Flashman and the Dragon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Author | George MacDonald Fraser |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Historical novel |
Publisher | HarperCollins |
Released | 1985 |
Media Type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
Pages | 320 pp (paperback) |
ISBN | ISBN 0-00-721721-8 |
Preceded by | Flashman and the Redskins |
Followed by | Flashman and the Mountain of Light |
Flashman and the Dragon is a 1985 novel by George MacDonald Fraser. It is the eighth of the Flashman novels.
Contents |
[edit] Plot introduction
Presented within the frame of the supposedly discovered historical Flashman Papers, this book describes the bully Flashman from Tom Brown's Schooldays. The papers are attributed to Flashman, who is not only the bully featured in Thomas Hughes' novel, but also a well known Victorian military hero. The book begins with an explanatory note detailing the discovery of these papers.
The present novel takes place shortly after Flashman's service with John Brown in the United States (detailed in Flashman and the Angel of the Lord). There is no explanation as to how he ends up in Hong Kong, but it is from here that he begins his adventures in China. Flashman meets both the leaders of the Taiping Rebellion and members of the Qing Dynasty who resisted the British march to Pekin in 1860 - part of the Second Opium War.
[edit] Plot summary
In Hong Kong, Flashman is convinced by Phoebe Carpenter, a lovely minister's wife, to take a shipment of opium into Canton, with the promise of a later, more pleasant meeting. On the way he discovers that instead of opium he is carrying guns to the Taiping rebels. In Canton, Flashman manages to convince Harry Smith Parkes that he was trying to stop the shipment. However, instead of being able to head for home as he originally intended, he is put on the intelligence staff in Shanghai. From Shanghai he travels to Nanking and meets the leaders of the Taiping rebels, in order to convince them not to march on Shanghai.
Flashman then proceeds to the mouth of the Peiho to join Lord Elgin's staff for his march to Pekin. After being captured by the Imperials, he meets Xianfeng Emperor and becomes the prisoner and lover of Yehonala, the imperial concubine. At the end of the novel, he witnesses the destruction of the Summer Palace.
[edit] Characters
[edit] Fictional characters
- Harry Paget Flashman - the hero or anti-hero
- Reverend Josiah Carpenter
- Mrs Phoebe Carpenter
- Szu-Zhan - member of the Provident Brave Butterfly Triad
[edit] Historical characters
- James Hope Grant - British general and commander of the British forces during the Second Opium War. Flashman says, "He wasn't much of a general; it was notorious he'd never read a line outside the Bible; he was so inarticulate he could barely utter any order but 'Charge!'; his notions of discipline were to flog anything that moved...But none of this mattered in the least because, you see, Hope Grant was the best fighting man in the world."
- Frederick Townsend Ward - American soldier of fortune and initial commander of the Ever Victorious Army. Flashman tries to shoot him at one point, but later says, "while Gordon finished the Taiping business, it was young happy-go-lucky Fred who broke the ground for him."
- Hong Xiuquan - Founder and leader of the Taiping Rebellion, referred to as Hung Hsiu-chuan. Flashman meets him at a time when his mind has deteriorated from excess debauchery, and refers to him as a "raving, dangerous, dreadful madman, and one of the most diabolical powers ever loosed on a suffering world."
- Harry Smith Parkes - British diplomat
- John Arbuthnot Fisher - Midshipman when Flashman meets him on the Pearl River, but later Admiral of the Fleet
- Garnet Joseph Wolseley - On Hope Grant's staff in China
- Charles Montauban - Commander of the French forces during the Second Opium War
- Lord Elgin - High Commissioner to China and the ambassador whose job it was to go to Pekin and see that the Treaty of Tientsin was honored. He was also responsible for the destruction of the Summer Palace, which was vilified by many as an unciviled act of vandalism. Flashman, however, liked him and called him, "the shrewdest diplomatic of his day, hard as a hammer and subtle as a Spaniard."
- Li Xiucheng - Military commander of the Taiping Rebellion, referred to as Loyal Prince Li. Flashman says he could "feel the force that had brought him in ten years from apprentice charcoal-burner and private soldier to the third place in the Taiping hierarchy...It was there, in the cold soft voice and hard unwinking eyes; he was a fanatic of course, and a formidable one."
- Chen Yucheng
- Hong Rengan - cousin of Hong Xiuquan and Prime Minister of the Taiping movement, referred to as Hung Jen-Kan. Flashman calls him an "extraordinary man".
- Ch'en Yu-ch'eng
- Charles George Gordon - Flashman meets him briefly during the destruction of the Summer Palace.
- Henry Loch - Secretary to Lord Elgin.
- Felice Beato
- Prince Yi
- Sushun
- Xianfeng Emperor - Eighth emperor of the Manchu Qing Dynasty, referred to as Emperor Hsienfeng.
- Empress Dowager Ci'an
- Empress Dowager Cixi - Yehonala, the imperial concubine, when Flashman meets her. Flashman at one point refers to her as a monster, although he reconsiders and instead says, "With Yehonala everything was extreme; whatever she did was done with every fibre of her, and enjoyed with sensual intensity - whether it was nibbling a sugared walnut, or half-killing a partner in bed, or flaunting a new dress, or having an offender flogged nearly to death..." He later says she was one of three women he ever truly loved (excluding Elspeth), the other two being Lola Montez and Rani Lakshmi Bai.
- Tongzhi Emperor
- Prince Gong
Flashman novels |
---|
Flashman | Royal Flash | Flash for Freedom! | Flashman at the Charge | Flashman in the Great Game | Flashman's Lady | Flashman and the Redskins | Flashman and the Dragon | Flashman and the Mountain of Light | Flashman and the Angel of the Lord | Flashman and the Tiger | Flashman on the March |