Anthony Trollope

openQuote

Clergymen are like women. As long as they're pure, they're a long sight purer than other men; but when they fall, they sink deeper.

closeQuote

Miss Mackenzie

See more quotes about:

Religion and the clergy

Chiltern, Oswald Standish,Lord.

Son of the Earl of Brentford, and brother of Lady Laura Standish. Violent in temper and undisciplined in conduct, tarred with a reputation for wildness that he did nothing to refute, he was sent down from Oxford for good cause, and devoted his time almost equally between gambling at cards and the Newmarket races.

He squandered the whole of Lady Laura's fortune, and was refused by Violet Effingham, although she loved him dearly. He and Phineas Finn had a duel because of Violet, who finally decided to marry him to reform him. The marriage was a happy one, and they retired to a small country place where Lord Chiltern expended his energies in acting as Master of the Hounds for the Brake Hunt, and became a model country gentleman.

"Lord Chiltern was a red man, and that peculiarity of his personal appearance was certainly the first to strike a stranger. It imparted a certain look of ferocity to him.... His beard was red, and was clipped, so as to have none of the softness of waving hair. The hair on his head also was kept short, and was very red,-and the colour of his face was red. Nevertheless he was a handsome man, with well-cut features, not tall, but very strongly built, and with a certain curl in the corner of his eyelids which gave him a look of resolution - which perhaps he did not possess. He was known to he a clever man, and when very young had had the reputation of being a scholar" - Phineas Finn

Character criticism:


"...an admirable figure of the English gentleman-savage who hunts ferociously, loves madly, fights violently, and is a good fellow at heart." - Walpole

"...really represents Trollope's snapshot at the Lord Hartington of his own day, who died eighth Duke of Devonshire." - Escott

Main character in

Minor character in

Related characters

Related organisations

Related illustrations

Send an e-postcard

Trollope postcard frank

E-mail a friend

Choose from a new or original illustration, or send a quote.

Have your say
Which Trollope would you take on holiday?
Options





Show Results

Quibble

Have we got something wrong? If you have a quibble, let us know and we'll try to put it right.

Send email