The Mill on the Floss

Front Cover
Random House, Oct 31, 2010 - Fiction - 624 pages

Discover George Eliot’s powerful tragedy about the struggle between head and heart.

**As Heard on BBC Radio 4**


Maggie and Tom Tulliver are both wilful, passionate children, and their relationship has always been tempestuous. As they grow up together on the banks of the River Floss, Tom's self-righteous stubbornness and Maggie's emotional intensity increasingly brings them into conflict, particularly when Maggie's beauty sparks some ill-fated attachments. George Eliot's story of a brother and sister bound together by their errors and affections is told with tenderness, energy and a profound understanding of human nature.

WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY MARINA LEWYCKA

'George Eliot is the greatest British novelist of any age' Daily Mail

 

Contents

Outside Dorlcote Mill
3
Mr Tulliver of Dorlcote Mill Declares his Resolution about Tom
6
Mr Rilley Gives his Advice Concerning a School for Tom
13
Tom is Expected
28
Tom Comes Home
34
The Aunts and Uncles are Coming
45
Enter the Aunts and Uncles
58
Mr Tulliver Shows his Weaker Side
83
A Variation of Protestantism Unknown to Bossuet
307
The Torn Nest is Pierced by the Thorns
313
A Voice from the Past
319
BOOK FIFTH WHEAT AND TARES
335
In the Red Deeps
337
Aunt Glegg Learns the Breadth of Bobs Thumb
350
Another Lovescene
377
The Cloven Tree
384

To Garum Firs
94
Maggie Behaves Worse than She Expected
109
Maggie Tries to Run Away from her Shadow
116
Mr and Mrs Glegg at Home
129
Mr Tulliver Further Entangles the Skein of Life
143
BOOK SECOND SCHOOLTIME
147
Toms FirstHalf
149
The Christmas Holidays
171
The New Schoolfellow
180
The Young Idea
187
Maggies Second Visit
199
A Love Scene
205
The Golden Gates are Passed
210
BOOK THIRD THE DOWNFALL
219
What Had Happened at Home
221
Mrs Tullivers Teraphim or Household Gods
228
The Family Council
234
A Vanishing Gleam
251
Tom Applies his Knife to the Oyster
255
Tending to Refute the Popular Prejudice Against the Present of a Pocketknife
268
How a Hen Takes to Stratagem
276
Daylight on the Wreck
289
An Item Added to the Family Register
298
BOOK FOURTH THE VALLEY OF HUMILIATION
305
The Hardwon Triumph
397
A Day of Reckoning
403
BOOK SIXTH THE GREAT TEMPTATION
411
First Impressions
423
Confidential Moments
438
Brother and Sister
443
Showing that Tom Had Opened the Oyster
451
Illustrating the Laws of Attraction
456
Philip Reenters
468
Wakem in a New Light
483
Charity in Full Dress
491
The Spell Seems Broken
502
In the Lane
509
A Family Party
516
Borne Along by the Tide
523
Waking
538
The Return to the Mill
553
St Oggs Passes Judgment
561
Showing that Old Acquaintances are Capable
571
Maggie and Lucy
578
The Last Conflict
586
CONCLUSION
598
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About the author (2010)

Mary Anne Evans was born near Nuneaton on 22 November 1819. She adopted the pseudonym George Eliot when she began her writing career. In her youth she was heavily influenced by her evangelical teachers but she later broke with orthodox religion. After she moved to Coventry with her father in 1841, she undertook the task of translating D.F. Strauss's controversial book Life of Jesus Critically Examined (1846) for Charles Bray. After her father's death she moved to London and helped to edit the radical journal the Westminster Review from 1851 to 1854. In 1851 she also met the journalist George Henry Lewes and, despite Lewes's marriage, they became partners for the rest of his life. In 1854 Lewes and Eliot openly set up home together, a scandalous arrangement by the social standards of the day.

In 1857 Eliot published Scenes from Clerical Life in Blackwood's Magazine and in 1859 her novel Adam Bede was published to great acclaim and established her as a bestselling author. Her most famous novel, Middlemarch was published serially in 1871. Lewes died in 1878 and, in 1880, Eliot married John Walter Cross, an American who was twenty years her junior. George Eliot died on 22 December 1880 and is buried in Highgate Cemetery next to Lewes.

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