
The barbarous babes : $b Being the memoirs of Molly
"The barbarous babes: Being the memoirs of Molly" by Edith Ayrton Zangwill is a children’s novel written in the early 20th century. Told in a lively first-person voice, it follows Molly and her siblings—Humphrey, Violet, and Teddy—through a string of misadventures born of fierce imaginations, pranks, and earnest but misguided attempts at virtue. Family life with their governess, visiting relatives, and an often-absent mother frames comic scrapes that turn into gentle moral lessons. The opening of this novel introduces a series of vivid episodes: Molly and Humphrey’s “torturing games” spiral into a mock martyrdom that nearly ends in disaster; jealousy of a visiting cousin’s curls leads Molly to cut them off in a Samson-and-Delilah prank; shy Violet, misreading a remark, bravely pays a formal call alone and causes social consternation; their mother must leave for her health, and Teddy tries to stow away before later being whipped for sweeping a chimney in play; Molly’s zeal to “missionary” her siblings culminates in an insulting bathroom placard that offends a visiting German musician until Humphrey mends matters; and, at last, the children’s chaotic home theatricals are rescued by their mother’s unexpected return, which steadies the household and brings the first performances off happily.
Related Subjects
Related books
Dick and Dolly
Carolyn Wells
The Dorrance Domain
Carolyn Wells
Brought out of peril
Emma Leslie
Little Prudy's Captain Horace
Sophie May
Ester Ried
Pansy
The Orphans of Glen Elder
Margaret M. (Margaret Murray) Robertson
Pam and the Countess
E. E. (Edith Elise) Cowper
Lady Rum-Di-Doodle-Dum's Children
Samuel Benjamin Dickson