Silas Marner

Front Cover
Random House Publishing Group, Jan 31, 2006 - Fiction - 208 pages

When Silas Marner is wrongly accused of crime and expelled from his community, he vows to turn his back upon the world. He moves to the village of Raveloe, where he remains an outsider and an object of suspicion until an extraordinary sequence of events, including the theft of his gold and the appearance of a tiny, golden-haired child in his cottage, transforms his life. Part beautifully realized rural portraiture and part fairy tale, the story of Marner’s redemption and restoration to humanity has long been George Eliot’s most beloved and widely read work.

The isolated, misanthropic, miserly weaver Silas Marner is one of George Eliot’s greatest creations, and his presence casts a strange, otherworldly glow over the moral dramas, both large and small, that take place in the pastoral landscape that surrounds him.

Introduction by Rosemary Ashton

 

Selected pages

Contents

Section 1
3
Section 2
14
Section 3
22
Section 4
34
Section 5
41
Section 6
46
Section 7
56
Section 8
62
Section 13
119
Section 14
127
Section 15
140
Section 16
145
Section 17
160
Section 18
171
Section 19
175
Section 20
185

Section 9
71
Section 10
78
Section 11
93
Section 12
113
Section 21
188
Section 22
192
Section 23
195
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

Chris Bohjalian is the author of Midwives, The Law of Similars, and Transsister Radio, among other books. His new novel, Buffalo Soldier, about a foster child will be published in May. He lives in Vermont.

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