Some Tame Gazelle

Some Tame Gazelle is Barbara Pym's dbut novel, first published in 1950. It is considered a remarkable first novel, because of the way in which the youthful Pym - who began the book while a student at Oxford before World War II - imagined herself into the situation of a middle-aged spinster, living with her sister in the country. Many of the characters in the book are based on Pym's own circle, as she pictured them in twenty or thirty years' time. The two heroines, Belinda and Harriet Bede, are Barbara herself and her sister, Hilary, and Archdeacon Hoccleve, a married clergyman for whom Belinda has long nurtured a passion, is believed to be based on Pym's first love, Henry Harvey. In the course of the book, both sisters receive proposals of marriage which they feel obliged to reject, partly because they are not attracted to the men in question, but mainly because they are so used to living together and have become devoted to one another. In fact, Barbara and her sister did end up living together in a quiet village in Oxfordshire.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
francis picabia
list of conservation topics
sword beach
the independent
deftones
ludham potter heigham nnr
general american
convention of sintra
mid yare nnr
redgrave and lopham fen nnr
holkham nnr
tuvaluan language
c4 explosive
elbe lbeck canal
the woodland trust
bitmaps
rhinovirus
mr. denton on doomsday
the sixteen millimeter shrine
walking distance
escape clause
the lonely
time enough at last
perchance to dream
g.711
quartet in autumn
strangers and brothers
jean plaidy
elizabeth taylor (novelist)
jean rhys
list of monasteries dissolved by henry viii of england
mary renault
"weird al" yankovic
thomas woolner
sega master system
warsaw fire brigade
international university bremen
list of historians
anton geesink
game controller
jns jakob berzelius
schwa
martin parr
kmail