The Wayward MuseSimon and Schuster, 20 mar 2007 - 272 páginas "I apologize again for my boldness, but I must tell you that you're the most beautiful girl in Oxford. Maybe in all of England. I have to put you in my painting." With these words, the scandalous, wildly talented painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti changes seventeen-year-old Jane Burden's life forever. Jane's gaunt, awkward figure and grave expression have cemented her reputation as the ugliest girl in Oxford. Raised by a stableman on Holywell Street -- the town's most sordid and despicable slum -- Jane is nearly resigned to marry in-kind. But when she meets Rossetti at the theater, he sees beyond her worn, ill-fitting dress and unruly hair and is stirred by her unconventional beauty. The charismatic painter whisks Jane into Oxford's exclusive art scene as his muse, and during the long and intimate hours of modeling -- draping and tilting, gazing and posing -- Jane finds herself falling in love. When Rossetti abruptly leaves Oxford with no plans to return, brokenhearted Jane settles for a stable, if passionless, marriage to his soft-spoken protégé, William Morris -- the man who would go on to become the father of the British Arts and Crafts Movement. Jane resigns herself to life as a respectable wife and mother, exchanging the slop bucket for intricate needlepoint, willing away the memories of Rossetti and what could have been. But Rossetti and Jane are inextricably bound together by tragedy, art, and desire, and no amount of time or distance can separate them. Ultimately this complicated arrangement with which Jane, Morris, and Rossetti must learn to live threatens to undo them all. Richly textured and deftly portrayed, Elizabeth Hickey's latest is a compelling portrait of the ever-changing notions of both love and beauty. |
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Página 1
... told her mother that she would not have children. When she was reproached with this, she thought to herself that it was terribly unfair to be blamed for something that was not her fault. She couldn't help it that her father and her. [1] ...
... told her mother that she would not have children. When she was reproached with this, she thought to herself that it was terribly unfair to be blamed for something that was not her fault. She couldn't help it that her father and her. [1] ...
Página 2
... told everyone who met her of her misery and her despair. They told of a girl who had ceased to hope for anything, who had gone deep inside herself to withstand her lot. It made the others uneasy. Jane fretted about her ugliness, of ...
... told everyone who met her of her misery and her despair. They told of a girl who had ceased to hope for anything, who had gone deep inside herself to withstand her lot. It made the others uneasy. Jane fretted about her ugliness, of ...
Página 3
... told. Bite your tongue, thought Jane. They had lived in four houses in three years, each more terrible than the last. Though she could not imagine what could be worse than living next to the privy. There was the smell, of course, and ...
... told. Bite your tongue, thought Jane. They had lived in four houses in three years, each more terrible than the last. Though she could not imagine what could be worse than living next to the privy. There was the smell, of course, and ...
Página 6
... told her we should wait until you got home, but Jane never listens to me,” said Bessie. “Shut up, Bessie,” said Mrs. Burden, “and start the supper. I want to speak to Jane alone.” “What will I use for vegetables?” whined Bessie. “Go ...
... told her we should wait until you got home, but Jane never listens to me,” said Bessie. “Shut up, Bessie,” said Mrs. Burden, “and start the supper. I want to speak to Jane alone.” “What will I use for vegetables?” whined Bessie. “Go ...
Página 14
... told herself that the young man must be ridiculing her poor dress or laughing at her ugliness. What other reason could he have for staring? When she turned back to look, they had gone, and Bessie was beside her again, holding the ...
... told herself that the young man must be ridiculing her poor dress or laughing at her ugliness. What other reason could he have for staring? When she turned back to look, they had gone, and Bessie was beside her again, holding the ...
Índice
Sección 18 | 188 |
Sección 19 | 199 |
Sección 20 | 204 |
Sección 21 | 211 |
Sección 22 | 220 |
Sección 23 | 225 |
Sección 24 | 228 |
Sección 25 | 234 |
Sección 9 | 103 |
Sección 10 | 111 |
Sección 11 | 122 |
Sección 12 | 128 |
Sección 13 | 137 |
Sección 14 | 146 |
Sección 15 | 153 |
Sección 16 | 166 |
Sección 17 | 179 |
Sección 26 | 240 |
Sección 27 | 248 |
Sección 28 | 257 |
Sección 29 | 266 |
Sección 30 | 271 |
Sección 31 | 285 |
Sección 32 | 291 |
Sección 33 | 292 |
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Términos y frases comunes
artists asked Jane asked Morris baby Barnstable began Bessie better blue Burden Burne-Jones can’t carriage color couldn’t course Dante Gabriel Rossetti dinner doctor door drawing dress easel eyes face Fanny Cornforth Faulkner feel floor Gabriel Georgie girl gone Guinevere hair hand He’s head heard Holywell Street hope husband I’ve Iceland imagine Jane asked Jane Burden Jane felt Jane knew Jane saw Jane thought Jane tried Jane’s Jenny Kelmscott Kelmscott Manor kissed lady laudanum laughed live Lizzie Lizzie’s London look Maria Zambaco married Miss Lipscombe Morris’s mother never night Oxford Oxford Union painting Perhaps poem pulled Red House Ruskin seemed setti sewing shook sitting sketches sleep smiled someone sorry stared stop sure tell There’s things told took trying turned waited walked Wallingford wife William Morris window won’t wondered you’re