Silas Marner: The Weaver of Raveloe by George Eliot (1861)
A lonely, miserly weaver, falsely accused of theft and betrayed by his best friend, withdraws from humanity — until a golden-haired orphan child appears at his hearth and redeems his life. Eliot's most compact and beloved novel.
Historical Significance:
George Eliot wrote Silas Marner in just four months in 1861, calling it a story that "thrust itself between me and the other book I was meditating." At just 70,000 words, it is her shortest and most accessible novel — a fairy tale for adults about how love and community can heal even the deepest wounds. The parallel between Silas's stolen gold and the golden-haired child who replaces it gives the novel a symbolic richness beneath its simple surface. It remains one of the most widely assigned novels in English schools.
This public domain classic was originally published in 1861. Free to read and share.
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