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The Real Adventure

by Henry Kitchell Webster

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Language
EN
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EPUB
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1.1 MB

Description

The novel centres on Rosalind Stanton, whose experiences reflect the social and personal challenges faced by young women in early 20th-century America. As she navigates her relationships with her family, a university professor, and her peers, the narrative examines themes of love, ambition, and self-discovery. Rosalind's interactions reveal societal expectations placed on women, contrasting with her internal desires for personal growth and autonomy. The story begins with a lighthearted scene involving a professor’s humorous comments on marriage, setting the tone for the character-driven exploration of individual versus societal values.

Set during the period between 1895 and 1923, the book depicts perceptions of gender roles and social mobility within a changing American society. It offers a detailed portrayal of its characters' lives and relationships, illustrating the complexity of personal decisions amid societal constraints. The narrative employs a realist style characteristic of its time, focusing on character development and social observations.

From the opening pages

"Indeed," continued the professor, glancing demurely down at his notes, "if one were the editor of a column of—er advice to young girls, such as I believe is to be found, along with the household hints and the dress patterns, on the ladies' page of most of our newspapers—if one were the editor of such a column, he might crystallize the remarks I have been making this morning into a warning—never marry a man with a passion for principles." It drew a laugh, of course. Professorial jokes never miss fire. But the girl didn't laugh. She came to with a start—she had been staring out the window—and wrote, apparently, the fool thing down in her note-book. It was the only note she had made in thirty-five minutes. All of his brilliant exposition of the paradox of Rousseau and Robespierre (he was giving a course on the French Revolution), the strange and yet inevitable fact that the softest, most sentimental, rose-scented religion ever invented, should have produced, through its most thoroughly infatuated disciple, the ghastliest reign of terror that ever shocked the world; his masterly character study of the "sea-green incorruptible," too humane to swat a fly, yet capable of sending half of France to the guillotine in order that the half that was left might believe unanimously in the rights of man; all this the girl had let go by unheard, in favor, apparently, of the drone of a street piano, which came in through the open window on the prematurely warm March wind. Of all his philosophizing, there was not a pen-track to mar the virginity of the page she had opened her note-book to when the lecture began. And then, with a perfectly serious face, she had written down his silly little joke about advice to young girls. There was no reason in the world why she should be The Girl. There were fifteen or twenty of them in the class along with about as many men. And, partly because there was no reason for his paying any special attention to her, it annoyed him frightfully that he did. She was good-looking, of course—a rather boyishly splendid young creature of somewhere about twenty, with a heap of hair that had, in spite of its rather commonplace chestnut color, a sort of electric vitality about it. She was slightly prognathous, which gave a humorous

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