As per usual, though, Wordsworth Classics takes the prize for most-irrelevant-and-vaguely-alarming cover design. He was very weak. It is a legacy from her uncle, a corrupt British army officer who served in India.
And then, a fair amount of the novel is downright funny. Franklin fails to understand Rosanna, Rachel fails to understand Franklin.
Rachel's eighteenth birthday is celebrated with a large party, at which the guests include her cousin Franklin Blake. Franklin is astounded—he has no memory of taking the gem, but an interview with Rachel confirms that she saw Franklin take the gem with her own eyes.
On the night of Rachel's birthday, her cousin Godfrey Ablewhite, a famous philanthropist, arrives and proposes marriage to her.
Suspicion falls on three Indian jugglers who have been near the house; on Rosanna Spearman, a maidservant who begins to act oddly and who then drowns herself in a local quicksand ; and on Rachel herself, who also behaves suspiciously and is suddenly furious with Franklin Blake, with whom she has previously appeared to be enamoured, when he directs attempts to find it.
When he was murdered, he was on his way to Amsterdam to have the stone cut; it would then have been sold to replenish the plundered trust fund before the beneficiary inherited.
The story incorporates elements of the legendary origins of the Hope Diamond or perhaps the Orloff Diamond or the Koh-i-Noor diamond. Candy — the family physician, loses the ability to speak coherently after recovering from a fever Ezra Jennings — Dr.
Franklin's suspicions are further roused when he notices Indian men following him, both in London and at Lady Verinder's country estate. The mystery is solved, Rachel and Franklin marryand in an epilogue from Mr.
The plot also shows some parallels with The Hermitagean earlier murder mystery story by English novelist Sarah Burney: Different narrators have different, decided opinions of other characters, for instance.
Both women fail to accept the codes of behavior and belief that more powerful members of their society use against them. Finally Franklin Blake returns from traveling abroad and determines to solve the mystery.
The very idea of the loss of social hierarchy is absolutely inconceivable in the world of The Moonstone; the realization that Rosanna was aiming high, even if only in her imagination, prevents either of the men from mourning her death humanely, distracted as they are by the perceived impudence.
In The Moonstone, however, Collins pulls a cool trick. The mystery is solved, Rachel and Franklin marryand in an epilogue from Mr.
Her fate is viewed with sorrow, but without particular pity, by most of the characters, including the otherwise-sympathetic butler Gabriel Betteredge, and by Blake himself. It was said to be protected by hereditary guardians on the orders of Vishnuand to wax and wane in brilliance along with the light of the moon.
After The Moonstone, he wrote novels containing more overt social commentary which did not achieve the same audience. A heavily fictionalised account of Collins' life while writing The Moonstone forms much of the plot of Dan Simmons' novel Drood.
Warning: this annotation reveals the solution of the novel's mystery. The Moonstone is typically read as one of the first detective novels in British fiction. Published serially inthe novel sets out to identify the thief who steals an expensive gem, the moonstone, from the heroine, Rachel Verinder.
Commentary on Collins’s Choice of Narrators in The Moonstone Posted on January 30, by Heather Flynn One of the elements of The Moonstone that I have found myself most interested in is Collins’s choice of speakers.
In a way, the moonstone symbolized the conquering that Herncastle did while in India, allowing the moonstone to almost become a trophy of his doings. This is not just at all, it was known that the invasion on India. Commentary on Collins’s Choice of Narrators in The Moonstone Posted on January 30, by Heather Flynn One of the elements of The Moonstone that I have found myself most interested in is Collins’s choice of speakers.
The Moonstone Commentary Posted on April 24, March 28, Author admin Comment(0) A Focus on Setting The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins () Partl – Lines 1 to 16 From the very first description of the storys setting, the audience is already presented with a .
The moonstone commentary