Father and Son Edmund Gosse 9781604596328 Books
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Father and Son is a memoir by poet Edmund Gosse, which he subtitled "a study of two temperaments." The book describes Edmund's early years in a Plymouth Brethren home. His father, Philip Henry Gosse, was an influential, though largely self-taught, invertebrate zoologist and student of marine biology who, after his wife's death, took Edmund to live in Devon. The book focuses on the father's response to the new evolutionary theories, and Edmund's gradual rejection of both his father and his father's fundamentalist religion.
Father and Son Edmund Gosse 9781604596328 Books
I truly didn’t know what to expect at the onset of reading this. I was aware of The Blue Danube (2001 Sapce Odyssy) and an annual Strauss Festival in my area which was just recorded music so that locals could parade and dance in period costume.The relationship between the father and the junior was quite interesting. And the talent that all the Strauss sons possessed was fascinating.
The history occurring, not behind them but with them, to them, was incredible to say the least. In ne fashion, it reminded me of our current polarized times.
This book caught me by surprise. At first I didn’t think I was going to enjoy it...but I couldn’t put it down. The Strauss family had so many dynamics....
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Tags : Father and Son [Edmund Gosse] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Father and Son is a memoir by poet Edmund Gosse, which he subtitled a study of two temperaments. The book describes Edmund's early years in a Plymouth Brethren home. His father,Edmund Gosse,Father and Son,SMK Books,1604596325,BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY Personal Memoirs,Biography & Autobiography,Biography Autobiography,BiographyAutobiography,Memoirs,Personal Memoirs
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Father and Son Edmund Gosse 9781604596328 Books Reviews
My husband loved it
Edmund Gosse's father was a self-taught marine biologist and his mother, a poet and illustrator, but the center of their lives was their fundamentalist faith. They were Plymouth Brethren and were devoted to this fundamentalist Christian sect. Edmund was their only child and this is how he describes their life together "For over three years after their marriage, neither of my parents left London for a single day, not being able to afford to travel. They received scarcely any visitors, never ate a meal away from home, never spent an evening in social intercourse abroad. At night they discussed theology, read aloud to one another, or translated scientific brochures from French or German. It sounds a terrible life of pressure and deprivation, and that it was physically unwholesome there can be no shadow of a doubt. But their commitment was complete and unfeigned."
Gosse, who eventually became a poet, critic and memoirist was not allowed to read fiction in this household. Fiction was made up. It was a lie and therefore a sin. This is particularly interesting as his mother enjoyed making up stories as a child and was able to hold an audience rapt as she told them. The family had little to do with people outside their religious sect and only decided to subscribe to a newspaper once England became engage in the Crimean War.
Gosse's mother died when he was 8 of breast cancer and his father remarried a woman with whom young Edmund got along very well. But a rift with his father continues to grow. When Edmund brings home a volume of poetry, his father burns it. His stepmother asks her husband's permission to introduce Edmund to Sir Walter Scott's Waverly novels No dice.
Gosse's father who found great comfort and satisfaction in his scientific work is dealt a blow when Darwin publishes "The Origin of the Species" because he cannot reconcile his literal interpretation of the Bible with Darwin's theory. He published Omphalos, a book that argued that the world was created with all it's species all at once. It was dismissed by almost everyone as a preposterous idea. Though Gosse says that this destroyed his father, indications are that his father continued to lecture and publish.
Father and Son is worth reading for Gosse's close attention to his own development (his understanding that his father was fallible, his belated delight in literature and his ability to become for lack of another phrase, "his own person."
His literary style is somewhat formal but a pleasure to read
Reprinted by a British firm that specializes in such things, this is a well-written, well-researched book on the Strauss family and other contemporary musician-conductors. Without being pedantic, it provides pertinent [sometimes little-known] facts in a reader-friendly fashion. I hadn't known until recently, for example, that performances of the Waltz King's waltzes and polkas are based on orchestral arrangements of 1- or 2-piano reductions--all the original orchestrations having been lost for years. The only clue that one is reading a high-quality photocopy-based reprint are the very rare check marks and other marginalia that someone forgot to expunge before the copying was done. Well worth the price.
If you're interested in parent/child dynamics or in growing up fundamentalist Christian, this is your book. It's the autobiography of a scholar who broke from his Puritan-like father in order to make his own way in the intellectual and cultural world of the 1800s. Fascinating.
Excellent description of a man who is trapped by both personal temperament and historical change. Loyal and sensitive to his father, Gosse nevertheless shows how a narrow emotional sensibility limits one's intellectual achievements. This book is beautifully written. In fact, the poetic prose here is superior to his poetry.
Astutely and honestly written biography and autobiography of the development of a father and son relationship and of an independent soul. Really more an autobiography since it is by a man reflecting on what he understood about his father as a child. Still I imagine any person differentiating as an adult would enjoy the book. I would list it among my all time favorites. If nothing else it is a worthy commentary on small town life in England at the time. And certainly food for reflection for any parent hoping to engage their child in spiritual awareness. In this case things didn't turn out at all as the father thought.
This is a beautifully written memoir of childhood. Yet, Henry James described the author as having a "gift for the inaccurate", and the accuracy of this book is disputed. Edmund Gosse outlined a strict, if not bleak, upbringing in a Plymouth Brethren home in the midst of the nineteenth century by his two intellectually gifted parents, Emily and Philip Henry Gosse. His mother wrote religious pamphlets and his father was a famous naturalist, who was unable to accept Darwin's theory of natural selection. The suffocating earnestness of a strict upbringing to an artistic child is sensitively drawn as well as the difficult separation of any child from the deep desires of a powerful parent. It was well received in part in the early twentieth century because it outlined so vividly the generational crisis of faith which divided many Victorian and Edwardian families; now it seems to echo contemporary conflicts between fundamentalist Christians and modern scientists. However, one should also read Ann Thwaite's biography of the father, "Glimpses of the Wonderful" (she also wrote a prize winning biography of the son) which outlines a different story of the father's character and relation to the natural world.
I truly didn’t know what to expect at the onset of reading this. I was aware of The Blue Danube (2001 Sapce Odyssy) and an annual Strauss Festival in my area which was just recorded music so that locals could parade and dance in period costume.
The relationship between the father and the junior was quite interesting. And the talent that all the Strauss sons possessed was fascinating.
The history occurring, not behind them but with them, to them, was incredible to say the least. In ne fashion, it reminded me of our current polarized times.
This book caught me by surprise. At first I didn’t think I was going to enjoy it...but I couldn’t put it down. The Strauss family had so many dynamics....
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