Mr. Scarborough's Family - Anthony Trollope

Mr. Scarborough's Family

The Project Gutenberg eBook, Mr. Scarborough's Family, by Anthony Trollope
It will be necessary, for the purpose of my story, that I shall go back more than once from the point at which it begins, so that I may explain with the least amount of awkwardness the things as they occurred, which led up to the incidents that I am about to tell; and I may as well say that these first four chapters of the book—though they may be thought to be the most interesting of them all by those who look to incidents for their interest in a tale—are in this way only preliminary.
The world has not yet forgotten the intensity of the feeling which existed when old Mr. Scarborough declared that his well-known eldest son was not legitimate. Mr. Scarborough himself had not been well known in early life. He had been the only son of a squire in Staffordshire over whose grounds a town had been built and pottery-works established. In this way a property which had not originally been extensive had been greatly increased in value, and Mr. Scarborough, when he came into possession, had found himself to be a rich man. He had then gone abroad, and had there married an English lady. After the lapse of some years he had returned to Tretton Park, as his place was named, and there had lost his wife. He had come back with two sons, Mountjoy and Augustus, and there, at Tretton, he had lived, spending, however, a considerable portion of each year in chambers in the Albany. He was a man who, through many years, had had his own circle of friends, but, as I have said before, he was not much known in the world. He was luxurious and self-indulgent, and altogether indifferent to the opinion of those around him. But he was affectionate to his children, and anxious above all things for their welfare, or rather happiness. Some marvellous stories were told as to his income, which arose chiefly from the Tretton delf-works and from the town of Tretton, which had been built chiefly on his very park, in consequence of the nature of the clay and the quality of the water. As a fact, the original four thousand a year, to which his father had been born, had grown to twenty thousand by nature of the operations which had taken place. But the whole of this, whether four thousand or twenty thousand, was strictly entailed, and Mr. Scarborough had been very anxious, since his second son was born, to create for him also something which might amount to opulence. But they who knew him best knew that of all things he hated most the entail.

Anthony Trollope
Содержание

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MR. SCARBOROUGH'S FAMILY


1883


CONTENTS


PART I.


CHAPTER I.


MR. SCARBOROUGH.


CHAPTER II.


FLORENCE MOUNTJOY.


CHAPTER III.


HARRY ANNESLEY.


CHAPTER IV.


CAPTAIN SCARBOROUGH'S DISAPPEARANCE.


CHAPTER V.


AUGUSTUS SCARBOROUGH.


CHAPTER VI.


HARRY ANNESLEY TELLS HIS SECRET.


CHAPTER VII.


HARRY ANNESLEY GOES TO TRETTON.


CHAPTER VIII.


HARRY ANNESLEY TAKES A WALK.


CHAPTER IX.


AUGUSTUS HAS HIS OWN DOUBTS.


CHAPTER X.


SIR MAGNUS MOUNTJOY.


CHAPTER XI.


MONTE CARLO.


CHAPTER XII.


HARRY ANNESLEY'S SUCCESS.


CHAPTER XIII.


MRS. MOUNTJOY'S ANGER.


CHAPTER XIV.


THEY ARRIVE IN BRUSSELS.


CHAPTER XV.


MR. ANDERSON'S LOVE.


CHAPTER XVI.


MR. AND MISS GREY.


CHAPTER XVII.


MR. GREY DINES AT HOME.


CHAPTER XVIII.


THE CARROLL FAMILY.


CHAPTER XIX.


MR. GREY GOES TO TRETTON.


CHAPTER XX.


MR. GREY'S OPINION OF THE SCARBOROUGH FAMILY.


CHAPTER XXI.


MR. SCARBOROUGH'S THOUGHTS OF HIMSELF.


CHAPTER XXII.


HARRY ANNESLEY IS SUMMONED HOME.


CHAPTER XXIII.


THE RUMORS AS TO MR. PROSPER.


CHAPTER XXIV.


HARRY ANNESLEY'S MISERY.


CHAPTER XXV.


HARRY AND HIS UNCLE.


CHAPTER XXVI.


MARMADUKE LODGE.


CHAPTER XXVII.


THE PROPOSAL.


CHAPTER XXVIII.


MR. HARKAWAY.


CHAPTER XXIX.


RIDING HOME.


CHAPTER XXX.


PERSECUTION.


CHAPTER XXXI.


FLORENCE'S REQUEST.


CHAPTER XXXII.


MR. ANDERSON IS ILL.


PART II.


CHAPTER XXXIII.


MR. BARRY.


CHAPTER XXXIV.


MR. JUNIPER.


CHAPTER XXXV.


MR. BARRY AND MR. JUNIPER.


CHAPTER XXXVI.


CHAPTER XXXVII.


VICTORIA STREET.


CHAPTER XXXVIII.


THE SCARBOROUGH CORRESPONDENCE.


CHAPTER XXXIX.


HOW THE LETTERS WERE RECEIVED.


CHAPTER XL.


VISITORS AT TRETTON.


CHAPTER XLI.


MOUNTJOY SCARBOROUGH GOES TO BUSTON.


CHAPTER XLII.


CAPTAIN VIGNOLLES ENTERTAINS HIS FRIENDS.


CHAPTER XLIII.


MR. PROSPER IS VISITED BY HIS LAWYERS.


CHAPTER XLIV.


MR. PROSPER'S TROUBLES.


CHAPTER XLV.


A DETERMINED YOUNG LADY.


CHAPTER XLVI.


M. GRASCOUR.


CHAPTER XLVII.


FLORENCE BIDS FAREWELL TO HER LOVERS.


CHAPTER XLVIII.


MR. PROSPER CHANGES HIS MIND.


CHAPTER XLIX.


CAPTAIN VIGNOLLES GETS HIS MONEY.


CHAPTER L.


THE LAST OF MISS THOROUGHBUNG.


CHAPTER LI.


MR. PROSPER IS TAKEN ILL.


CHAPTER LII.


MR. BARRY AGAIN.


CHAPTER LIII.


THE BEGINNING OF THE LAST PLOT.


CHAPTER LIV.


RUMMELSBURG.


CHAPTER LV.


MR. GREY'S REMORSE.


CHAPTER LVI.


SCARBOROUGH'S REVENGE.


CHAPTER LVII.


MR. PROSPER SHOWS HIS GOOD-NATURE.


CHAPTER LVIII.


MR. SCARBOROUGH'S DEATH.


CHAPTER LIX.


JOE THOROUGHBUNG'S WEDDING.


CHAPTER LX.


MR. SCARBOROUGH IS BURIED.


CHAPTER LXI.


HARRY ANNESLEY IS ACCEPTED.


CHAPTER LXII.


THE LAST OF MR. GREY.


CHAPTER LXIII.


THE LAST OF AUGUSTUS SCARBOROUGH.


CHAPTER LXIV.


THE LAST OF FLORENCE MOUNTJOY.

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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2004-05-01

Темы

Inheritance and succession -- Fiction; Fathers and sons -- Fiction; Domestic fiction; Hertfordshire (England) -- Fiction

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