Plot
Lily Dale, her sister Bell and their widowed mother lived in the
Small House at Allington, almost as pensioners of
old Squire Dale of the Great House. The Squire's nephew and
heir Bernard had grown up with the two sisters, and Bell was the Squire's choice for the next
mistress of his beloved home. Lily fell deeply in love with one of her cousin's
London friends,
the handsome Adolphus Crosbie, and promised to marry
him. He was a selfseeking social-climber and at a
house party at Courcy
Castle, despite his
engagement to Lily, he proposed to Lady Alexandrina de Courcy and was
accepted. Lily was crushed by his faithlessness but tried unsuccessfully to
conceal her grief. Johnny Eames, who had loved her since they were children,
was so enraged that, on meeting Crosbie at a railway
station, he thrashed him soundly. This episode did not add to Crosbie's popularity and, when the affair became known at Allington, Johnny became a hero in the
neighborhood. Lord de Guest was much pleased at his prowess, undertook to
help him in his career and eventually left him a substantial legacy.
Even before his marriage, Crosbie regretted his
choice and within ten weeks after the ceremony, Lady Alexandrina left him to
retire to Baden-Baden with her mother, where she soon died. Bell
married the doctor in the nearby town of Guestwick, but Lily, despite the
unwavering devotion of Johnny Eames, refused to marry him and devoted herself
to her mother and the old Squire
GEROULD,
WINIFRED GREGORY;
A GUIDE TO TROLLOPE.
© 1948 Princeton University Press,
1976 renewed PUP
Reprinted by permission of Princeton
University Press.
Url: http://www.anthonytrollope.com/
Academic year 2008/2009
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente Forés
López
©Davinia Moreno Arroyo
Universitat de Valčncia
Press
damoa2@alumni.uv.es