Mr and Mrs Dove: Difference between revisions

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It was first published in ''The Sphere'' on 28 November 1921, and later reprinted in ''The Garden Party and Other Stories''.<ref>Katherine Mansfield, ''Selected Stories'', Oxford World's Classics, explanatory notes</ref>
It was first published in ''The Sphere'' on 28 November 1921, and later reprinted in ''The Garden Party and Other Stories''.<ref>Katherine Mansfield, ''Selected Stories'', Oxford World's Classics, explanatory notes</ref>


==References==
==Footnotes==
<references/>
<div class="references-small"><references/></div>


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/mansfield/garden/dove.html Full text]
*[http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/mansfield/garden/dove.html Full text]

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[[Category:Modernist texts]]
[[Category:Modernist texts]]
[[Category:1921 short stories]]
[[Category:1921 short stories]]
[[Category:Novels by Colleen McCullough]]

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Revision as of 09:10, 18 June 2007

Mr and Mrs Dove is a 1921 short story by Katherine Mansfield.

Plot summary

Reginald is returning to Rhodesia the next day; it is his last day in England. Again he thinks of Anne; then he goes to Colonel Proctor's to say goodbye, and he is greeted by Anne, her parents being away. On seeing him she gives out a peal of laughter, then he tells her he is leaving. They both of them look at her doves; Mr Dove is always running after Mrs Dove. Reginald asks her if she likes him, and she says she cannot marry him; her partner shows up; on parting she calls him again, and he goes back to her, as Mr Dove would do.

Characters

  • Reginald, the young man; he works on a fruit farm in Rhodesia. He is wan-looking because of his job.
  • Anne, the coveted girl. She is Colonel Proctor's daughter, and she lives in England with her parents.
  • Colonel Proctor, Anne's father.
  • Uncle Alick, deceased.
  • the mother's widowed mother, who lives in England.

Major themes

  • love
  • anthropomorphism

Literary significance

The text is written in the modernist mode, without a set structure, and with many shifts in the narrative.

Trivia

It was first published in The Sphere on 28 November 1921, and later reprinted in The Garden Party and Other Stories.[1]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Katherine Mansfield, Selected Stories, Oxford World's Classics, explanatory notes

External links