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Lord Tony's Wife Emmuska Orczy

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Lord Tony's Wife

Emmuska Orczy

Lord Tony's Wife Emmuska Orczy Lord Tony's Wife is a sequel book to the classic adventure tale, The Pimpernel.

Plot summary: The year is 1789 and Pierre Adet, a young French peasant, is incensed at the unfair treatment of the local peasantry, who are no more better off than slaves to the local aristo. His brother-in-law is about to be hanged for poaching two pigeons from the woods belonging to the Duc de Kernogan in Nantes and this proves the final straw. After months of planning Pierre leads a mob against the Duc against the advice of his father. Before the mob have had the chance to storm the Chateau, they come across the Duc's daughter Yvonne returning home and attack her carriage. In the ensuing scuffle, Adet assaults Yvonne 'And just to punish you, my fine lady, ' he said in a whisper which sent a shudder of horror right through her, 'to punish you for what you are, the brood of tyrants, proud, disdainful, a budding tyrant yourself, to punish you for every misery my mother and sister have had to endure, for every luxury which you have enjoyed, I will kiss you on the lips and the cheeks and just between your white throat and chin and never as long as you live if you die this night or live to be an hundred will you be able to wash off those kisses showered upon you by one who hates and loathes you --a miserable peasant whom you despise and who in your sight is lower far than your dogs.' Shortly afterwards the Duc's private army arrive and dispatch the mob. Adet is seriously injured and seeks refuge from a local priest before fleeing Nantes and the death sentence which has been passed on him. Determined that someone must pay for the incident, the Duc de Kernogan ensures that Pierre's father is hanged for his son's crime. By the time Pierre finds out it is too late and he is driven to seek revenge against the Duc and his daughter. It's now 1793 and Adet is living in England under the alias of Martin-Roget. He has spent the intervening years educating himself and with the aid of an introductory letter, obtained by blackmailing the Bishop of Brest, has ingratiated himself into English society -- to the extent that he has gained the favour of the Duc de Kernogan (who is now living near Bath) and is Yvonne's favoured suitor. Needless to say, both Yvonne and her father are ignorant of Martin-Roget's true identity and are unaware that he is seeking revenge. With the help of Chauvelin, he plans to marry Yvonne and lure her and the Duc back to Nantes and to their death as ci-devants on the . Adet's plans suffer a setback when he discovers that, warned by Sir Percy that she is at risk from Martin-Roget, Yvonne has eloped with Lord Antony Dewhurst. The Duc, believing that Martin-Roget is a millionaire banker whose marriage to Yvonne would have resulted in substantial funds being given to the French royalist cause, is furious that his plans have been thwarted and refuses to recognise the marriage, which would not be legal in France due to Yvonne's age. Martin-Roget convinces the Duc that he still wishes to marry Yvonne and soon persuade him to lure Yvonne away from Lord Tony. He then kidnaps her and the three set off for France. Lord Tony must seek the help of to save his wife. (wikipedia.org)

Lord Tony's Wife Details

Date : Published April 11th 2014 by Start Classics (first published 1917) ISBN : Author : Emmuska Orczy Format : Kindle Edition 137 pages Genre : Classics, Historical, , Fiction, Adventure, Romance

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From Reader Review Lord Tony's Wife for online ebook

Judy Ann says

Absolutely amazing! The rescue for Yvonne Dewhurst was quite unexpected. It thrilled and amazed me ho daring the plot for the rescue was, still am puzzled though, whether or not Sir Percy dropping "important" files was deliberate or not. It was absolutely addicting, I couldn't put the book down until I've finished reading it, but even then I just had to reread the whole story! :) Definitely, absolutely a must read!

Lynne Stringer says

I enjoyed this novel, although it was quite as much of a favourite as some of the others. It was nice to see Lord Tony get a girl and it was certainly entertaining. Although the ending, as I find with some of Orczy's novels, seems a bit beyond belief.

Kim says

Another rollicking adventure featuring high romance, bitter villains and the incredible talents of disguise and good-humored (but thorough) deception that are the essence of the inimitable Scarlet Pimpernel! It is highly predictable at this point that Percy will always win the day but the interest is always in exactly how he does it. Of course the uncanny ability to fully disguise himself and a high-born aristocrat's daughter wholly unschooled in disguise herself so that they escape the masses hounding them unscathed is ridiculous, yet satisfying. Love these fantastic, cozy reads that assure you of the existence of handsome, clever, funny, redoubtable do-gooders in this world.

