8 Works found in Arabella Strange
Listing Works
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Frost-white and Fire-red by Makioka for custardpringle
Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell - Susanna Clarke
22 Dec 2011
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Summary
After Faerie, Lady Pole and Arabella are reunited, and determine to learn Magic themselves. But Faerie still haunts them both, and Lady Pole has an obligation to discharge before they can both be free.
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The Heirs of English Magic by bobthemole for Leaf Litter (leaflitter)
Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell - Susanna Clarke
22 Dec 2011
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Summary
In the aftermath of Strange's and Norrell's departure from England, who is entitled to be a magician?
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Long Distance by AriadnesThread for sophia_sol
Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell - Susanna Clarke
26 Dec 2010
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Summary
Strange finds ways of reminding his wife he has not forgotten her.
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An Account Of Work: Unfinished by Pitseleh for Sinope
Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell - Clarke
22 Dec 2009
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Summary
Mr Childermas tries to get some work done.
- Words:
- 2,444
- Chapters:
- 1/1
- Kudos:
- 2
- Hits:
- 174
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Summary
"Mr. Redruth begs the society's pardon, but he is not a magician at all... It is his daughter who is the magician. He has one son and three daughters and he says that they are all magicians. The others...[prefer] to pursue their studies privately at home without distractions."
"Miss Redruth, the young lady in the red velvet gown, was one of the first to speak. Her voice was low and rather hurried. She was not used to speaking in public and not all of the magicians caught her words, but her delivery was very passionate... Magic would be freed from the shackles that Gilbert Norrell had placed upon it!"
"From the Duke of Roxburghe's library: 'The Parliament of Women' was an allegorical sixteenth-century description of the wisdom and magic that belongs particularly to women."
If men are engaged in the newly fashionable practice of English Magic, what place for women?
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Arabella visits Lady Pole after recieving a strange letter.
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The difficulty for Arabella Woodhope, when it came to marriage, was that she was in love.
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The trick of being married to a magician was remembering that even the Greatest Magician of the Age (really, whom did Norrell think he was fooling?) was also a fine strong young English man, with fine strong young English appetites.
