, and I regret nothing.

Can't wait for the sequel!



4 out of 5 stars A beautiful novel.   October 20, 2007
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Silas Marner is an honest and kind master weaver whose life is destroyed by the betrayal of his trusted best friend.
Having lost his home, friends and family, fiancee, his job and most significantly - his faith in God, he finds himself in the rural village of Raveloe a bitter and broken man. He spends his days alone and unhappy, weaving linen for the village folk - his loom and the money he makes from it becoming an obsession, and his only hateful joy is the habitual counting of his hard earned bags of gold which he keeps hidden in a hole under his bed.
One night his precious money is stolen and Silas is heartbroken and inconsolable until the day when he finds a beautiful baby girl asleep in front of his fire. As no one knows where she came from He decides to keep her, bringing her up as his own and she transforms his life, bringing hope, love, faith and happiness to an otherwise meaningless existence.
Although I found this novel difficult to get into, the first few chapters I found hard going, I am glad I persevered as this is a genuine classic.



5 out of 5 stars Reversal of fortune, recovery of faith   November 23, 2005
 10 out of 14 found this review helpful

George Eliot, born Marian Evans in 1819, spent most of her early life in rural Warwickshire. This early upbringing is apparent from her easy comfort in writing about country settings, with attention to detail and niceties that a born-Londoner would generally not be able to provide. Eliot's life was not that of the typical Victorian lady; she worked in publishing, including periodicals, translations, and writing her own fiction. Eliot led a 'colourful' life; living in a common-law marriage with Lewes, a man who left his wife and children for her, she then married after his death a man twenty years her junior, only to die eight months later.

Silas is a weaver, a rather grumpy and sour man, whose primary occupation and avocation is the making of money. He is an outsider in Raveloe, having been driven from his earlier community under the false accusation of theft, an accusation that also cost him his engagement to his beloved, and left him with little faith in human nature, particularly that of the church-ly humans.

The high society in Raveloe reached the pinnacle in the Cass family. Squire Cass had two sons, Godfrey and Dunstan, each his own unique form of scoundrel. Godfrey, who had an illicit marriage to a local barmaid Molly, is being blackmailed by his spendthrift brother Dunstan. Alas, Godfrey is expected to marry another, Nancy Lammeter, daughter of another society family. Godfrey attempts to buy off Dunstan with his horse, Wildfire, and during a journey to sell the horse Dunstan accidentally injures and kills Wildfire.

Dunstan is stranded in the countryside, but sees light from a cottage -- the home of Silas Marner, reputed after fifteen years of weaving and miserly activity of having accumulated a large stash. He steals the bags of money he finds in the deserted cottage, and disappears into the night.

Silas reports the theft, but is unaided. He is heartbroken, for his life's purpose has been the accumulation of this wealth. No one seems to make the connexion between the lost money and the disappearance of Dunstan (one flaw in the novel, in my opinion). Silas gradually recovers from this blow, and the people of Raveloe begin for the first time to see him in terms of friendship.

At a Christmas party, the Cass family is in full celebration, for the upcoming marriage of Godfrey and Nancy. However, Nancy is not pleased, given Godfrey's reputation. Later in the holiday season, Molly makes her way to the Cass estate and confronts Godfrey with a two-year-old daughter in tow. Upon her return from the estate, she falls and dies in a drunken, drug-induced stupor, and the child wanders through the snow to the cottage of Silas. Silas lays claim to the golden-haired child, and Godfrey is relieved to be free from Molly and paternity.

Sixteen years pass, and we come to meet a very different Silas, one who is now a truly human being, who is loved, and has an object of love in his daughter Eppie. Eppie is in fact about to be wed to the nice Aaron Winthrop. Godfrey and Nancy, however, have had a loveless and childless marriage.

Things develop rapidly near the end of the novel. A pond near Silas' cottage is drained, and the remains of Dunstand with two bags of gold coins is found. Godfrey feels compelled to tell his wife now everything, how Dunstan dishonoured the family, how he (Godfrey) was being blackmailed, and admits his paternity of Eppie. Nancy is strangely tolerant -- she only complains of not having been told sooner. They decide to demand that Eppie be returned to them.

In a beautiful scene of compassion and love, Eppie, given the free choice of deciding between Silas and connexion with the noble Cass family, opts for the man who was her true father, and chooses to remain with Silas.

Later, Silas and Eppie revisit Lantern Yard, from which Silas was expelled so many years before. Here in no longer the old church, his old home, or his old friends -- all has changed; life has gone on. The old place is dirty and noisy by comparison to the serene Raveloe. The question of Silas' guilt or innocence cannot be resolved, but then, is no longer a question of concern for anyone in either place. Eppie then marries Aaron, in a wedding paid for by Godfrey, who cannot attend due to business, and Eppie declares in the end that 'nobody could be happier than we are.'

Elliot intended to show that misfortune can lead to greater things, and provided a typical Victorian happy ending.

This novel has been a traditional one assigned to students of secondary school age for decades now; it is a classic, fairly simple in construction and vocabulary, and brings up the timeless themes of good, evil, fate, and has a wide range of characters who change over time. Alas, many school-age readers come away cold, often determined never to read another novel again, as it is presented poorly and not put in a more modern context which students will more readily understand. But, it remains a good story, and a fine representative of the Victorian novel.


1 out of 5 stars Tedium that eats away at your soul   June 2, 2005
 11 out of 68 found this review helpful

Don't read this. It's a hundred pages too long and a very poor story to begin with.

A novel for people who are looking for fancy prose rather than substance, though I doubt even these people could put up with the smug, self indulgent, ridiculously overrated writing of George Elliot and the dispicable excuse for a story.

Plus, the character of Silas Marner is not at all likeable and impossible to empathise with, unless you're one of those people who does the weekly shopping dressed in only a bathrobe and a ski mask (I don't care how many 'not useful' clicks that earns me).


5 out of 5 stars Pure gold   November 8, 2004
 23 out of 26 found this review helpful

If you have a heart, the story of Silas Marner will warm it. You are better coming to it fresh, without knowing anything of the simple yet solid plot, so I will say nothing of it. I will just urge you to read this wonderful book. Eliot writes beautifully and from page one, you realize you are in the hands of a true artist. This is a very human, very English story of simple people living through those very basic emotions that make the world turn and give the universe meaning.



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