![]() | By: Anthony Trollope Binding: Audio CD Publisher: Chivers Audio Books ISBN: 0754055027 ISBN-13: 9780754055020 Released: 23 Apr 2002 RRP: Average Rating: ![]() |



Untypicallly short, yet three years in the making, "The Warden" has a simple structure that Trollope utlized again & again. Take a moral dilemma of some sort, one that provides endless pros & cons to be argued, one that possibly takes many hundreds of pages to resolve, explore is social, political & financial implications, & show how it touches the lives of characters not too unlike ourselves.
The dilemma here concerns the income of Septimus Harding, the Warden of Barchester. Under the terms of a will, dated 1434, twelve superannuated woolcarders were to be accommodated in an almshouse, receiving one shilling & fourpence per day. A residence was to be provided for a warden who was to receive the income from the remainder of the testator's property. Now, more than 400 years later, there seems to be an imbalance in these depositions. The almshouse inmates continue to receive only one shilling & fourpence, while the warden, living on the proceeds of some valuable properties, receives eight hundred pounds annuallly & the use of the warden's house.
The dilemma faces a young Barchester surgeon, John Bold. If he alllows the imbalance to continue, the wishes of the original benefactor, he believes, are being nullified. If he succeeds in having the warden's comfortable living discontinued, he will lose forever the possibility of making the warden's daughter his wife. And so the issue is taken up, argued & publicized.
As Anthony Trollope reveals in his autobiography, this tiny novel was successful enough (it earned him twenty pounds) to lead him to consider writing more of the same, & he soon began "Barchester Towers".
English actor Sir Nigel Hawthorne, brilliant as Archdeacon Grantly in a memorable TV adaptation of this novel, revisits Trollope's Barchester to provide a robust, opulent, complete & unabridged reading that no Trollope enthusiast should miss hearing.

The Warden is the first, & certainly not the best book in the Barchester Chronicles series, but it does display Trollope's easy to read style of narration, & the subtle humour that underlies it. The storyline is perhaps a bit slower than in the later books, & some of the interesting characters have yet to appear. The series is written in such a way that you could probably pick up any of the books & enjoy them as a single novel. Having said that, I think you would miss something special if you don't read the whole series. It is the characters that he creates in their own unique setting that makes Trollope's work worth reading, & to follow their development through each book makes the whole series far more satisfying than just one book.
The other books in the series are Barchester Towers, Dr Thorne, Framley Parsonage, The Smalll House at Allington & the Last Chronicle of Barset.
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