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< Classics to read in English _ Cashel Byron¡¯s Profession by Bernard Shaw >
Cashel Byron's Profession is George Bernard Shaw's fourth novel. The novel was written in 1882 and after rejection by several publishers it was published in serialized form in a socialist magazine. The novel was later published as a book in England and the United States. Shaw wrote five novels early in his career and then abandoned them to pursue politics, drama criticism and eventually play writing. The Admirable Bashville (1901), a short play based loosely on this novel, was written to protect American copyrights after the novel became unexpectedly successful in the United States.
Summary
The novel follows Cashel Byron, a world champion prizefighter, as he tries to woo wealthy aristocrat Lydia Carew without revealing his illegal profession.
Lydia is portrayed as a moral and intelligent woman (although "priggish" according to Shaw) and is constantly contrasted with the "ruffian" Cashel. Lydia was advised by her recently deceased father to find a husband with a profession, as opposed to an idle gentleman or an art critic like her father.
Cashel¡¯s childhood ends when he runs away from school to Australia and becomes apprentice to an ex-world champion boxer. When Cashel goes to England to secure his world title in that country he meets Lydia at her country manor. After much miscommunication and drawing room comedy, Cashel gives up boxing and succeeds in marrying Lydia. As in his postscript to "Pygmalion" (1912), in which he describes Eliza Doolittle's future life, Shaw chose to portray the Byron marriage in a realistic manner and narrates how Lydia comes to regard Cashel as "one of the children".
PROLOGUE
I. Moncrief House, Panley Common
II. That night there was just sufficient light
III. There was at this time in the city of Melbourne
CHAPTER I. Wiltstoken Castle was a square building
CHAPTER II. In the month of May, seven years
CHAPTER III. Next day Alice accepted Miss Carew¡¯s invitation
CHAPTER IV. One morning Miss Carew sat on the bank
CHAPTER V. Miss Carew remorselessly carried out her intention
CHAPTER VI. Next evening, Lydia and Alice reached
CHAPTER VII. Society was much occupied during Alice¡¯s first season
CHAPTER VIII. One morning a handsome young man
CHAPTER IX. Cashel¡¯s pupils frequently requested him
CHAPTER X. Mrs. Byron, under her stage name of Adelaide Gisborne
CHAPTER XI. Alice was more at her ease
CHAPTER XII. When the autumn set in
CHAPTER XIII. Lydia resumed her work next day
CHAPTER XIV. Before many days had elapsed a letter
CHAPTER XV. In the following month Cashel Byron
CHAPTER XVI. Miss Carew, averse to the anomalous relations