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The Wide, Wide World (1850)

by Susan Warner

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2575104,211 (3.38)12
Ellen has difficulty believing that God will take care of her when her dying mother leaves her with the unloving Mrs. Dunscombe.
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» See also 12 mentions

Showing 5 of 5
As other readers have expressed, this book leaves me with very mixed feelings. I would like to come back and review it properly when I am not sick. ( )
  aurelas | Dec 23, 2016 |
This is a sweet treasure of a book. It’s easy to see why it was a runaway best seller back in the day, in an era of Victorian pathos. If you enjoy books about Christian living, you should love this one, with its beautiful writing and realistic characters and setting in a bygone day. This is not historical fiction; its setting seems to be contemporary to the time in which it was written, in the late 19th century.

Ellen Montgomery is a young child living in New York City, with a loving mother and an indifferent father. His wife is the only thing that matters to him, and she is ailing fast. He determines to take her to France for her health and leave the daughter with a half-sister in the country, which decision breaks the hearts of both mother and daughter. Ellen feels as though she’s been thrown out into the wide world, and eventually lands on the stoop of her grim, unmarried relative. Aunt Fortune, who lives with her mother in the country, grudgingly does her duty to her brother.

Ellen finds a friend in the quiet man who manages her aunt’s farm; indeed her innocent longing to please, as she used to have done for her mother, endears her to most everyone she meets. Alice, a young woman who lives on the mountain just a few miles from her aunt, becomes her closest friend and helper. Her happiest hours are spent there in the company of Alice and her family, and here the spiritual growth begun at her mother’s knee is again nourished. Of course, her story, as in real life, has its ups and downs; friends true and false, days happy and sad, character victories and failures, life and death - and life goes on, and we learn or we don’t.

Most of the story is set around Randolph, New York, in a place that encompasses farmland, valleys and mountains. I’ve not been to that area of the state, but after living for a time in upstate New York and skiing the little mountains in the Finger Lakes region, those were the images that came to mind with her descriptions.

Each chapter begins with an epigraph that sets up that section of the story, using selections from Longfellow, Shakespeare, old Scottish ballads, Milton, Burns, Cowper and others, which were a treat in themselves. The book has strange punctuation, with its combinations of commas and dashes.

The prose, though, is beautiful. Here, a picnic with her friends on the mountain: “The moon, meanwhile, rising higher and higher, poured a flood of light through the gap in the woods before them, and stealing among the trees here and there lit up a spot of ground under their deep shadow. The distant picture lay in mazy brightness. All was still, but the ceaseless chirrup of insects, and gentle flapping of leaves; the summer air just touched their cheeks with the lightest breath of a kiss, sweet from distant hay-fields, and nearer pines and hemlocks, and other of nature’s numberless perfume-boxes.”

If you read current Christian fiction authors, for a change of pace, give Elizabeth Wetherell (Susan Warner) a try, and you’ll see why Grace Livingston Hill called her own work (and I’ll add – Janette Oke and those types of writers) as ‘Christian Fiction Light’. Still, because it IS so old-timey, and Christian living IS its theme, it would probably only be enjoyed by those for whom Christianity is a vital part of their life. If that’s you, this charming story will certainly touch your heartstrings. ( )
2 vote countrylife | Apr 19, 2010 |
Exceeded in popularity in its time only by Uncle Tom's Cabin, The Wide, Wide World is a feminist Huckleberry Finn. First published in 1850, this domestic epic narrates the seven-year pilgrimage of a girl sent out into the world at age ten by a dying mother and a careless father. Moved from relative to relative, Ellen Montgomery astonishes by remaining faithful to her mother's memory and to her Christian teachings. As Jane Tompkins notes in her afterword, Warner's (1819-1865) novel is "compulsively readable, absorbing, and provoking to an extraordinary degree... More than any other book of its time, it embodies, uncompromisingly, the values of the Victorian era."
1 vote MollyMac | Mar 21, 2007 |
An interesting novel which follows Ellen through the changes she goes through after her mother dies and she is sent to live in the U.S. with a stern relative. Ellen grows up physically, mentally and spiritually.A very sentimental story, but it held my interest. These old novels are a wealth of cultural tidbits about the 1800's. ( )
  dkvietzke | Jul 9, 2006 |
From my Gramma Burns' collection. Inscribed: "Hulda and Helen, From Grandma Barrows, Xmas 1911" (Helen was my grandmother, Hulda her big sister.) ( )
  MerryMary | Apr 20, 2007 |
Showing 5 of 5
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» Add other authors (4 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Susan Warnerprimary authorall editionscalculated
Karssen, H.Introductionsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Epigraph
Enjoy the spring of love and youth,
To some good angel leave the rest,
For time will teach thee soon the truth,
"There are no birds in last year's nest."
--Longfellow
Dedication
First words
"Mamma, what was that I heard papa saying to you this morning about his lawsuit?"
Quotations
Miss Fortune … looked as if she could have bitten off a tenpenny nail, and indeed as if the operation would have been rather gratifying than otherwise.
She was somewhat under the common size and rather stout; her countenance most agreeable; there was sense, character, sweetness in it. Some wrinkles no doubt were there too; lines deep-marked that spoke of sorrows once known. Those storms had all passed away; the last shadow of a cloud had departed; her evening sun was shining clear and right towards the setting; and her brow was beautifully placid, not as though it never had been, but as if it never could be ruffled again.
I thought your mother was a lady, from the honorable notions she had given you; and from your ready obedience to her, which was evidently the obedience of love, I judged she had been a good mother in the true sense of the term. I thought she must be a refined and cultivated person from the manner of your speech and behavior; and I was sure she was a Christian because she had taught you the truth, and evidently had tried to lead you in it.
“She couldn’t grow handsomer than she was before,” said the old grandmother, hugging and kissing her little granddaughter with great delight; - “the sweetest posie in the garden she always was!” Mr. Van Brunt looked as if he entirely agreed with the old lady. That, while it made some amends for Miss Fortune’s dryness, perhaps increased it. She remarked, that she thanked heaven, she could always make herself contented at home; which Ellen could not help thinking was a happiness for the rest of the world.
Miss Fortune was not the pleasantest work-mistress in the world, and Ellen was apt to wish to be doing something else; but after all this was not amiss. Besides the discipline of character, these trials made the pleasant things with which they were mixed up seem doubly pleasant; the disagreeable parts of her life relished the agreeable wonderfully. {books, drawing, times with Miss Alice} Yes – these things were all the sweeter for being tasted by snatches.

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Ellen has difficulty believing that God will take care of her when her dying mother leaves her with the unloving Mrs. Dunscombe.

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