商品編號:DJBQ34-D900CGP21

Plays : Fourth Series(Kobo/電子書)

$169
$169
折價券
  • P幣

    全盈+PAY 單筆滿1200回饋80P幣(限量)

  • 登記送

    11/01-11/07【加碼送300P幣-資格登記B】百貨指定單筆滿$1500 即可進行登記

  • 登記送

    11/2全百貨指定品單筆滿$3000登記送BOXMAN x WOKY保溫杯(顏色隨機/限量)

付款方式
出貨
  • 廠商出貨
    本商品不受24h到貨限制
  • 電子書
    非實體商品,發送方式詳見商品頁說明
配送
實際運費計算依結帳頁為準
  • 宅配到府(本島/低溫)
    滿$699免運
  • 宅配到府(本島/常溫)
    滿$490免運
  • 超商取貨(常溫)
    滿$350免運
  • 超商取貨(低溫)
    滿$699免運
  • i郵箱(常溫)
    滿$290免運
商品詳情
作者:
ISBN:
1230003860885
出版社:
出版日期:
2020/04/30
  • 內文簡介

  • PLAYS IN THE FOURTH SERIES
    By John Galsworthy
    Contents:
    A Bit O' Love
    The Foundations
    The Skin Game
    A BIT O' LOVE
    PERSONS OF THE PLAY
    MICHAEL STRANGWAY BEATRICE STRANGWAY MRS. BRADMERE JIM BERE JACK CREMER MRS. BURLACOMBE BURLACOMBE TRUSTAFORD JARLAND CLYST FREMAN GODLEIGH SOL POTTER MORSE, AND OTHERS IVY BURLACOMBE CONNIE TRUSTAFORD GLADYS FREMAN MERCY JARLAND TIBBY JARLAND BOBBIE JARLAND
    SCENE: A VILLAGE OF THE WEST
    The Action passes on Ascension Day.
    ACT I. STRANGWAY'S rooms at BURLACOMBE'S. Morning.
    ACT II. Evening
    SCENE I. The Village Inn. SCENE II. The same. SCENE III. Outside the church.
    ACT III. Evening
    SCENE I. STRANGWAY'S rooms. SCENE II. BURLACOMBE'S barn.
    A BIT O' LOVE
    ACT I
    It is Ascension Day in a village of the West. In the low panelled hall-sittingroom of the BURLACOMBE'S farmhouse on the village green, MICHAEL STRANGWAY, a clerical collar round his throat and a dark Norfolk jacket on his back, is playing the flute before a very large framed photograph of a woman, which is the only picture on the walls. His age is about thirty-five his figure thin and very upright and his clean-shorn face thin, upright, narrow, with long and rather pointed ears; his dark hair is brushed in a coxcomb off his forehead. A faint smile hovers about his lips that Nature has made rather full and he has made thin, as though keeping a hard secret; but his bright grey eyes, dark round the rim, look out and upwards almost as if he were being crucified. There is something about the whole of him that makes him seen not quite present. A gentle creature, burnt within.
    A low broad window above a window-seat forms the background to his figure; and through its lattice panes are seen the outer gate and yew-trees of a churchyard and the porch of a church, bathed in May sunlight. The front door at right angles to the window-seat, leads to the village green, and a door on the left into the house.
    It is the third movement of Veracini's violin sonata that STRANGWAY plays. His back is turned to the door into the house, and he does not hear when it is opened, and IVY BURLACOMBE, the farmer's daughter, a girl of fourteen, small and quiet as a mouse, comes in, a prayer-book in one hand, and in the other a gloss of water, with wild orchis and a bit of deep pink hawthorn. She sits down on the window-seat, and having opened her book, sniffs at the flowers. Coming to the end of the movement STRANGWAY stops, and looking up at the face on the wall, heaves a long sigh.
    IVY. [From the seat] I picked these for yu, Mr. Strangway.
    STRANGWAY. [Turning with a start] Ah! Ivy. Thank you. [He puts his flute down on a chair against the far wall] Where are the others?
    As he speaks, GLADYS FREMAN, a dark gipsyish girl, and CONNIE
    TRUSTAFORD, a fair, stolid, blue-eyed Saxon, both about sixteen,
    come in through the front door, behind which they have evidently
    been listening. They too have prayer-books in their hands.
    They sidle past Ivy, and also sit down under the window.
    GLADYS. Mercy's comin', Mr. Strangway.
    STRANGWAY. Good morning, Gladys; good morning, Connie.
