Tri lásky diskuze
Archibald Joseph Cronin
Román škótskeho autora - dojímavý príbeh Lucy, ktorá poznala v živote tri lásky a všetky tri boli tragické a nenaplnené. Prvou láskou bol jej muž, ktorého tak milovala, že sa napokon stal obeťou tragického nedorozumenia a jej majetníckych pudov. Druhou láskou bol jej syn, na ktorého sa upäla s celou náruživosťou svojho nenaplneného citu. Aj tretia láska - duchovná je predurčená na sklamanie. A my sa pýtame spolu s hrdinkou: Kde je koreň nešťastia, tá hrozná chyba, ktorá zničila taký krásny a sľubný život?... celý text
Literatura světová Romány
Vydáno: 1992 , Slovenský spisovateľOriginální název:
Three Loves, 1964
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Autorovy další knížky
1974 | Hrad mistra kloboučníka |
1993 | Příhody z černého kufříku |
1972 | Citadela |
1972 | Tři lásky |
1947 | Zelená léta |
Three Loves is a 1932 novel by A.J. Cronin about the loves of Lucy Moore — her husband, her son, and God. Initially published by Gollancz, the story demonstrates how a virtue can become a vice when misguided in seeking rewards other than those in and of itself. The self-satisfied Lucy loves her husband, yet she yearns to improve him so that she can love him even more. To teach him hospitality she invites Cousin Anna, against his protest, to their home. Anna's free and easy behavior soon makes Lucy forget hospitality, and she thinks only of her husband's possible infidelity, which eventually alienates him. When her husband is driven from the house, Anna goes with him, but he is drowned in the ensuing pursuit. Lucy then turns to her son, Peter, and works extremely hard so that he may become a doctor. She accepts no help and refuses to even marry in order to preserve the purity of her motives. Her motherly love is not so pure as she thinks; when Peter marries, her life is ruined once again. Disappointed in men, Lucy gives all her love to God. As an aged novice in a Belgian monastery, she forces herself to endure disciplinary mortifications for her new love's sake. However, her wearied body cannot stand the strain, and growing sick, she is sent back to England. When her son, through no fault of his own, fails to meet her train, she waits for him on the station platform until she falls. After a brief agony in a hospital, Lucy dies.