Romola  
Author(s): George Eliot
Published by Trove Books
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9789358783865
Pages: 575

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Romola is a historical novel penned by the renowned British author George Eliot, the pseudonym of Mary Ann Evans. Published in 1863, it stands as a compelling literary work set in fifteenth-century Florence, Italy, during the Italian Renaissance. This intricate narrative artfully weaves themes of love, politics, religion and the evolving role of women in society.

At its core, Romola revolves around the life of the eponymous character, Romola de’ Bardi. Romola is a young woman of noble birth, characterized by her intelligence and strong moral compass. She finds herself trapped in a loveless marriage to Tito Melema, a charismatic scholar who is seemingly driven by ambition rather than moral principles.

Tito Melema is a complex character central to the novel’s plot. His journey takes him from a promising scholar to a man consumed by political intrigue and personal ambition. As he makes choices that lead to his moral deterioration, the readers are made to think in the line of ethics and character development.

Against the backdrop of Tito’s descent into moral darkness, Romola’s character takes centre stage. She becomes a symbol of strength and resilience as she navigates the challenges of her own life, including her conflicted emotions regarding Tito’s actions. Romola’s evolution from a sheltered young woman to an independent and determined individual is a central theme in the novel.

What sets Romola apart from other historical novels is George Eliot’s meticulous attention to historical and cultural detail. Eliot’s vivid descriptions transport the reader to the Florence of the Italian Renaissance, immersing them in the political upheaval and intellectual mayhem of the time. The novel is replete in Renaissance Florence’s art, politics and society, offering readers a unique peep into this fascinating period of history.

Additionally, Romola delves deeply into character psychology and morality. It explores how individuals are shaped by their choices and the consequences of those choices. Tito’s moral decline and Romola’s steadfastness provide a thought-provoking contrast that forces readers to reflect on the nature of virtue and vice.

While Romola may not be as widely recognized as some of George Eliot’s other works, it is highly regarded for its literary quality and its portrayal of a strong female protagonist within a historical context. The novel’s exploration of complex characters and its vivid historical setting continue to captivate readers and offer valuable insights into human nature and the historical period it depicts. In Romola, George Eliot masterfully combines history, psychology and morality to create an eternal work of literature.

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Romola is a historical novel penned by the renowned British author George Eliot, the pseudonym of Mary Ann Evans. Published in 1863, it stands as a compelling literary work set in fifteenth-century Florence, Italy, during the Italian Renaissance. This intricate narrative artfully weaves themes of love, politics, religion and the evolving role of women in society.

At its core, Romola revolves around the life of the eponymous character, Romola de’ Bardi. Romola is a young woman of noble birth, characterized by her intelligence and strong moral compass. She finds herself trapped in a loveless marriage to Tito Melema, a charismatic scholar who is seemingly driven by ambition rather than moral principles.

Tito Melema is a complex character central to the novel’s plot. His journey takes him from a promising scholar to a man consumed by political intrigue and personal ambition. As he makes choices that lead to his moral deterioration, the readers are made to think in the line of ethics and character development.

Against the backdrop of Tito’s descent into moral darkness, Romola’s character takes centre stage. She becomes a symbol of strength and resilience as she navigates the challenges of her own life, including her conflicted emotions regarding Tito’s actions. Romola’s evolution from a sheltered young woman to an independent and determined individual is a central theme in the novel.

What sets Romola apart from other historical novels is George Eliot’s meticulous attention to historical and cultural detail. Eliot’s vivid descriptions transport the reader to the Florence of the Italian Renaissance, immersing them in the political upheaval and intellectual mayhem of the time. The novel is replete in Renaissance Florence’s art, politics and society, offering readers a unique peep into this fascinating period of history.

Additionally, Romola delves deeply into character psychology and morality. It explores how individuals are shaped by their choices and the consequences of those choices. Tito’s moral decline and Romola’s steadfastness provide a thought-provoking contrast that forces readers to reflect on the nature of virtue and vice.

While Romola may not be as widely recognized as some of George Eliot’s other works, it is highly regarded for its literary quality and its portrayal of a strong female protagonist within a historical context. The novel’s exploration of complex characters and its vivid historical setting continue to captivate readers and offer valuable insights into human nature and the historical period it depicts. In Romola, George Eliot masterfully combines history, psychology and morality to create an eternal work of literature.

