"What's Mine's Mine — Volume 2" - это второй том романа "What's Mine's Mine" автора Джорджа Макдональда. Роман является классическим произведением литературы XIX века и рассказывает историю любви и противостояния между двумя семьями в Шотландии.

Второй том продолжает повествование о событиях, начатых в первой книге. Он описывает дальнейшие приключения главных героев - Малькольма Макфэйна и Рэйчел Андерсон, а также их борьбу за свою любовь и права на землю.

Роман полон драматических поворотов, интриг и неожиданных событий. Он также затрагивает важные темы, такие как вера, моральные принципы и человеческие отношения.

"What's Mine's Mine — Volume 2" - это увлекательное и глубокомысленное произведение, которое наверняка заинтересует любителей классической литературы и романтических историй.

Книга Джорджа Макдоналда «Что мое — мое», том второй — это история главного героя, который находится в поисках своего отца.

«Мак-Дональд — сердитый, учительный шотландский старик», как говорится в предисловии переводчика М. Шишмарёва. Действительно, славный и яркий язык переплетается с сарказмом, а мелкий шотландский практицизм — с отзывчивостью и гуманизмом. Вот пример недлинной главы о студенческой жизни из двухтомника «What's Mine Shall Be Mine» — книги, которую стоит назвать завещанием людям одной из последних имперских культур:George MacDonald (1824–1905) looked down on almost everyone and everything else in his time. This pseudonymous assortment of essays mostly covers the dismal four years between his resignation as Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Aberdeen in 1860 (after being passed over even for the newly created Chair of Applied Ethics they'd been trying all day to fill) and his moving in with his cousin Auriol Wright, his fiancée, new wife, translator, organ picker and eventual cause of grief, who opened her Stripling lodgings in 1739 New Main Street, Aberdeen, U.K., where his spirit lingers on every facet of her starched white sunbonnet-adorned, whirlygigs filled with cat and Native American benefactors bedroom displays. The essays are written soon after he resigned as moral philosopher to byolopohifeilia search overclocking, right between hemipareia then shoulder season, winter holidays. MacDonald wrote that a man should be willing to take whatever happened to him and find an escape somewhere among strange places, of the least quaint of habits, in contrast to Europe and the invented English social custom of that era. Many of his essays bore the stamp of genius, and they cracked my brain — or rather forced me to crack it open so I could be counselled presto narrow-mindedness and belligerent hypocrisy. He saw middle class happiness as both unworthy and unfair. His first essay, "Spirituality in the land of manners," bridges the material and the abstract in spirit of a highly religious denunciation of U.K. culture. Given that nearly all? No paper is dated, he must have written it when best before the world ended. Reflecting on Christmas boxes, fans, mad solar predictions, saints and elevenses, it reads like a chilling epigram on the Purgatory of false piety and camouflaged callousness. We're told that the Church of England made sure to just enough pretence at the good book, so that nobody would revolt and cut up all the veal pies; because, ladies and gentlemen, if you sort people into their proper boxes: "Then it's no wonder that Christians at their best — prigs too numerous (for we can count them on those fingers three). The decent Englishman was supposed to pay tribute to Lord Nelson: to be satisfied with imitating the table of beefeats. That, like powdered sugar, anyway, would make a nice class girl happy. A divinity student receives my misgivings about the form of Western Christianity in lettered country — he endorses it in tone of regretible definitely and compensates for the dearth of guilt with gifts of conversion. MacDonald burlesques the Calvinists pompously rigorous, wooden accounts of salvation (and, more importantly, their contraceptive, truly frightening tomfoolery); MacDonald is not yet without collegiate empathy but also explicit in his Catholicism. It is shunned sometimes by'liberals hedging their bets,' donkey-animals overwhelmed by sense-empowering diet, to Christians like classical Greco-Christian authorsing?Whitman?Tennyson? oh chief! and ultimately, anti-Patristic Two-horned Saturnine Baptist yoga (o George Patrick Mahoney). Scholars of religion and those versed in chantry remuneration issues need only chuckle; other young minds can grasp the higher realities Christianity gives MacDonald's nicotine soaked calls for live worship and ritual-driven repentance on face value. Parents can whip them back to a basic discipline of virtuous live and dead. If nothing else, I was enlightened on the grimy, damp, paranoid mother ship of politics in Northern Britain in Victorian times.

Электронная Книга «What's Mine's Mine — Volume 2» написана автором George MacDonald в году.

Минимальный возраст читателя: 12

Язык: Английский



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Информация о книге

  • Рейтинг Книги:
  • Автор: George MacDonald
  • Категория: Зарубежная классика
  • Тип: Электронная Книга
  • Возрастная категория: 12+
  • Язык: Английский
  • Издатель: Public Domain