    He turns to a book-case on a table against the far wall, and taking out a book, finds his place in it. While he stands thus with his back to the girls, MERCY JARLAND comes in from the green. She also is about sixteen, with fair hair and china-blue eyes. She glides in quickly, hiding something behind her, and sits down on the seat next the door. And at once there is a whispering.
    STRANGWAY. [Turning to them] Good morning, Mercy.
    MERCY. Good morning, Mr. Strangway.
    STRANGWAY. Now, yesterday I was telling you what our Lord's coming meant to the world. I want you to understand that before He came there wasn't really love, as we know it. I don't mean to say that there weren't many good people; but there wasn't love for the sake of loving. D'you think you understand what I mean?
    MERCY fidgets. GLADYS'S eyes are following a fly.
    IVY. Yes, Mr. Strangway.
    STRANGWAY. It isn't enough to love people because they're good to you, or because in some way or other you're going to get something by it. We have to love because we love loving. That's the great thing —without that we're nothing but Pagans.
    GLADYS. Please, what is Pagans?
    STRANGWAY. That's what the first Christians called the people who lived in the villages and were not yet Christians, Gladys.
    MERCY. We live in a village, but we're Christians.
    STRANGWAY. [With a smile] Yes, Mercy; and what is a Christian?
    MERCY kicks afoot, sideways against her neighbour, frowns over her china-blare eyes, is silent; then, as his question passes on, makes a quick little face, wriggles, and looks behind her.
    STRANGWAY. Ivy?
    IVY. 'Tis a man—whu—whu——
    STRANGWAY. Yes?—Connie?
    CONNIE. [Who speaks rather thickly, as if she had a permanent slight cold] Please, Mr. Strangway, 'tis a man what goes to church.
    GLADYS. He 'as to be baptised—and confirmed; and—and—buried.
    IVY. 'Tis a man whu—whu's gude and——
    GLADYS. He don't drink, an' he don't beat his horses, an' he don't hit back.
    MERCY. [Whispering] 'Tisn't your turn. [To STRANGWAY] 'Tis a man like us.
    IVY. I know what Mrs. Strangway said it was, 'cause I asked her once, before she went away.
    STRANGWAY. [Startled] Yes?
    IVY. She said it was a man whu forgave everything.
    STRANGWAY. Ah!
    The note of a cuckoo comes travelling. The girls are gazing at
    STRANGWAY, who seems to have gone of into a dream. They begin
    to fidget and whisper.
    CONNIE. Please, Mr. Strangway, father says if yu hit a man and he don't hit yu back, he's no gude at all.
    MERCY. When Tommy Morse wouldn't fight, us pinched him—he did squeal! [She giggles] Made me laugh!
    STRANGWAY. Did I ever tell you about St. Francis of Assisi?
    IVY. [Clasping her hands] No.
    STRANGWAY. Well, he was the best Christian, I think, that ever lived—simply full of love and joy.
    IVY. I expect he's dead.
    STRANGWAY. About seven hundred years, Ivy.
    IVY. [Softly] Oh!
    STRANGWAY. Everything to him was brother or sister—the sun and the moon, and all that was poor and weak and sad, and animals and birds, so that they even used to follow him about.
    MERCY. I know! He had crumbs in his pocket.
    STRANGWAY. No; he had love in his eyes.
    IVY. 'Tis like about Orpheus, that yu told us.
    STRANGWAY. Ah! But St. Francis was a Christian, and Orpheus was a
    Pagan.
    About Author :

    John Galsworthy OM (/ˈɡɔːlzwɜːrði/; 14 August 1867 – 31 January 1933) was an English novelist and playwright. Notable works include The Forsyte Saga (1906–1921) and its sequels, A Modern Comedy and End of the Chapter. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1932.

