The Shadow Flies

Rose Macaulay (1881 - 1958)

The title of the original, British release of this novel was They Were Defeated, referring, among other matters, to the English Civil War, 1642 to 1651. Since the main action covers the build-up toward this event and climaxes in 1641, the title implies that defeat had been inevitable for both sides even before the war began. The American title, The Shadow Flies, comes from a poem on the vanity of human wishes.

Yet, for all that, the story is full of life and yearning, of effort and fun, of assertion and tolerance, of conscience and love. In keeping with these themes, the action and the characters are loosely linked to the incomparable lyric poet Robert Herrick in his remote home in Devonshire, where he exults in the beauty of nature and wrangles with his backward parishioners, waiting in vain for the recognition and fame which he would be denied until long after his death.

The emotional focus of the novel is an adolescent girl, a scholar and poet of promise, encouraged by an educated father of unconventional opinions. In particular, his insistence that education ought to be offered equally to both sexes endears him to moderns but sets him at odds with his peers—as does his scorn of religion, which, in its turn, complicates many readers’ response to him.

The issues into which individual characters draw the reader include, beyond the strictly political, poetic taste, academic curricula, witchcraft, science, superstition, and religious observances in an England still reeling from the Reformation, which had taken place in the lifetime of the generation just preceding that of the oldest characters. Many well known historical figures, and especially poets, make brief appearances, and the language the author puts into their mouths is as close as she can manage to that of the mid seventeenth century, with different dialects faithfully represented in spelling when convenient. - Summary by Thomas A. Copeland

Genre(s): Literary Fiction, Published 1900 onward

Language: English

Section Chapter Reader Time
Play 01 Part 1, Chapter 1 Thomas A. Copeland
00:20:59
Play 02 Part 1, Chapter 2 Thomas A. Copeland
00:10:03
Play 03 Part 1, Chapter 3 Thomas A. Copeland
00:16:30
Play 04 Part 1, Chapters 4-5 Thomas A. Copeland
00:08:10
Play 05 Part 1, Chapter 6 Thomas A. Copeland
00:32:13
Play 06 Part 1, Chapters 7-8 Thomas A. Copeland
00:29:26
Play 07 Part 1, Chapters 9-11 Thomas A. Copeland
00:31:42
Play 08 Part 1, Chapter 12 Thomas A. Copeland
00:47:47
Play 09 Part 1, Chapter 13-15 Thomas A. Copeland
00:49:48
Play 10 Part 1, Chapters 16-18 Thomas A. Copeland
00:29:21
Play 11 Part 1, Chapters 19-20 Thomas A. Copeland
00:22:19
Play 12 Part 2, Chapters 1-3 Thomas A. Copeland
00:52:40
Play 13 Part 2, Chapters 4-6 Thomas A. Copeland
00:44:43
Play 14 Part 2, Chapters 7-11 Thomas A. Copeland
00:47:32
Play 15 Part 2, Chapters 12-13 Thomas A. Copeland
00:43:14
Play 16 Part 2, Chapters 14-17 Thomas A. Copeland
00:46:13
Play 17 Part 2, Chapters 18-23 Thomas A. Copeland
00:49:25
Play 18 Part 3, Chapters 1-4 Thomas A. Copeland
00:51:22
Play 19 Part 3, Chapters 5-11 Thomas A. Copeland
00:51:34
Play 20 Part 3, Chapters 12-15 Thomas A. Copeland
00:51:02
Play 21 Part 3, Chapters 16-20 Thomas A. Copeland
00:51:41
Play 22 Part 3, Chapter 21-Postscript Thomas A. Copeland
00:34:54