165:, where they help a gentleman, Mr Rawson, down on his luck to travel to America. Clement is now very sick and sends for Miss Searle. She responds to his call and tells him that her brother has been thrown from a horse and killed. Clement might now have a real chance for a share of the estate, but the opportunity comes too late for him. He dies and is buried in the England which proved so inhospitable to him.
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was published on 31 January 1875 under the imprint "Boston: James R. Osgood and
Company", and sold for $ 2 each. The initial printing was of 1500 copies, but not all copies were bound immediately: about 400 copies that were bound in 1878 or later have the imprint of Houghton Osgood & Co. on their
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Some critics have expressed impatience with
Clement Searle as an impractical dreamer and a weak example of James' "poor sensitive gentlemen." Clement's physical illness makes him even less effective in the crude business of the world than some of James' other defeated protagonists. But his desire for
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Clement Searle is an early example of James' imaginative and sensitive protagonists who are often defeated by less fastidious adversaries. The perhaps overly blunt irony of the story is that
Clement might have realized his dream of living on an English estate if his physical frailty had not betrayed
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inn. Searle has long wanted to settle in
England to escape what he considers his arid life in America. But he is physically ailing, and he's also depressed because his lawyer cannot uphold his claim to a share in a country estate currently owned by Richard Searle, a distant relation. Clement and the
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preface James admitted the story's technical shortcomings. But the tale meant much to him as an early example of his international theme, the vivid contrast between Europe and
America. Critics have generally agreed that the story makes the theme immediate and appealing, though there has been
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spine. There was no
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They also meet Miss Searle's brother
Richard, who is at first suspicious and then outright hostile and combative toward Clement. Upset by the conflict Clement and the narrator travel to
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was published in 1885 by London: Macmillan & Co., initially in a three-volume edition, and shortly afterwards in a two-volume reprint.
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The story shows James still in his apprentice stage. Although written in an assured and fluent manner, there are many passages of
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James further revised the text of the story for a continental edition, published by
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a new and more emotionally fulfilling existence may gain him sympathy from readers who can identify with his dreams.
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The story also plays on another common theme in James' fiction: the simultaneous allure and danger of
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narrator visit the estate, where they meet the ethereal Miss Searle, who supports
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Since James' death "A Passionate
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disagreement as to whether the tale is really all that much better than other early
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in 1871. The story was the earliest fiction that James included in the
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Works originally published in The Atlantic (magazine)
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291:The Novels and Stories of Henry James
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250:A Passionate Pilgrim and Other Tales
245:A Passionate Pilgrim and Other Tales
361:"The Ladder: A Henry James Website"
394:Modern Critical Views: Henry James
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431:Original magazine publication of
299:The Complete Tales of Henry James
235:(161) (March 1871): 352–371; and
129:(1907–1909) of his works. Set in
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337:A Bibliography of Henry James
488:Short stories by Henry James
239:(162) (April 1871):478–499.
309:collection of James works.
16:1871 novella by Henry James
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411:A Henry James Encyclopedia
452:Author's preface to the
377:The Tales of Henry James
303:The Tales of Henry James
209:James excluded from the
307:The Library of America
465:Note on the texts of
117:, first published in
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433:A Passionate Pilgrim
228:The Atlantic Monthly
120:The Atlantic Monthly
106:A Passionate Pilgrim
60:The Atlantic Monthly
258:The Siege of London
221:Publication history
196:Critical evaluation
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503:1871 short stories
472:Library of America
381:Edward Wagenknecht
493:American novellas
262:The Point of View
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115:Henry James
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482:Categories
396:edited by
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190:experience
169:Key themes
295:Leon Edel
231:of 1871 (
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55:Publisher
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456:text of
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