A Life's Morning

A Life's Morning is a novel by English author George Gissing.[1] Although written in the space of three months during 1886 it was first published, in serial form, beginning January 1888, in Cornhill Magazine[2] before being released by Smith, Elder & Co. as a novel.

A Life's Morning
Title page of the first edition
AuthorGeorge Gissing
CountryEngland
LanguageEnglish
PublisherSmith, Elder & Co.
Publication date
1888

Plot

Originally entitled Emily, it tells the story of a poor, yet cultivated, young woman, Emily Hood, from a small town in the north of England. While serving as a governess to a wealthy country family, she becomes enamored of her employer's son, Wilfrid Athel, and the two are engaged. However, during a visit to her parents' home, she is confronted by her father's employer, Dagworthy, who threatens to expose her father as a thief unless Emily marries him. The situation is resolved when Hood Sr. commits suicide to spare his family the shame of his deeds as he had, indeed, 'stolen' ten pounds from his employer.

Emily rejects Wilfrid, partly out of sympathy for her father, but they meet again, many years later, and are married.

gollark: Oh.
gollark: Explain what a "converter" is. I haven't used them.
gollark: What's a converter?
gollark: I agree.
gollark: If it just says you should prove that, then *obviously* you should just differentiate the RHS.

References

  1. "Brief review: A Life's Morning". The Athenaeum (3189): 770. 8 Dec 1888.
  2. "A Life's Morning," Cornhill Magazine, Part II, Vol. X/XI, 1888.
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