| Green Dolphin Street by Elizabeth Goudge |
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| Written by Margaret and Kristen McGuire | |
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Finally! The works of Elizabeth Goudge are being reprinted! You do not want to miss the books that many older women have told me they read and re-read as teens. I think it is my favorite book ever...even now in my forties!
To write this review, I only meant to read a few passages to remind myself of the the highlights. At 1:45 a.m., I guiltily clicked off the lamp and trundled into bed, where my husband grunted his disapproval. All through the exhaustion of the following day, however, my happy soul reminded me that some books are better than a good night's sleep.
The first time I read it, I needed its core insight that vocation, and marriage in particular, has supernatural meaning. Now, looking at it as a middle-aged mother, I see so many interesting side lessons. To keep me focused, my daughter Margaret offers the following helpful summary:
Marguerite and Marianne LePatournel are sisters in this pre-Victorian setting in Calais. The elder, Marianne, is short, dark, intelligent and fiercely independent. She is *unscrupulous in pursuit of her desires* and sets up a rivalry with her happy, fair and spiritual younger sister, Marguerite. Both women love William Ozanne, the son of their mother*s lost love. The girls and William are inseparable.
William leaves their island home between England and France, and after a disastrous career at sea, settles in New Zealand. He decides to send away for his love to join him among the Maori heathen. When writing the letter of marriage proposal to the girls' father, William makes a terrible error. (We can't give away the plot, but there was whiskey involved.) He does marry one sister, and the other sister joins a convent. You*ll have to guess which one and why. What a story!
Just be careful not to apply modern day standards to this book, which was published in 1944 and displays objectionable racial prejudices and antiquated diction. The movie version starring Lana Turner is worth a look as well. Enjoy!
1. Marianne is presented as the ideal of a woman who takes her vision of a man and molds him into a worldly success. Conversely, Marguerite is idealized as the conduit of the Holy Spirit in William's life. In your life, which sister do you feel closer to, and why?
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