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Riders in the Chariot - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Riders in the Chariot

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Riders in the Chariot

Riders in the Chariot cover
Author Patrick White
Country Australia
Language English
Series NYRB Classics, bk 25
Genre(s) Psychological fiction
Publisher New York Review of Books, US (2002)
Publication date 1961 (first published)
Media type Print (paperback)
Pages 643
ISBN ISBN13: 9781590170021

Riders in the Chariot, a novel by Australian Author Patrick White, Nobel Prize winner of 1973, was published in 1961 and won the Miles Franklin Award in that year. It also won the 1965 Gold Medal of the Australian Literature Society.[1]

Contents

[edit] The book

The novel is the story of the lives of four loosely connected people, whose common link is the mystic experience of the chariot of the title described in the Book of Ezekiel and traces their lives towards the point where they realise they share the same vision. We are introduced to each character in turn, and their personal struggles are explored against the backdrop of Sarsaparilla, a fictional mid-20th century suburb in Australia, often thought to be based on White's place of residence of that time, at Castle Hill, Sydney in New South Wales. The novel combines literature, mysticism and suburban life in 1950s Australia.

The novel shows the ignorance and prejudice of the everyday people in reaction to the few who see the infinite, snowballing with catastrophic consequences[2]

[edit] Plot summary

The novel begins with the wild and mad Miss Hare, awaiting the arrival of a new maid to assist in the upkeep of her house, Xanadu, a large and sprawling structure that is slowly falling into decadence due to a lack of care.

The climax is a mock crucifixion of an old Jewish refugee (one of the four main characters) in the courtyard of the factory where he works. The owner of the factory fears to interfere, and a young aborigine says three times, that he does not know the victim.

[edit] Characters

The main four characters are outsiders with deeply different lives made more difficult because they are religious visionaries. Each experience the same vision of four horses drawing a chariot into a shining future: the fiery chariot from the Book of Ezekiel in the Hebrew bible; visions that make them vulnerable to – and affect the way they deal with - the wily plotting of others.[3]

They are Miss Mary Hare an eccentric heiress in a decaying mansion living with her housekeeper Mrs Jolley; Aboriginal artist Alf Dubbo, painter and sometime drunk; Mordecai Himmelfarb, Holocaust survivor, professor and now migrant working in a machine shop, and Mrs Ruth Godbold, a kindly washerwoman.

[edit] Minor characters

Miss Antill, Eustace Cleugh, Cousin Eustace, Tom Godbold, Else Godbold, Norbert Hare, Frau Himmelfarb, Ruth Joyner, Norman Fussell, Fixer Jensen, Humphrey Mortimer, Miss Mudge, Harry Rosetree, Shirl Rosetree, Konrad Stauffer, Frau Stauffer, Ingeborg Stauffer, Bob Tanner, Ernie Theobalds, Miss Whibley.

[edit] Settings

Sarsaparilla, Abercrombie Crescent, Montebello Avenue, "Xanadu".

[edit] Symbolism

The primary form of symbolism within the book is through the chariot (or merkabah/merkavah), as described in the Book of Ezekiel. Other symbolism includes the mysteries of the Book of Revelation, with its Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, and the Seven Seals, along with biblical warnings about blood, fire, and destruction. As a symbol with a complex history in many cultures and artistic and religious traditions the chariot is most simply the vehicle for God's elect[4] or chosen ones.

[edit] Literary criticism

The novel did little for White's popular or critical reception in Australia, selling a measly amount of copies, and further alienating him from the public.

Preceded by
The Irishman
Miles Franklin Award recipient
1961
Succeeded by
The Well Dressed Explorer and The Cupboard Under the Stairs

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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