The Warden
Anthony Trollope
Paperback
(CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, June 24, 2017)
"No novel of any distinguished merit dealing with politics appeared in England till Anthony Trollope took up the subject....It should seem that Trollope, having exploited the clergy with brilliant force in 'The Warden' and its successors, was the first author to apprehend clearly what might be made in fiction of the fortunes of a group of politicians, their leaders, underlings, and antagonists, seeking to hold or to seize the reins of power in England." The Atlantic Monthly "There is a delicacy in some of his best work which proves him an artist, not a photographer. In 'The Warden,' the character of Mr. Harding, the gentle and lovable old clergyman whose sense of honor will not permit him to retain his living after the suggestion has been made that the stipend attached to it is unjustly large, is drawn with a marvelously fine touch. Mr. Harding has been compared to Colonel Newcome; it is high praise, but the two are kin....One of Trollope's strongest claims to be ranked among the great novelists of his day has perhaps never been sufficiently considered. It is not the least of his merits that his women are as true to life as are his men....He was at no time impressed with the need of taking his women with painful seriousness, and we have no laborious studies of the subtle in feminity such as later writers have given us. His heroines are without exception concerned with the simple everyday themes of 'she would and she would not' and its variations, merging at times into the equally simple but less agreeable 'she would but he would not.' And in dealing with these affairs of the heart, 'the apostle of the commonplace,' as some contemptuous critic once dubbed Trollope, was preeminently successful. He has given us more and better pictures of the English girl in love than all his fellows together....The present generation readers has much to be grateful for in the restoration of Anthony Trollope. Forty novels, none of them poor and many admirable, are a treasure trove indeed....The novelists of tomorrow have much to gain by reading Anthony Trollope." -The Dial "An interesting and realistic story of la cathedral town. This is the first of a series of books dealing with the same place and people, and each book is simply a period taken arbitrarily from the history of the community. But the people and their troubles are so natural that most readers of 'The Warden' desire to finish the series." -The Massachusetts Agricultural College Extension Service "An excellent little story, and a signal instance of Trollope's habit of offering us the spectacle of character. A motive-more delicate, more slender, as well as more charming, could scarcely be conceived. It is simply the history of an old man's conscience....The subject of 'The Warden,' exactly viewed, is the opposition of the two natures of Archdeacon Grantley and Mr. Harding, and there is nothing finer in all Trollope than the vividness with which this opposition is presented....Some persons profess to regard 'The Warden' as the author's masterpiece." -The Century Illustrated Monthly