Themes -- Family -- Patriarch
Family -- Patriarch: the role and relationships established by, or expected of, fathers in the novel.
Letter 1.3
and
note
("Father's dying injunction")
1.1.1
and
note
("Bestowing on the state sons")
1.1.1
and
note
("Public business")
1.1.3
and
note
("His destined successor")
1.1.6
and
note
("Extensive usefulness")
1.1.6
and
note
("Father")
1.2.3
and
note
("His father")
1.3.6
and
note
("No father could claim the gratitude")
1.3.7
and
note
("Your other duties are equally neglected")
1.3.8
and
note
("Thought that my father would be unjust")
1.5.2
and
note
("Through his interest he might become a judge")
1.6.1
and
note
("An absent child")
1.6.9
and
note
("Respectable parent")
1.6.11
and
note
("So much depravity and ingratitude")
1.7.6
and
note
("My father wished her not to go")
2.1.1
and
note
("No one could love a child more")
2.2.1
and
note
("I wished to avoid him")
2.2.3
and
note
("Anger and hatred")
2.2.4
and
note
("Bound by ties")
2.2.4
and
note
("Your duty")
2.4.1
and
note
("Love and respect")
2.4.4
and
note
("The exhortations of her father")
2.6.1
and
note
("His son was bred in the service of his country")
2.6.6
and
note
("Deprived of his wealth and rank")
2.7.3
and
note
("The patriarchal lives of my protectors")
2.7.6
and
note
("The good-will ... De Lacey")
2.8.5
and
note
("My father")
3.3.3
and
note
("I am your master")
3.5.1
and
note
("How little do you know me")
3.5.7
and
note
("The lessons of my father")
3.5.8
and
note
("Plans of my father")
3.6.6
and
note
("It is your duty as a magistrate")
3.7.1
and
note
("A sum of money")