Hörbuch: Sybil, or the Two Nations
- Download 00 - Dedication and Advertisement audio
- Download 01 - Book I, Chapter i audio
- Download 02 - Book I, Chapter ii audio
- Download 03 - Book I, Chapter iii audio
- Download 04 - Book I, Chapter iv audio
- Download 05 - Book I, Chapter v audio
- Download 06 - Book I, Chapter vi audio
- Download 07 - Book II, Chapter i audio
- Download 08 - Book II, chapter ii audio
- Download 09 - Book II, chapter iii audio
- Download 10 - Book II, chapter iv audio
- Download 11 - Book II, chapter v audio
- Download 12 - Book II, chapter vi audio
- Download 13 - Book II, chapter vii audio
- Download 14 - Book II, chapter viii audio
- Download 15 - Book II, chapter ix audio
- Download 16 - Book II, chapter x audio
- Download 17 - Book II, chapter xi audio
- Download 18 - Book II, chapter xii audio
- Download 19 - Book II, chapter xiii audio
- Download 20 - Book II, chapter xiv audio
- Download 21 - Book II, chapter xv audio
- Download 22 - Book II, chapter xvi audio
- Download 23 - Book III, chapter i audio
- Download 24 - Book III, chapter ii audio
- Download 25 - Book III, chapter iii audio
- Download 26- Book III, chapter iv audio
- Download 27 - Book III, chapter v audio
- Download 28 -Book III, chapter vi audio
- Download 29 - Book III, chapter vii audio
- Download 30 - Book III, chapter viii audio
- Download 31 - Book III, chapter ix audio
- Download 32 - Book III, chapter x audio
- Download 33 - Book IV, chapter 1 audio
- Download 34 - Book IV, chapter ii audio
- Download 35 - Book IV, chapter iii audio
- Download 36 - Book IV, chapter iv audio
- Download 37 - Book IV, chapter v audio
- Download 38 - Book IV, chapter vi audio
- Download 39 - Book IV, chapter vii audio
- Download 40 - Book IV, chapter viii audio
- Download 41 - Book IV, chapter ix audio
- Download 42 - Book IV, chapter x audio
- Download 43 - Book IV, chapter 11 audio
- Download 44 - Book IV, chapter 12 audio
- Download 45 - Book IV, chapter 13 audio
- Download 46 - Book IV, chapter 14 audio
- Download 47 - Book IV, chapter 15 audio
- Download 48 - Book V, chapter 1 audio
- Download 49 - Book V, chapter 2 audio
- Download 50 - Book V, chapter 3 audio
- Download 51 - Book V, chapter 4 audio
- Download 52 - Book V, chapter 5 audio
- Download 53 - Book V, chapter 6 audio
- Download 54 - Book V, chapter 7 audio
- Download 55 - Book V, chapter 8 audio
- Download 56 - Book V, chapter 9 audio
- Download 57 - Book V, chapter 10 audio
- Download 58 - Book V, chapter 11 audio
- Download 59 - Book VI, chapter 1 audio
- Download 60 - Book VI, chapter 2 audio
- Download 61 - Book VI, chapter 3 audio
- Download 62 - Book VI, chapter 4 audio
- Download 63 - Book VI, chapter 5 audio
- Download 64 - Book VI, chapter 6 audio
- Download 65 - Book VI, chapter 7 audio
- Download 66 - Book VI, chapter 8 audio
- Download 67 - Book VI, chapter 9 audio
- Download 68 - Book VI, chapter 10 audio
- Download 69 - Book VI, chapter 11 audio
- Download 70 - Book VI, chapter 12 audio
- Download 71 - Book VI, chapter 13 audio
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Beschreibung
Sybil is one of the most prominent political novels of the mid-nineteenth century, taking as its subject the "condition of England" question. That phrase was first used by Thomas Carlyle in an essay of 1839 on Chartism, a working-class protest movement that plays a prominent role in this novel. The two nations are the rich and the poor, and the increasing gulf between them, and their condition also inspired such writers as Charles Dickens and Mrs. Gaskell, among others (one of whom, Friederich Engels, was the disciple of Karl Marx, and in his The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844 described the appalling effects of the industrial revolution a year before Sybil appeared).
Disraeli, of course, was far from being a Marxist though, like Engels, his sympathies are with the poor, exemplified in this book particularly by the Chartists, who were active between roughly 1839 and 1848. In his view, the villains are the aristocratic Whigs and Whig-Liberals, who, ever since the despoliation of the monasteries by Henry VIII in the sixteenth century, had made sure that the moneys which had been used for the alleviation of social distress and poverty, now flowed into their own pockets, leaving the poor with little recourse to help. His solution, which he sought to put into effect when he later became Prime Minister, was to push for measures of what he called "Tory democracy," or a kind of "compassionate conservatism," though quite different from the sort recently seen in the United States. Whatever one thinks of his politics, Disraeli tells a good story, in this case about the love of the aristocratic Charles Egremont for the lovely Chartist Sybil Gerard. In 2003, the Guardian ranked Sybil as No. 15 on its list of Hundred Greatest novels, and some consider it the best political novel of the nineteenth century. There is also general agreement that Disraeli (Lord Beaconsfield, as he became) and Winston Churchill are probably the only two prime ministers who can be seen as successes in the world of literature as well as that of politics.
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