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The Third Violet

Stephen Crane

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Book Excerpt: 
. . .Worcester girl cried, "Oh, do!"

After another scanning of the figures at the top of the cliff, Hollanden established himself in an oratorical pose on a great weather-beaten stone. "Well—you must understand[Pg 27]—I started my career—my career, you understand—with a determination to be a prophet, and, although I have ended in being an acrobat, a trained bear of the magazines, and a juggler of comic paragraphs, there was once carved upon my lips a smile which made many people detest me, for it hung before them like a banshee whenever they tried to be satisfied with themselves. I was informed from time to time that I was making no great holes in the universal plan, and I came to know that one person in every two thousand of the people I saw had heard of me, and that four out of five of these had forgotten it. And then one in every two of those who remembered that they had heard of me regarded the fact that I wrote as a great impertinence. I a. . . Read More

Community Reviews

This book of Crane was very close to Maggie. In its words, pargraphs, pages, and chapters, I always felt that I was hearing Maggie. The extra thing that this work has is the introduction of an upper class family, which created the theme of domination of one class over another, into the narration. An

What a neat novella, exploring the divides between urban and rural, artist and non-artist, cultural elite and scrapers-by. In doing so, it shows interesting alignments between these, as well as the forces that make an individual on one side of a divide simultaneously envy and loathe someone on the o

Lacks the weight of Crane’s other work but is at times very funny, just not particularly memorable. It's "little known" for a reason.