North and South North and South

North and South

    • 4.3 • 32 Ratings

Publisher Description

The Novel

The North is a manufacturing town with its inhabitants in the cotton district. The South is chiefly represented by an amiable ex-clergyman and his family. The circumstance which induces Mr. Hale, with his wife and daughter Margaret, to quit the South and his living in the New Forest, is a doubt relating to the Church. He goes to Milton-Northern to add to his small income by teaching the classics to youthful manufacturers. The North is characteristically represented by Mr. Thornton, a manufacturer of respectable family, but who has had to work his way through difficulties and poverty in consequence of his father's extravagance and reckless speculations. A sort of family acquaintance springs up in consequence. Although somewhat mortified at the reserve and indifference of Margaret, Thornton ends by falling in love, with a depth and intensity of feeling belonging to his character…


The Author

Elizabeth Gaskell was born in the year 1811 and was brought up by her aunts residing at Knutsford, Cheshire. In 1832 she married the William Gaskell, minister of the Unitarian Chapel, Cross Street, Manchester. Her first novel was Mary Barton, a picture of Manchester life among the working classes, which appeared anonymously in 1848. The Moorland Cottage, a simple little Christmas book, followed in 1850. Two years later appeared the novel Ruth. Elizabeth Gaskell published some sketches of life in a small country town, which were contributed to Household Words under the title of Cranford. In 1855, the novel North and South appeared, in which she returns to the manufacturing districts of Yorkshire. In 1857 she published a life of Charlotte Brontë. Elizabeth Gaskell's death in 1865 was most sudden. She expired instantaneously, while conversing with her daughters, on her return from church. The novel Wives and Daughters was left incomplete by her sudden decease.


Contemporary Reviews

The Spectator, March 1855 — Elizabeth Gaskell displays that intellectual quality understood by the word power. She has power in conception, power in depiction, power in expression. 


Athenaeum, 1855 — We imagine that this year will produce few better tales than North and South,—which its author has gathered from the columns of a weekly contemporary, retouched and extended. Elizabeth Gaskell possesses some of an artist's best qualities. She will be attended to, having never as yet written without engaging the reader's interest, whether he agrees with or dissents from her philosophies. Her dialogue is natural,—her eye for character is keen. She enjoys humour, obviously,—she calls out pathos skilfully.


The Eclectic Magazine, December 1855North and South is extremely clever as a story; and, without taking any secondary qualification to build its merits upon, it is perhaps better and livelier than any of Elizabeth Gaskell’s previous works. North and South has, of necessity, some good sketches of the “hands” and their homes, but it is Mr. Thornton’s fierce and rugged course of true love to which the author is most anxious to direct our attention.


Harper & Brothers, 1855 — Equally remarkable with Mary Barton for its keen perception of character and motives, its fine touches of humanity, its comprehensive and genial sympathies, and the combined terseness and grace of its style. The incidents are drawn from the common social life of England, and are described with such exquisite naturalness as to produce an ineffaceable impression of reality.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
1855
December 14
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
792
Pages
PUBLISHER
Silver Fork Novels
SELLER
Silver Fork Novels
SIZE
865.5
KB

Customer Reviews

Froginastorm ,

Such a captivating story, though sometimes I admit the numerous details can be overwhelming, and sometimes the speech can be a but tricky to understand. Beautiful story though - if you have seen the tv series but not read the book, know there are differences, including some timelines and events. I do feel given the length of the story as a whole the ending seems a bit rushed and abrupt, but a wonderful ending to be sure!

More Books Like This

North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell - Delphi Classics (Illustrated)
2017
North and south North and south
1854
Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South, Abridged Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South, Abridged
2018
Works of Elizabeth Gaskell Works of Elizabeth Gaskell
2010
Delphi Collected Works of Margaret Oliphant with Complete Stories of the Seen and Unseen Delphi Collected Works of Margaret Oliphant with Complete Stories of the Seen and Unseen
2015
Mary Barton by Elizabeth Gaskell - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) Mary Barton by Elizabeth Gaskell - Delphi Classics (Illustrated)
2017

More Books by Elizabeth Gaskell

250 Greatest Books Collection 250 Greatest Books Collection
2023
100 Greatest Books 100 Greatest Books
2018
Wives and Daughters Wives and Daughters
1865
L'Œuvre d'une nuit de mai L'Œuvre d'une nuit de mai
2013
Cranford Cranford
1853
250 Masterpieces You Have to Read Before You Die 250 Masterpieces You Have to Read Before You Die
2023

Customers Also Bought

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
1848
Villette Villette
1853
Agnes Grey Agnes Grey
1847
Northanger Abbey Northanger Abbey
1803
Mansfield Park Mansfield Park
1814
The Mysteries of Udolpho The Mysteries of Udolpho
1794