Table of contents
Contents
Prologue
Chapter I The Shipwrecked Stranger
Chapter II Breakfast for Love
Chapter III The Barber’s Shop
Chapter IV First Impressions
Chapter V The Blind Scholar and his Daughter
Chapter VI Dawning Hopes
Chapter VII A Learned Squabble
Chapter VIII A Face in the Crowd
Chapter IX A Man’s Ransom
Chapter X Under the Plane-Tree
Chapter XI Tito’s Dilemma
Chapter XII The Prize is nearly Grasped
Chapter XIII The Shadow of Nemesis
Chapter XIV The Peasants’ Fair
Chapter XV The Dying Message
Chapter XVI A Florentine Joke
Chapter XVII Under the Loggia
Chapter XVIII The Portrait
Chapter XIX The Old Man’s Hope
Chapter XX The Day of the Betrothal
Chapter XXI Florence expects a Guest
Chapter XXII The Prisoners
Chapter XXIII After-Thoughts
Chapter XXIV Inside the Duomo
Chapter XXV Outside the Duomo
Chapter XXVI The Garment of Fear
Chapter XXVII The Young Wife
Chapter XXVIII The Painted Record
Chapter XXIX A Moment of Triumph
Chapter XXX The Avenger’s Secret
Chapter XXXI Fruit is Seed
Chapter XXXII A Revelation
Chapter XXXIII Baldassarre makes an Acquaintance
Chapter XXXIV No Place for Repentance
Chapter XXXV What Florence was thinking of
Chapter XXXVI Ariadne discrowns herself
Chapter XXXVII The Tabernacle Unlocked
Chapter XXXVIII The Black Marks become Magical
Chapter XXXIX A Supper in the Rucellai Gardens
Chapter XL An Arresting Voice
Chapter XLI Coming Back
Chapter XLII Romola in her Place
Chapter XLIII The Unseen Madonna
Chapter XLIV The Visible Madonna
Chapter XLV At the Barber’s Shop
Chapter XLVI By a Street Lamp
Chapter XLVII Check
Chapter XLVIII Counter-Check
Chapter XLIX The Pyramid of Vanities
Chapter L Tessa Abroad and at Home
Chapter LI Monna Brigida’s Conversion
Chapter LII A Prophetess
Chapter LIII On San Miniato
Chapter LIV The Evening and the Morning
Chapter LV Waiting
Chapter LVI The Other Wife
Chapter LVII Why Tito was Safe
Chapter LVIII A Final Understanding
Chapter LIX Pleading
Chapter LX The Scaffold
Chapter LXI Drifting Away
Chapter LXII The Benediction
Chapter LXIII Ripening Schemes
Chapter LXIV The Prophet in his Cell
Chapter LXV The Trial by Fire
Chapter LXVI A Masque of the Furies
Chapter LXVII Waiting by the River
Chapter LXVIII Romola’s waking
Chapter LXIX Homeward
Chapter LXX Meeting Again
Chapter LXXI The Confession
Chapter LXXII The Last Silence
Epilogue
Biographical note

George Eliot was the pen name of Mary Ann Evans who was born on 22 November 1819 in provincial England. She was also known as Mary Anne or Marian. She is the famous author of several popular works such as Adam Bede (1859), The Mill on the Floss (1860), Silas Marner (1861), Romola (1862–63), Felix Holt, the Radical (1866), Middlemarch (1871–72) and Daniel Deronda (1876). Eliot was a poet, novelist, journalist and a translator with psychological insight and realism as her primary strengths. Her works magnificently explore the beauty and value of the countryside.

Though Eliot was an intelligent girl and a voracious reader she lacked physical beauty. Thus her father thought it wise to invest in her education which was not the norm for women belonging to that era. Eliot studied at Miss Latham’s school in Attleborough, Mrs. Wallington’s school in Nuneaton, and Miss Franklin’s school in Coventry. At Miss Franklin’s school, Eliot came across a disciplined belief opposed to evangelicalism and was influenced by it later in life. She was brought up within a low church Anglican family.

Eliot’s novels were primarily inspired by Greek tragedy and religion. She chose to publish under her pen name to be recognized as a serious writer and for her fiction to be consumed and judged independent of her already published and famous work as an editor, translator and critic. During her time, the prevalent societal belief was that the writing of women authors was limited to light-hearted romances and not to be taken very seriously. Eliot also wanted to shield her private life from public scrutiny and avoid her relationship with the married George Henry Lewes from becoming a scandal. Evans began to refer to Lewes as her husband after their trip to Germany and legally changed her name to Mary Ann Evans Lewes after his death.

Thomas Carlyle was Eliot’s favourite author, and it was his work that sparked Eliot’s interest in German thought. This interest encouraged her to turn from Christian orthodoxy, and prompted her to write her first complete novel, Adam Bede, in 1859, inspired by Dutch visual art and focusing on duty, realistic aesthetic, sympathy and evolution of the self. Adam Bede was an instant success and raised curiosity regarding the author’s identity leading to Marian Evans Lewes unveiling herself as the real author behind the pen name George Eliot. Queen Victoria herself was an avid reader of all of Eliot’s novels. Her fascination with Adam Bede led her to commission the artist Edward Henry Corbould to paint scenes from the book.

For the next fifteen years after the success of Adam Bede, Eliot continued to write popular novels.  She published her last novel, Daniel Deronda, in 1876. Soon after in 1878, her partner Lewes died and on 16 May 1880 Eliot married John Walter Cross, a Scottish commissioning agent. This time she changed her name to Mary Ann Cross. The marriage was short-lived as Eliot fell ill with a throat infection, along with suffering from kidney disease, afflicting her for several years. Finally, Eliot died on 22 December 1880 at the age of 61.

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 6. David Copperfield by Charles Dickens

 7. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

 8. A Portrait of the Artist As a Young Man by James Joyce

 9. The Mill on the Floss by George Eliot

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14. Journey to the Centre of the Earth by Jules Verne

15. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy

16. She Stoops to Conquer by Oliver Goldsmith

17. Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad

18. The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

19. Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte

20. Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K. Jerome

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