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The Apple Tree Text Review

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The Apple Tree Text Review

TEXT ANALYSIS

The apple-tree by John Galsworthy

John Galsworthy (1867—1933), a prominent English novelist, playwright and short-story writer, came from an upper middle-class family. He was edu¬cated at Harrow and Oxford and was called to the Bar. His first novel (From the Four Winds) was published in 1897, but it was The Man of Property that won him fame. Among his numerous novels The Forsyte Saga and A Modern Comedy are the most prominent. They give a truthful picture of English bourgeois society at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centu¬ries. The Apple-Tree (1917) is one of the most popular long short stories written by John Galsworthy.

In the novel «The apple-tree» the author tells us about two young guys, Frank Ashurst and Robert Garton, who after their last year together at college were on a tramp.

As their journey was too long and Ashurst*s football knee had given out, they decided to find some place to put up, but there were no people and farms round them.

While they were sitting near the river and taking rest, a young girl – the maiden, rural ninny was passing through the forest and invited them to her farm.

Her image has stuck in the Ashurst*s mind so deep, that even when he took a rest on her farm, she still was in his memory.

For the first sight we will not be able to find out some extraordinary problem or main line of this novel, but we all know that the most difficult things are the easiest to be founded and contra.

Two close friends and very different in characters are regard the world in different ways. Ashurst idealistic and romantic, Robert –a practical man.

They have a different picture of university, life and happy in their mind. The author shows this idea in the dialog when Ashurst asks a young girl about everything and Robert asks two simple and important questions: her name and if she cans to shelter them.

The difference between two friends is shown in the description of their appearance: Ashurst pale, idealistic, full of absence; Garton queer, round-the-corner, knotted, curly, like some prime¬val beast. Both had a literary bent; neither wore a hat. Ashurst's hair was smooth, pale, wavy; and had a way of rising on either side of his brow, as if always being flung back; Garton's was a kind of dark un-fathomed mop.

The whole novel

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