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Brideshead revisited 1945
Brideshead revisited 1945










brideshead revisited 1945

The 1940s perspectiveīut although the novel’s events are set in the 1920s, when Charles and Sebastian were carefree undergraduates, and then the 1930s, when they are young men exploring the world, Waugh goes to some pains in his 1959 preface to the book to emphasise that the novel is not of those relatively carefree times. (To be clear, the grand house is named after the little river Bride which runs through the shallow valley where the house is situated the title the family own and pass on is ‘Marchmain’, so Lord Marchmain, Lady Marchmain and Marchmain House in London but the actual family name as written in passports and legal documents is Flyte).

brideshead revisited 1945

The novel begins in 1923 and tells the story of the friendship between Charles Ryder and the beautiful, debonaire Sebastian Flyte, second son of scandalous Lord Marchmain, who is the owner of the impressive country house of the title, Brideshead. At 331 pages in the Penguin paperback edition, Brideshead is by some margin Waugh’s longest book, his other novels averaging around 220 pages, the travel books a skimpy 160 or 170.

brideshead revisited 1945

It’s also odd that it’s so popular, considering it amounts to a prolonged description of the destructive effects of alcoholism, the bitterness of adultery and infidelity, and a sustained account of one of the most dysfunctional families in literature.īrideshead Revisited is divided into five sections: a short prologue (13 pages) and even shorter epilogue (6 pages) and 3 long central parts which each cover a distinct period in the characters’ lives. Which is ironic, because there’s a strong case for arguing that Brideshead is the least representative of Waugh’s works. (Charles and Sebastian as students discuss their drinking habits in Brideshead Revisited)īrideshead Revisited is probably Evelyn Waugh’s most famous novel, simply because of the huge success of the 1981 ITV dramatisation.

brideshead revisited 1945

“Ought we to be drunk every night?” Sebastian asked one morning.












Brideshead revisited 1945