Episode 181: "Kidnapped", Ch. 19-End
The Literary Life Podcast
Angelina Stanford
4.7 ⢠1.2K Ratings
šļø 18 July 2023
ā±ļø 79 minutes
šļø Recording | iTunes | RSS
š§¾ļø Download transcript
Summary
Welcome back to The Literary Life Podcast and the final episode in our series on Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped. This week, Angelina, Cindy, and Thomas open with a discussion of the difference between Jacobites and Whigs and how that contrast is played out in this story. Angelina and Cindy compare the characters of David Balfour and Jim Hawkins of Treasure Island and how they display honor. Angelina addresses moralizing stories versus making a moral observation of a story. Thomas gives a summary of the last several chapters of Kidnapped and makes some comment on the lawyer Rankeillor. They highlight more of the epic romance elements found in this book, as well.
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Commonplace Quotes:
But in these days we are forced even against our will to judge everything, even plays, morally. A crowd of artists and aesthetes have declared in this age that art is immoral; but the fact plainly and obviously remains that there never was a time in the history of the world when art was so moral. If there be a fault in the popular criticism of the day, it is that it is far too much so.
G. K. Chesterton, The Soul of Wit
Man is by nature so dissatisfied an animal that he must always be acclaiming something that he fondly believes to be new.
Charles Petrie, The Four Georges
But though the thing is to be criticised (and admired) strictly as an adventure story, there are sidelights of interest about it considered as a historical novel. It carries on a rather curiously balanced critical attitude, partly inherited from the attitude of Sir Walter Scott, the paradox of being intellectually on the side of the Whigs and morally on the side of the Jacobites.
G. K. Chesterton, Robert Louis Stevenson
Scotland's Winter
by Edwin Muir
Now the ice lays its smooth claws on the sill,
The sun looks from the hill
Helmed in his winter casket,
And sweeps his arctic sword across the sky.
The water at the mill
Sounds more hoarse and dull.
The miller's daughter walking by
With frozen fingers soldered to her basket
Seems to be knockingĀ
Upon a hundred leagues of floor
With her light heels, and mocking
Percy and Douglas dead,
And Bruce on his burial bed,
Where he lies white as may
With wars and leprosy,
And all the kings before
This land was kingless,
And all the singers before
This land was songless,
This land that with its dead and living waits the Judgement Day.
But they, the powerless dead,
Listening can hear no more
Than a hard tapping on the floor
A little overhead
Of common heels that do not know
Whence they come or where they go
And are content
With their poor frozen life and shallow banishment.
Books Mentioned:
The History of Tom Jones by Henry Fielding
David Balfour/Catriona by Robert Louis Stevenson
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | You're going to. This is not just another book chat podcast. |
| 0:22.8 | Lifelongs, |
| 0:24.8 | joins teachers Angelina Stanford and Thomas Banks |
| 0:27.6 | for an ongoing conversation |
| 0:29.6 | about the skill and art of reading well. |
| 0:33.0 | Explore the lost intellectual tradition |
| 0:35.6 | and discover how to fully enter into the great works of literature. |
| 0:40.3 | Learn what books mean while delighting |
| 0:42.4 | in the sheer joy of imagination. |
| 0:45.0 | Each week we will rescue story from the ivory tower |
| 0:49.0 | and bring it to your couch, your kitchen, and your commute. The literary life is for everyone. your to be granted a deeper insight into reality. |
| 1:03.6 | Join us for an ever unfolding discussion |
| 1:06.6 | of how stories will save the world. |
| 1:09.6 | This is the Literary Life Podcast. Hello and I am Angelina Stanford and I'm here today to finish up Robert |
| 1:35.8 | Louis Stevenson's adventure story kidnapped with a was my two. I was going to say |
| 1:41.6 | partners in crime but maybe that's not the appropriate thing to say for this book I mean |
| 1:46.7 | But I mean everybody still alive at the end so I mean maybe it is okay so my two my two cohorts one Jacobite and one wig, we'll let them say who is who, |
| 1:57.2 | the blonde bombshell herself, Cindy Rollins, and the mysterious Mr Banks. |
| 2:02.3 | Good to be here as always, Good to be here as always. |
| 2:04.0 | Good to be here as always. |
| 2:05.0 | Yes, I guess Tom has to be the Jacobite. |
| 2:07.0 | I mean that would make sense, right? |
... |
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