    Galsworthy was born at what is now known as Galsworthy House (then called Parkhurst) on Kingston Hill in Surrey, England, the son of John and Blanche Bailey (née Bartleet) Galsworthy. His family was prosperous and well established, with a large property in Kingston upon Thames that is now the site of three schools: Marymount International School, Rokeby Preparatory School, and Holy Cross Preparatory School. He attended Harrow and New College, Oxford. He took a Second in Law (Jurisprudentia) at Oxford in 1889, then trained as a barrister and was called to the bar in 1890. However, he was not keen to begin practising law and instead travelled abroad to look after the family's shipping business. During these travels he met Joseph Conrad, then the first mate of a sailing-ship moored in the harbour of Adelaide, Australia, and the two future novelists became close friends. In 1895 Galsworthy began an affair with Ada Nemesis Pearson Cooper (1864–1956), the wife of his cousin Major Arthur Galsworthy. After her divorce ten years later, they were married on 23 September 1905 and stayed together until his death in 1933. Before their marriage, they often stayed clandestinely in a farmhouse called Wingstone in the village of Manaton on Dartmoor, Devon. In 1908 Galsworthy took a long lease on part of the building and it was their regular second home until 1923.

    From the Four Winds, a collection of short stories, was Galsworthy's first published work in 1897. These and several subsequent works were published under the pen name of John Sinjohn, and it was not until The Island Pharisees (1904) that he began publishing under his own name, probably owing to the recent death of his father. His first full-length novel, Jocelyn, was published in an edition of 750 under the name of John Sinjohn—he later refused to have it republished. His first play, The Silver Box (1906), —in which the theft of a prostitute's purse by a rich 'young man of good family' is placed beside the theft of a silver cigarette case from the rich man's father's house by 'a poor devil', with very different repercussions, though justice was clearly done in each case—became a success, and he followed it up with The Man of Property (1906), the first book of a Forsyte trilogy. Although he continued writing both plays and novels, it was as a playwright that he was mainly appreciated at the time. Along with those of other writers of the period, such as George Bernard Shaw, his plays addressed the class system and other social issues, two of the best known being Strife (1909) and The Skin Game (1920).

    John Galsworthy
    He is now far better known for his novels, particularly The Forsyte Saga, his trilogy about the eponymous family and connected lives. These books, as with many of his other works, deal with social class, and upper-middle class lives in particular. Although sympathetic to his characters, he highlights their insular, snobbish, and acquisitive attitudes and their suffocating moral codes. He is viewed as one of the first writers of the Edwardian era who challenged some of the ideals of society depicted in the preceding literature of Victorian England. The depiction of a woman in an unhappy marriage furnishes another recurring theme in his work. The character of Irene in The Forsyte Saga is drawn from Ada Pearson, though her previous marriage was not as miserable as that of the character.

    Causes Edit
    Through his writings Galsworthy campaigned for a variety of causes, including prison reform, women's rights, and animal welfare, and also against censorship. Galsworthy was a supporter of British involvement in the First World War. In an article for The Daily News on 31 August 1914 Galsworthy called for war on Germany to protect Belgium. Galsworthy added "What are we going to do for Belgium — for this most gallant of little countries, ground, because of sheer loyalty, under an iron heel?" During the First World War he worked in a hospital in France as an orderly, after being passed over for military service, and in 1917 turned down a knighthood, for which he was nominated by Prime Minister David Lloyd George, on the precept that a writer's reward comes simply from writing itself.
    Galsworthy opposed the slaughter of animals and fought for animal rights. He was also a humanitarian and a member of the Humanitarian League.
    Honours Edit
    In 1921 he was elected as the first president of the PEN International literary club and was appointed to the Order of Merit in 1929. Galsworthy was awarded the 1932 Nobel Prize for Literature, having been nominated that same year by Henrik Schück, a member of the Swedish Academy. He was too ill to attend the Nobel Prize presentation ceremony on 10 December 1932, and died seven weeks later. He donated the prize money from the Nobel Prize to PEN International.

    Galsworthy lived for the final seven years of his life at Bury in West Sussex. He died from a brain tumour at his London home, Grove Lodge, Hampstead. In accordance with his will he was cremated at Woking, with his ashes then being scattered over the South Downs from an aeroplane, but there are also memorials to him in Highgate 'New' Cemetery and in the cloisters of New College, Oxford, cut by Eric Gill.The popularity of his fiction waned quickly after his death but the hugely successful television adaptation of The Forsyte Saga in 1967 renewed interest in his work.
    Legacy Edit
    A number of John Galsworthy's letters and papers are held at the University of Birmingham Special Collections.
    In 2007, Kingston University opened a new building named in recognition of his local birth. Galsworthy Road in Kingston, the location of Kingston Hospital, is also named for him.