Krysta says

Lord Tony’s Wife provides offers nothing new in the Scarlet Pimpernel series. By this point, readers know the way the Scarlet Pimpernel operates and can probably predict the events that will lead to a successful rescue. The lack of innovation disappointed me as many books follow this one, and I fear they will soon grow old if Orczy does not change her formula. Despite the predictability, however, I enjoyed the story both because it is, after all, about the Scarlet Pimpernel, and because it gives readers a closer look at some of the other characters—in particular Lord Anthony Dewhurst and his wife Yvonne. I found the focus on Yvonne particularly intriguing since adventure novels often concentrate on men. In consequence, the female perspective felt refreshing and unique.

Despite the amount of time readers spend with Yvonne, however, her personality remains a little ambiguous. This stems largely from Orczy’s seeming reluctance to criticize the aristocracy. Our introduction to Yvonne portrays her as proud and stubborn, and specifically states that she has grown up learning to consider the peasants under her father as beasts. I found myself disliking her immediately. The next time we see her, however, she is suddenly charming and sweet. She has won over all those who know her. I can only attribute her change in manners to the people around her. We first see her interacting with peasants; we then see her interacting with aristocrats.

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Orczy’s works undoubtedly have a slant that favors the aristocracy, but the insistence that readers accept Yvonne as a worthy heroine despite her contemptuous treatment of her social inferiors tested my ability to accept the black-and-white world of the Scarlet Pimpernel: a world where the servants of the Revolution are invariably ugly and depraved even in their private lives, and the nobility of England are invariably handsome and good. I thought back to the The Elusive Pimpernel where a character accuses the Pimpernel of not caring for the peasants who go to the guillotine—only the aristocrats. That book subsequently tried to prove that character wrong by having Sir Percy make an attempt to save a village from destruction, but the village people were only caught up in the machinations of the French government by accident; Sir Percy was obligated to save them simply because he was on the scene. I cannot think of any rescue planned out in advance for the benefit of anyone other than an aristocrat or a friend of one of the league members. But why should Sir Percy save the peasantry if they are truly as brutal and degenerate as the ones depicted by Orczy?

Ordinarily I can accept the good-and-evil dichotomy of adventure novels as a device to highlight the qualities to which a man should aspire. However, in the Scarlet Pimpernel series, good and evil have been drawn largely across class lines. Occasional descriptions of the sufferings of the ordinary men and women crushed by poverty and hard living as a result of the Revolution do little to outweigh all the instances where the poor prove themselves desperate and mean. Until Orczy gives readers a kindhearted and honest peasant as a major player and until she shows the Scarlet Pimpernel specifically setting out to aid one of the poor, I will be left wondering about the series’ latent classism, and if Sir Percy is really less of a man than I had thought.

Laura P. says

Once again I was totally surprised by the scarlet pimpernel disguises...I wasn't expecting that! As usual, the story was highly enjoyable...one death did shock me a lot...I wasn't expecting it to happen so suddenly if at all. I'm gald we have got to know a bit more about Lord Tony...he is so cute! Percy & Marguerite are terribly adorable! *sniffs* Last but not least, poor Chambertin/ Chauvelin...he just can't win.

Perry Whitford says

"It all came about through the death of a pair of pigeons," he said.

Such was the combustible spirit of France in 1789, anything could light the fuse. Lord Tony's Wife kicks off at breakneck speed, an exciting prologue describing a pre-revolutionary flickering of dissent in rural Nantes and the injustice which follows it.

A father is hanged in place of the rebellious son who whipped up the frenzy of a mob, only to disappear in the aftermath. This son, Pierre Adet, plots an unusually humiliating revenge against the aristocrat M. le duc de Kernogan and his young daughter, Mademoiselle Yvonne.

In Paris Adet forms an alliance with citizen Chauvelin, an aristocrat turned Republican idealist, ruthless and unflappable, yet the continual patsy of the elusive Scarlet Pimpernel!

As adventure stories go, Lord Tony's Wife has a terribly thin plot, with very little incident after that exciting prologue. I found it an enjoyable enough read all the same, thanks largely to Orczy's breezy style and the

PDF File: Lord Tony's Wife... 5 Read and Download Ebook Lord Tony's Wife... cheery insouciance of her hero.

The Scarlet Pimpernel may well be a master of disguise, but in Orczy's capable hands he always wears the acceptable face of melodrama.

Alisha says

It's been so long since I've read a Scarlet Pimpernel book that I can't remember if they're all like this, but there was way too much time spent on the plottings of the bad guys and not enough time with Sir Percy!!

Els says

Mm, yes, more time reacquainting myself with the League, the members of which I have not visited since that dreadfully embarrassing period of time when the Scarlet Pimpernel may have been an obsession. They’re still friends, though, and I visit them as an occasional treat. I’ve already memorized most of the facts of the , so the novels no longer provide any educational value. *winces*

Shockingly, I, an extremist anti-Yvontony shipper- found the ship slightly less obnoxious this time around. I still find Yvonne wrong for Tony, but at least this time I was able to see a bit of her bravery and . . . Alright, fine, they go reasonably well together. Still not a fave, but tolerable.

