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La ballade et la source (1944)

par Rosamond Lehmann

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

Séries: Rebecca - Lehmann (1)

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2941089,480 (3.82)61
A young girl befriends an elderly woman during the First World War in this remarkable novel by one of Britain's best-loved authors Sibyl Jardine, the former best friend of Rebecca Landon's grandmother, has recently returned to the Priory, her home at the top of a hill. Rebecca is instantly drawn in by Sibyl's magnetic personality and blunt, shocking manner. Decades earlier, Sibyl had left her husband Charles for another man and, as a result, lost her daughter Ianthe. Now she is finally about to meet her three grandchildren, who will become an integral part of Rebecca's life as she journeys into adolescence.   At the heart of this extraordinary novel is the enigma that is Sibyl Jardine: Is she a saint or a sinner? Is she a duplicitous lover or a woman who has been unjustly punished? Played out in a series of conversations between Rebecca, Sibyl Jardine, Jardine's granddaughter Maisie, and a Cockney maid named Tilly, The Ballad and the Source is a tale of perception and memory, passion and betrayal, and the fearsome power of a mother's love.… (plus d'informations)
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    L'Arbre de mer par Rosamond Lehmann (KayCliff)
    KayCliff: Characters from The Ballad and the Source reappear in The Sea-Grape Tree.
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» Voir aussi les 61 mentions

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  SueJBeard | Feb 14, 2023 |
I forgot I had read this before, and even after I realised that, I didn't really remember anything about it. The focus is on Rebecca's fascination with their neighbour Mrs Jardine, who was a friend of her grandmother. What stood out for me most on this reading was the telling of stories of your life to maintain your sense of self. That's what Sybil Jardine does to Rebecca, but it's also there in the stories Rebecca hears from Sybil's granddaughter Maisie. ( )
  mari_reads | Feb 4, 2023 |
This a rather odd book. It's the tale of an English gentlewoman, Sybil Jardine, who left her husband and lost her daughter, Ianthe. She goes on to become rather notorious, not only because of her behavior, but also because of semi-autobiographical novels she wrote. The story is told to a young girl, Rebecca Landon, by three narrators: Tilly, an old nursemaid/retainer, and Sybil herself, when Rebecca is ten-years old, and four years later by Rebecca's friend and Sybil's granddaughter, Maisie.

Basically, it's a character study of a woman who lived by the strength of her own lights, regardless of how her behavior affected others. Set in the years prior to WWI, Sibyl cared little for the moral strictures that bound the lives of women. In some aspects of Sibyl's life the novel reminded me of the biography, Becoming Modern: The Life of Mina Loy although Sibyl was a generation earlier. I found the book both fascinating and fervid. ( )
  janeajones | Apr 25, 2018 |
The narrator is a woman who is recounting events from her childhood--specifically from the age of ten until approximately fourteen years old. While the story line was interesting, and the writing was good, I could not accept the premise that the woman narrator could have had the conversations that she relates as having happened at the age of ten. I don't accept that the ten-year-old child could have understood and processed the conversations with an elderly woman who shares her most intimate thoughts and experiences with a ten-year-old girl. In portions of the beginning of the novel, the narrator makes clear that she really was a normal child, with childish ideas and perceptions. Then suddenly she carries on adults conversations. It's just not plausible. I even went back and reread the first few chapters to make sure that years had not passed.

Compare this to "What Maisie Knew" by Henry James. The point of that excellent novel is that the adults are having mysterious conversations which are at many times incomprehensible to the child Maisie, exactly as the adults want, since they are keeping secrets from her.

I'm not saying that a ten-year-old girl could never have held these conversations, but it so very unlikely that it kept me from accepting the story.

The novel drags in the middle, and then once the children are older teenagers and young adults, there is a long passage where a friend of the narrator tells a compelling story that is worth reading the book in order to reach.

All in all, I'm glad I read the novel. ( )
  eowynfaramir | Jan 18, 2017 |
Rebecca is fascinated by Mrs Jardine who comes to live in the nearby house with her quiet husband Harry and who had been a friend of her grandmother's until something happened. She gradually finds out more as Mrs Jardine, her grand-daughter Maisie and Tilly who had been a maid of Rebecca's grandmother tell their sides of the stories over the years.

I enjoyed this book. ( )
  mari_reads | Oct 18, 2015 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Rosamond Lehmannauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Grimshaw, AtkinsonArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Talva, JeanTraductionauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Watts, JanetIntroductionauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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One day my mother told me that Mrs. Jardine had asked us to pick primroses on her hill.
In 1944, the year that this book was first published, a friend reported to Rosamund Lehmann the reaction she saw it inspire in her fellow-lodger. (Introduction)
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[Mrs Jardine says,] `She was a blue stocking, and like all the breed, wished to drive home that desolatingly boring fact'. [The young Narrator comments,] `I dared not interrupt to ask the meaning of this fantastic word'.
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A young girl befriends an elderly woman during the First World War in this remarkable novel by one of Britain's best-loved authors Sibyl Jardine, the former best friend of Rebecca Landon's grandmother, has recently returned to the Priory, her home at the top of a hill. Rebecca is instantly drawn in by Sibyl's magnetic personality and blunt, shocking manner. Decades earlier, Sibyl had left her husband Charles for another man and, as a result, lost her daughter Ianthe. Now she is finally about to meet her three grandchildren, who will become an integral part of Rebecca's life as she journeys into adolescence.   At the heart of this extraordinary novel is the enigma that is Sibyl Jardine: Is she a saint or a sinner? Is she a duplicitous lover or a woman who has been unjustly punished? Played out in a series of conversations between Rebecca, Sibyl Jardine, Jardine's granddaughter Maisie, and a Cockney maid named Tilly, The Ballad and the Source is a tale of perception and memory, passion and betrayal, and the fearsome power of a mother's love.

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