Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Enduring Love
chapter 1 to 4
- Key Events
- Chapter 1
- picnic and balloon accident Joe
concerntrates on his and Clarissa's
romance
- John Logan
dies, all the men let go of the balloon
- The first meeting with Jed
- Chapter 2
- McEwan deliberately aiming for
suspense through the halting, teasing
narrative?
- Joe begins the next chapter by trying to
slow down his story, thinking about
whether this is the beginning, and
contemplating the artificial nature of
beginnings.
- Joe and Jed go and find Johns dead body and they
have their first conversation. Joe refuses to pray with
Jed as he is an athiest
- this difference in beliefs helps set the
conflict
- Joe retreats to science to explain the tragedy. He also says that
he wasn't the first to let go of the balloon and therefore wasn't
responsible for Johns death
- Chapter 3 +4
- Joe explains that a routine surgery left Clarissa unable to
bear children and that, although they are happy together, it is
clear she carries that pain with her.
- Joe and Clarissa arrive at
their apartment where they
exchange their experiences of
the tragedy
- Clarissa loves children, and when her friend’s
infant died unexpectedly, Clarissa treated it almost
as if it were her own “phantom” child.
- the telephone rings. Jed Parry says to him, “I just wanted you to know, I
understand what you’re feeling. I feel it too. I love you” (pg. 37). Clarissa
asks Joe who was calling, and he claims it was a wrong number,
admitting to the reader that it was his “first serious mistake”
- Joe notices someone following him in the library
- Key Quotes
- Chapter 1
- "We turned to look across
the field and saw the
danger.Next thing , I was
running towards it"
- "This was the
moment,this was the
pinprick on the time
map"
- "The beginning is
simple to mark"
- Chapter 2
- ‘So much followed from this incident, so much branching
and subdivision began in those early moments, such
pathways of love and hatred blazed from this starting
position, that a little reflection, even pedantry, can only
help me here.
- ‘Like a self in a dream I was both first
and third persons.
- Chapter 3 + 4
- Clarissa compares the falling Logan to a line of
John Milton from Paradise Lost: “Hurled headlong
flaming from th’Ethereal Sky” metaphor for her and joes relationship.
- “was a challenge that no angel could resist, and his death
denied their existence”
- “recount the events without re-living them in the faintest
degree, without even remembering them”