Children of This Earth
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![]() First US edition | |
Author | Bruce Marshall |
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Country | Scotland |
Language | English |
Publisher | The Macaulay Co (US) |
Publication date | 1930 |
Media type | Print (Hardback) |
Pages | 320 |
Children of This Earth is a 1930 novel by Scottish writer Bruce Marshall.
Plot summary[]
John Glenuff is the son of a wealthy Scottish family with deep and powerful religious feelings. He studies to become a minister and is assigned to a conservative Anglican church in London. He is troubled by the sin and lack of religious belief he sees and dreams of bringing all to Christ.
A wealthy and beautiful young girl pursues him and he is distraught when he almost succumbs to her. Walking home through Leicester Square afterwards he is propositioned by Dorothy, an attractive young prostitute. On the spot he decides to marry her in order to “save her soul.” And, despite his superiors’ objections, he does so.
Church officials transfer him to an Anglican parish in Paris to minimize scandal, but his religious fervor and grandiose plans soon alienate the congregation. His marriage also deteriorates as he finds Dorothy extremely resistant to his preaching.
As the novel ends, Glenuff believes that he has developed stigmata and thinks that these will finally enable him to convert the world, but it turns out that he is the only one who can see the signs.[1]
References[]
- ^ Marshall, B: Children of This Earth The Macaulay Company 1930.
See also[]
- 1930 British novels
- Novels by Bruce Marshall
- Novels set in London
- Novels set in Paris
- 1930s novel stubs