Vive la Mourin Rouge!

Elizabeth Easter says

Much too much dialogue and detail by and about Chauvelin, Martin-Roget, and Carrier -- the villains of the piece -- and not enough with the good guys. I skipped much of the dialogue in the middle, and skimmed most of the descriptive passages. The action is in the prologue and at the end.

On the positive side, could write characters and settings, and when she swung into action, well, her heroes could buckle-and-swash. I'd like to see this story on film.

Tara says

This is my least favourite of the Pimpernel books. It was so slow and there wasn't much of a payoff in the end. I thought this book was too predictable, maybe it's because I've read five of them now. It had potential but didn't come to anything. Not one I'd recommend.

Rachael says

I love this author and thesse books! <3 Such adventure. Such suspense and in the end, it all works out!

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Amy says

I have been looking forward to reading this particular Scarlet Pimpernel book for some time. Lord Tony’s Wife, for heaven’s sake its very title is exciting! Lord Anthony Dewhurst is one of my favorite characters and any adventure that involves his youthful excitement is worth it. Plot At the beginning of the revolution, a young man named Pierre Adet leads a mob against his lord, the Duc de Kernogan in Nantes. His plan fails and he is forced to flee, but the Duc, determined to have justice, hangs Pierre’s innocent Father for the crime. Pierre, bent on revenge, turns himself into Martin-Roget, a wealthy French immigrant, and begins courting the Duc de Kernogan’s daughter, Yvonne. Among Yvonne’s other suitors is the boyish and charming Lord Anthony Dewhurst, peer of the realm, favorite of society, and close friend of that famed fob of society, Sir Percy Blackney . Lord Tony convinces Yvonne to elope with him, but she is later kidnapped by Martin-Roget (Pierre) and taken to France to be disgraced and guillotined. Will the Scarlet Pimpernel be able to save her from the mostly deadly trap lade yet? Will Chauvelin finally get the revenge he seeks? Will Lord Tony ever hold his bride in his arms again? Thoughts As another reviewer said, there is really nothing “new” in this book. In fact, for most of it I felt like it was more simplistic than your average Scarlet Pimpernel novel. I was almost disappointed with it, right up until the end. Yvonne’s rescue is predictable to anyone who has read enough of the Scarlet Pimpernel, but it is daring and fun and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Once again, it was the adventure at the end that made the book for me. I am starting to get tired of the typical Pimpernel bad-guy, though. They are always ugly and gnashing their teeth and leering evilly. The chapters were also longer then they needed to be. I want more Percy!! More Tony! More Andrew! They are the characters I read these books for. The daring-do-gooders. Monologues about honor and love bore me. Extensive bad-guy creation where the evil-looking cowardly creep rants against the Scarlet Pimpernel is interesting…at first. After five chapters it gets slow. But the intimate glances into the workings of the Scarlet Pimpernel’s gang are wonderful. I love reading about it, and I will continue reading about it. Even if all the women in these stories seem to do nothing but go about and faint, even if Chauvelin clenches his fist and smothers his anger a thousand times, still I will read on! Because Sir Percy is timeless. Honor, virtue, courage…unadulterated goodness. He embodies it and sometimes, it is just fun to read about a character that fights for no other benefit then that of the weak. Good is good and bad is bad and love triumphs over all. Sometimes, though, that good-good, evil-evil, black and white can be a bit tiring. I don’t recommend to many Scarlet Pimpernel books in a row.

Suvi says

I have no idea why I finished this book. It's honestly very bad. The previous sequels were at least readable, but I'd seriously recommend skipping this one.

My main impression after finishing the book was something a lot like "peeling wallpaper and peasants are evil". And that was it.

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Doris says

Somewhat entertaining. Orczy uses the same words and phrases over and over and the sensibility of Yvonne was a bit much to handle. The Scarlet Pimpernel was very much a background character in this one. I haven't read and of the others with him in it yet, other than The Scarlet Pimpernel, so I'm not sure if this is uncommon or not. Pretty forgettable on the whole.

Tricia Mingerink says

Not my favorite of the Scarlet Pimpernel books. The tangled web of plots was really neat. Literally everyone was tricking everyone else.

Due to all the plots going on and his disgrace, Chauvelin couldn't orchestrate things with his normal efficiency. It made Sir Percy's escape seem a little easy compared to some of his other adventures. He didn't even have to work hard on this one.

Sir Percy wasn't in this one a whole lot. He's there, but no witty banter with Chauvelin, which was a disappointment. Those are always my favorite parts.

Don't get me wrong, I still enjoyed the book, and once I started getting into it, I couldn't stop listening. The free version of this one on Librevox is an okay recording. It is done by several narrators, and they are decent. Not as great as Karen Savage, but she's hard to beat.

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