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Edna Healey

Wives of Fame

Here are portraits of three very different Victorian women, all of whom married men of exceptional talent, energy and genius. To be the wife of such frenetic, explosive characters as David Livingstone, Karl Marx or Charles Darwin, especially at this period in history, demanded rare qualities. Yet the late twentieth-century view of these women is perhaps best summed up in the frequently heard comment: 'I didn't know he had a wife.'
The mid-nineteenth century was a time of unprecedented movement and upheaval. The revolutions of 1848 set Europe ablaze and sent swarms of political dissidents to seek freedom outside their homelands. Britain and her Empire were ruled by a young Queen Victoria, inspired by her enterprising, vigorous consort, Albert; it was a climate in which invention and discovery were encouraged. Men were creating new frontiers, both geographically and intellectually, and where they went their wives and families accompanied them.
334 бумажные страницы
Год выхода издания
2011
Издательства
Bloomsbury Publishing, Bloomsbury Reader
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Цитаты

  • Ирина Осипенкоцитирует5 лет назад
    Their relationship too grew easier in the last years. Tussy remembered their immense sense of humour:

    Assuredly two people never enjoyed a joke more than these two. Again and again - especially if the occasion were demanding decorum and sedateness -have I seen them laugh till the tears ran down their cheeks, and even those inclined to be shocked at such awful levity could not choose but laugh with them. And how often have I seen them not daring to look at one another, each knowing that once a glance was exchanged uncontrollable laughter would result. To see these two with eyes fixed on anything but one another, for all the world like two schoolchildren suffocating with suppressed laughter … is a memory I would not barter for all the millions I am sometimes accredited with having inherited.

    One of Tussy’s theatrical friends remembered the relaxed, good-humoured atmosphere of the Marxes’ home in these later years. Tussy was a leading member of a Shakespeare reading club, the Dogberry, whose fortnightly meetings were often held at Maitland Park. Marx and Jenny in these later years rarely went out at night, so they delighted in the readings. Jenny must have taken part, though Marx never did. According to Marian Skinner, a friend, ‘He had a guttural voice and decided German accent’ - and he was very self-conscious. Jenny herself was remembered as a lovable, charming woman, obviously beautiful in her youth - ‘but ill health and perhaps turbulent times, had taken their toll. Her skin had faded to a waxen pallor, there were purple brown stains under her eyes, yet there was still an air of breeding about her and a certain distinction of manner.’
  • Ирина Осипенкоцитирует5 лет назад
    I should so like to live a little longer
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