    Source: Wikipedia

    Kobo 電子書 購買注意事項如下:

    (一)如果您是第一次購買Kobo電子書的顧客,請依以下兩種購買方式擇一進行綁定:

    1.PChome 24h 網頁版(https://24h.pchome.com.tw/):結帳後至顧客中心,確認訂單狀態,若為確認中,請稍候五分鐘,待訂單狀態變為訂單成立後,點選明細,在訂單資訊中點選〔內容〕,在彈跳視窗後點選〔去兌換〕,即可前往Kobo官網執行綁定及登入流程。

    我的訂單/顧客中心 >訂單查詢> 訂單編號> 點選明細 > 訂單資訊 點選〔內容〕>彈跳視窗 點選〔去兌換〕即可前往Kobo官網執行綁定及登入流程。

    2.PChome APP版:結帳後至顧客中心,確認訂單狀態,若為確認中,請稍候五分鐘,待訂單狀態變為訂單成立後,點選明細,在訂單資訊中點選[序號/軟體下載],並在彈跳視窗出現後點選〔下載連結〕,即可前往Kobo官網執行綁定及登入流程。

    顧客中心> 訂單查詢> 訂單編號> 點選明細 > 訂單資訊 點選 [序號/軟體下載] >彈跳視窗 點選〔下載連結〕即可前往Kobo官網執行綁定及登入流程。

    *進入Kobo官網後的綁定流程請參考如下:

    (使用Kobo主帳號 登入/註冊)
    1. 當您在PChome 24h 網頁版(https://24h.pchome.com.tw/)/PChome APP版,購買確認後,並依步驟跳轉到Kobo官網時,下滑點選〔更多登錄選項〕,由〔PChome〕後點選進入,同意後登入,並可以註冊Kobo主帳號進行綁定,完成後,所購買的書籍即會出現在Kobo APP/Kobo 閱讀器/Kobo官網內的我的書籍。

    (使用快速登入:FACEBOOK、GOOGLE、APPLE帳號登入)
    2. 當您在PChome 24h 網頁版(https://24h.pchome.com.tw/)/PChome APP版,購買確認後,並依指示跳轉到Kobo官網時,點選〔FACEBOOK、GOOGLE、APPLE帳號登入〕擇一登入,同意後登入,並可以註冊Kobo主帳號進行綁定,完成後,所購買的書籍即會出現在Kobo APP/Kobo 閱讀器/Kobo官網內的我的書籍。

    (二)如果您是已經完成PChome與Kobo帳號綁定程序,非第一次購買Kobo電子書的顧客

    1.PChome 24h 網頁版(https://24h.pchome.com.tw/):結帳後至顧客中心,確認訂單狀態,若為確認中,請稍候五分鐘,待訂單狀態變為訂單成立後,點選明細,在訂單資訊中點選〔內容〕,在彈跳視窗後點選〔去兌換〕,所購買的書籍即會出現在Kobo APP/Kobo 閱讀器/Kobo官網內的我的書籍。

    2.PChome APP版:結帳後至顧客中心,確認訂單狀態,若為確認中,請稍候五分鐘,待訂單狀態變為訂單成立後,點選明細,在訂單資訊中點選[序號/軟體下載],並在彈跳視窗出現後點選〔下載連結〕,所購買的書籍即會出現在Kobo APP/Kobo 閱讀器/Kobo官網內的我的書籍。

    - 退換貨:依樂天Kobo官方規範為準

    - 僅能由 閱讀器以外 的裝置做會員帳號綁定

    - 請注意,帳號綁定後:

    * Kobo會更新您的帳戶詳細資料

    * 您將能在Kobo APP/Kobo 閱讀器/Kobo官網中查看所有書籍

    * 帳號綁定後,您可以使用任一帳戶登入 Kobo

    * 完成第一次串接時,請登出所有裝置,約等待5分鐘後再登入即可查看您的書籍

    * 重新登入後,原帳戶中的書籍如有畫線註記和收藏將有遺失的可能。登出前,請務必先行拍照備份

    * 若您有任何相關疑問請至Kobo官方網站 https://help.kobo.com/hc/zh-tw 並到頁面最下方點選“聯繫我們”

規格說明

1. 出版地:台灣

2. 本商品為數位內容商品,非實體紙本書籍

3. 完成購買後,請使用Kobo App、Kobo桌面閱讀軟體Kobo Desktop或Kobo閱讀器閱讀。App詳情請見:https://www.kobo.com/tw/zh/p/apps

4. 下載格式:Epub2-流式格式

備註

樂天Kobo官方授權銷售

1. 訂單確認交易成功後,系統會自動將書籍匯入帳戶

2. 請使用樂天Kobo提供的閱讀程式或裝置閱讀

3. 訂單及書籍問題請聯繫PCHOME客服中心

購物須知
寄送時間
預計訂單成立後7個工作天內送達不含週六日及國定假日。如廠商有約定日將於約定日期內送達,約定日期需於訂單成立後14天內。
送貨方式
透過宅配或是郵局送達。
消費者訂購之商品若經配送兩次無法送達,再經本公司以電話與E-mail均無法聯繫逾三天者,本公司將取消該筆訂單,並且全額退款。
送貨範圍
限台灣本島地區。注意!收件地址請勿為郵政信箱。
若有台灣本島以外地區送貨需求,收貨人地址請填台灣本島親友的地址。
執照證號&登錄字號
本公司食品業者登錄字號A-116606102-00000-0
關於退貨
  • PChome24h購物的消費者,都可以依照消費者保護法的規定,享有商品貨到次日起七天猶豫期的權益。(請留意猶豫期非試用期!!)您所退回的商品必須回復原狀(復原至商品到貨時的原始狀態並且保持完整包裝,包括商品本體、配件、贈品、保證書、原廠包裝及所有附隨文件或資料的完整性)。商品一經拆封/啟用保固,將使商品價值減損,您理解本公司將依法收取回復原狀必要之費用(若無法復原,費用將以商品價值損失計算),請先確認商品正確、外觀可接受再行使用,以免影響您的權利,祝您購物順心。
  • 如果您所購買商品是下列特殊商品,請留意下述退貨注意事項:
    1. 易於腐敗之商品、保存期限較短之商品、客製化商品、報紙、期刊、雜誌,依據消費者保護法之規定,於收受商品後將無法享有七天猶豫期之權益且不得辦理退貨。
    2. 影音商品、電腦軟體或個人衛生用品等一經拆封即無法回復原狀的商品,在您還不確定是否要辦理退貨以前,請勿拆封,一經拆封則依消費者保護法之規定,無法享有七天猶豫期之權益且不得辦理退貨。
    3. 非以有形媒介提供之數位內容或一經提供即為完成之線上服務,一經您事先同意後始提供者,依消費者保護法之規定,您將無法享有七天猶豫期之權益且不得辦理退貨。
    4. 組合商品於辦理退貨時,應將組合銷售商品一同退貨,若有遺失、毀損或缺件,PChome將可能要求您依照損毀程度負擔回復原狀必要之費用。
  • 若您需辦理退貨,請利用顧客中心「查訂單」或「退訂/退款查詢」的「退訂/退貨」功能填寫申請,我們將於接獲申請之次日起1個工作天內檢視您的退貨要求,檢視完畢後將以E-mail回覆通知您,並將委託本公司指定之宅配公司,在5個工作天內透過電話與您連絡前往取回退貨商品。請您保持電話暢通,並備妥原商品及所有包裝及附件,以便於交付予本公司指定之宅配公司取回(宅配公司僅負責收件,退貨商品仍由特約廠商進行驗收),宅配公司取件後會提供簽收單據給您,請注意留存。
  • 退回商品時,請以本公司或特約廠商寄送商品給您時所使用的外包裝(紙箱或包裝袋),原封包裝後交付給前來取件的宅配公司;如果本公司或特約廠商寄送商品給您時所使用的外包裝(紙箱或包裝袋)已經遺失,請您在商品原廠外盒之外,再以其他適當的包裝盒進行包裝,切勿任由宅配單直接粘貼在商品原廠外盒上或書寫文字。
  • 若因您要求退貨或換貨、或因本公司無法接受您全部或部分之訂單、或因契約解除或失其效力,而需為您辦理退款事宜時,您同意本公司得代您處理發票或折讓單等相關法令所要求之單據,以利本公司為您辦理退款。
  • 本公司收到您所提出的申請後,若經確認無誤,將依消費者保護法之相關規定,返還您已支付之對價(含信用卡交易),退款日當天會再發送E-mail通知函給您。