The Little Lady Of The Big House

The Little Lady of the Big House (1915) is a novel by American writer Jack London. Biographer Clarice Stasz states that it is "not autobiography," but speaks of his "frank borrowing from his life with Charmian" and says it is "psychologically valid as a mirror of events during the winter 1912-13. The story concerns a love triangle. The protagonist, Dick Forrest, is a rancher with a poetic streak (his "acorn song" recalls London's play, "The Acorn Planters."). His wife, Paula, is a vivacious, athletic, and sexually self-aware woman (in one scene, she rides a stallion into a "swimming tank," emerging in "a white silken slip of a bathing suit that molded to her form like a marble-carven veiling of drapery.") Paula, like Charmian, is subject to insomnia; and Paula, like Charmian, is unable to bear children. Based on a reading of Charmian's diary, Stasz identifies the third vertex of the triangle, Evan Graham, with two real-life men named Laurie Smith and Allan Dunn. Even minor characters can be identified; Forrest's servant Oh My resembles London's valet Nakata. The long-bearded hobo philosopher Aaron Hancock resembles the real-life long-bearded hobo philosopher Frank Strawn-Hamilton, who was a long-term guest at the London ranch. Sculptor Haakan Frolich makes an appearance as "the sculptor Froelig" — and painter Xavier Martinez appears as the character "Xavier Martinez!" London said of this novel: "It is all sex from start to finish — in which no sexual adventure is actually achieved or comes within a million miles of being achieved, and in which, nevertheless, is all the guts of sex, coupled with strength." One reviewer disparaged the novel's "erotomania." (Modern readers will find it coy rather than titillating). The novel ends with Paula accidentally wounding herself mortally with a rifle and convincing a doctor to inject her with an overdose of morphine. As she drifts off, she says goodbye to both of her lovers: “Two bonnie, bonnie men. Good-by, bonnie men. Good-by, Red Cloud.... Stretch the skin tight, first. You know I don’t like to be hurt."

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
document file format
the frugal gourmet
rumble fish
toroid
john nevison
jeff nuttall
msm
georg muffat
families need fathers
plattsburgh, ohio
leniwka
john birch
the tragical history of doctor faustus
port island (gdansk)
new economy
sampan
south asia free trade agreement
yurikamome
robert duncan (poet)
night stand with dick dietrick
golden week
a daughter of the snows
gibbet
the iron heel
martin eden
the valley of the moon
the star rover
nihil
nrnberger land
moche
the four aces
greece interstate 33
1822 in science
marine and mobile radio telephony
sharks (album)
paperboard
dowd report
victor li
double eagle
fan dance
david of trebizond
whirligig beetle
night train
watchman nee