Amos Barton

E1023615

Amos Barton is a fictional clergyman whose modest struggles and personal hardships are portrayed with deep psychological realism in George Eliot’s early novella "The Sad Fortunes of the Reverend Amos Barton."

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Label Occurrences
Amos Barton canonical 3

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Statements (41)

Predicate Object
instanceOf clergyman
fictional character
protagonist
appearsIn The Sad Fortunes of the Reverend Amos Barton NERFINISHED
characterTrait conscientious
modest
pious
socially awkward
countryOfOrigin United Kingdom
createdBy George Eliot NERFINISHED
evaluatedByNarratorAs limited but sincere
experiences bereavement
financial distress
social criticism
firstPublicationContext Scenes of Clerical Life NERFINISHED
firstPublishedIn Blackwood’s Magazine NERFINISHED
genre realist fiction
hasChild six children
hasSpouse Milicent Barton NERFINISHED
literaryMovement Victorian literature NERFINISHED
literarySignificance early example of George Eliot’s psychological realism
livesIn Shepperton NERFINISHED
narrativeFunction study of an ordinary clergyman
narrativeRole title character
occupation Anglican clergyman
Reverend
portrayedAs devoted father
devoted husband
financially struggling clergyman
relatedWork Janet’s Repentance NERFINISHED
Mr Gilfil’s Love Story NERFINISHED
religion Christianity
settingOfLife rural English parish
symbolizes quiet endurance
unheroic goodness
themeAssociated clergy life
domestic hardship
poverty
psychological realism
timePeriod 19th century
undergoes moral testing

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.