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Gryll Grange

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Gryll Grange is a satirical novel written by Thomas Love Peacock and published in 1861. The book tells the story of a group of intellectuals who retreat to the country estate of Gryll Grange to escape the pressures of modern society and engage in philosophical discussions. The main character, Mr. Falconer, is a wealthy man who has grown tired of the shallow and materialistic society he lives in. He invites a group of friends to stay at his estate, where they engage in debates about politics, religion, and social issues. The novel is a critique of Victorian society, particularly the obsession with money and status. Peacock uses humor and irony to expose the flaws of his characters and their beliefs. The book also includes elements of romance, as several characters fall in love and struggle with their feelings. Overall, Gryll Grange is a witty and entertaining novel that provides insight into the intellectual and social climate of Victorian England. It is a must-read for fans of satire and 19th-century literature.This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the old original and may contain some imperfections such as library marks and notations. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions, that are true to their original work.

332 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1861

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About the author

Thomas Love Peacock

325 books61 followers
Thomas Love Peacock (1785-1866) was an English novelist and poet. For most of his life, Peacock worked for the East India Co. He was a close friend of Percy Bysshe Shelley, who greatly inspired his writing. His best verse is interspersed in his novels, which are dominated by the conversations of their characters and satirize the intellectual currents of the day. His best-known work, Nightmare Abbey (1818), satirizes romantic melancholy and includes characters based on Shelley, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Lord Byron.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
131 reviews14 followers
April 10, 2010
Gryll Grange was the last of Thomas Love Peacock’s novels, published when he was seventy-five. It reads as though he threw in all those things that he had never found a good place for before. The result is extraordinary: very, very good at its best, just plain odd at its worst.

In fewer than 300 pages, Gryll Grange includes a number of poems, several acts of a comedy based on Aristophanes’ Clouds, a good deal of after-dinner conversation about literature and philosophy, some wicked satire and a couple of extremely strange rants. The grand finale contains a wedding for nine couples. All this came from a man who had to leave school at thirteen and educate himself at the local reading library, albeit the one at the British Museum.

Mr. Gryll. I am afraid we live in a world of misnomers, and of a worse kind than this. In my little experience I have found that a gang of swindling bankers is a respectable old firm; that men who sell their votes to the highest bidder, and want only 'the protection of the ballot' to sell the promise of them to both parties, are a free and independent constituency; that a man who successively betrays everybody that trusts him, and abandons every principle he ever professed, is a great statesman, and a Conservative, forsooth, a nil conservando; that schemes for breeding pestilence are sanitary improvements; that the test of intellectual capacity is in swallow, and not in digestion; that the art of teaching everything, except what will be of use to the recipient, is national education; and that a change for the worse is reform. – Gryll Grange, Thomas Love Peacock (1860)

The trick with Peacock, even more than other satirists, seems to be to never forget that the characters are not necessarily declaiming the author’s views. In fact, the whole point is often to make the opinions so ridiculous that we can never again take them seriously. For example, if I had not known that Peacock had recommended the use of steamboats to the East India Company, I might have really believed his diatribes against those infernal, exploding machines.

Intertwined in all this is a love story that could have come straight from Shakespeare with its couples swapping partners until they got it right. These lovers are not the vapid little fortune-hunting minxes and two-dimensional possessors of fortunes of Jane Austen. They are intelligent, educated people with interesting things to say about life and marriage. For these chapters alone, Gryll Grange is worth reading.
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188 reviews1 follower
February 25, 2021
The last if Peacock's novels, the humour here is kinder, gentler, and also less laugh out loud funny. He has more plot than conversation, a welcome departure.
He has his cranks and crotchets and condemnations of modern progress (starships and telegraphs, whist, the competitive examination) which make for some of the humour. Keep in mind some of the crotchets are not truly his, but those of his characters.

The romances are amusing and I see Peacock here as a link between Shakespeare's Twelth Night or the Tèmpest and any Gilbert and Sullivan.
A pleasant read.

One important exception to the pleasant reading is a chapter where the company discuss American slavery and the character of the African race, and another section where they discuss Cleopatra and why she was Greek and not Nubian. While this is true, the terms of both the discussions were grotesque to today's reader and should have been to Peacock himself.
124 reviews2 followers
June 20, 2023
Made me realize I need to read more classic works from Greek and Roman times, because the references are many. Also helps to read Greek, I suppose. At places, laugh out loud funny. Will need to read again.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews