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to his father, despite the fact that the family lawyer insists on telling the senior Mr. Rainier so he can change his will back and include Charles, who had been assumed dead. Shortly afterwards, Charles receives word that his father has died and returns home. The family gathers to pay their last respects, and included is 14-year-old Kitty, stepdaughter of Charles' elder sister Jill. Prompted by the family lawyer, each of the Rainier heirs agrees to give up a portion of their inheritance to Charles, so he may have an equal share. Under the poor leadership of Charles' older brother Chetwynd (Chet), Rainier shares dwindle in worth until Charles has to take control of the company to save it from bankruptcy. He takes leave from university (where he had resumed his studies which had been interrupted by war) and throws himself into work. He saves the family business, but at the price of his own scholarly aspirations. In due course, he and Kitty become engaged. But before their wedding, he receives a note from Kitty breaking off the engagement, and telling him she is going abroad.
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rescued by a young woman just as he is on the point of being reported. Feeling poorly, he is helped by the young woman – Paula Ridgeway – to a nearby hotel, The Owl, where she is staying. Now assigned the pseudonym of 'Smith', he takes on odd jobs at the hotel, guarded by 'Biffer', the ex-boxer and landlord. It is not long before his whereabouts become known to the hospital. Although Paula sends him away before he is caught, they soon meet up again at a revue in which she is appearing. She arranges a job with the travelling troupe of actors, and they grow closer. After an abortive stage appearance of his own and a brief resumption of his mental illness in which he assaults a man in the street, 'Smith' escapes to a small village named Beachings Over. Paula easily tracks him down, however, and aware that the authorities may still be pursuing him after the assault, they move to London, where they are befriended by Blampied, a kindly
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sophistication are contrasted with the happy simplicity of his time with Paula; similarly stark contrasts are drawn between the grimness of London and the idyll of Beachings Over. Hilton draws parallels between Rainier's ability to sense impending doom but inability to do anything about it and British governmental paralysis in responding to Hitler's manoeuvres preceding the outbreak of the Second World War.
353:. 'Smith' and Paula marry and Smith starts to help the parson in his work. Smith discovers a flair for writing, and Blampied, knowing the editor of a newspaper in Liverpool, sends some of Smith's writings to him. Impressed, the editor asks 'Smith' to come and see him. 'Smith' arrives in Liverpool, but slips whilst crossing the street in the rain and is knocked unconscious. 370:
platonic marriage with him. Her motives and anxieties are revealed to the audience through discussions with Dr. Jonathan Benet, Smith's psychiatrist from the asylum, a character original to the film. He cautions her that she must not reveal her true identity to Rainier, that he must recover his memories, if he's going to, spontaneously.
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become ensconced in the business world. We know that when Margaret has John Smith declared dead it has been 12 years since he disappeared, making 1932 the year of Charles’ election and their marriage. Margaret decides to go away on their third anniversary, so the film ends in 1935, untouched by World War II.
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The encounter causes Rainier's memory to flood back. He remembers his life in the hospital, where he had been deposited after being released from a German prison hospital as an unknown soldier. Escaping from the asylum as the end of the Great War is being celebrated, he goes into Melbury, where he is
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Rainier's tale is told in the form of the third person (although Harrison is recounting it) and relates his return to Stourton, where he learns his father is gravely ill. Told by the doctor that the shock of his return could be fatal to his father, Charles decides to leave his home to lessen the risk
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The book is prefaced with this quote: '..German Official Report: "According to a British Official report, bombs fell at Random"'. The novel starts in 1937, and is narrated by Charles Rainier's secretary, Mr. Harrison. Charles and Mrs. Rainier ("Helen" in the novel) reside at Stourton, their country
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Kitty does not die in the film. Rainier's father is already deceased when he returns to Random Hall, and, after 1920 when he recovers his memories, few specific dates or historical events are given. We know only that enough years have passed for Kitty to graduate from university, and for Rainier to
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These recollections prompt Rainier to become more determined than ever to find out what happened after his blackout in Liverpool, above all to locate Paula. He goes off to search and Harrison returns to the Rainier home, where he encounters Mrs. Rainier. He outlines what has taken place. She takes
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Rainier meets Paula for the second time some time after 1920, having recovered his original memories, but having lost the memory of his years as Smith, her husband. She identifies herself to him as Margaret Hansen, and becomes his trusted private secretary, later entering into a non-romantic,
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Harrison for a drive, then "threaded the winding gravel roads over the estate to an exit I had not known of before..." They wind up in Beachings Over and spot Rainier's car. Mrs. Rainier and Harrison find Charles up on a hillside. The closing line reveals that Mrs. Rainier is in fact Paula.
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A theme common to this and James Hilton's other novels is lost innocence – here, the destructive effects of two world wars on England – and a concomitant yearning to return to apparently simpler times. Charles Rainier's complex, pressure-filled business and political life and his outward
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show, and something about it sparks a vague memory in Rainier. He starts to remember things, including being in a hospital in Melbury, a north London outer suburb. He and Harrison drive there, where he finds the asylum he was in during the final days of World War I.
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The film, unlike the novel, does not employ flashbacks. The narrative begins in 1918, when the patient simply called Smith is in the asylum. The viewer first encounters Paula in this context as his rescuer, and so is well aware of her identity throughout the film.
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nomination for their work. Though the film departs from the novel's narrative in several significant ways, the novel's surprise ending, cleverly built on inferences drawn by the reader, would not work in a visual medium.
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manor west of London, where she is the perfect hostess, and a young man named Woburn has been hired to catalogue the family library. One night Rainier recounts his story to Harrison, from the time he woke up in
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as "Rancid Harvest" (Season 6, Ep 24, 24 March 1973) with Carol Burnett decked out in a red plaid cape and tam-o-shanter as Greer Garson (Paula) desperately trying to jog the memory of
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Thus, at the end of the film, it is only to Charles Rainier / Smithy that Paula's true identity is revealed, and there is never any uncertainty that she is his lost love.
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Rainier goes on to disclose to Harrison that Kitty was to die soon after. Meantime, war is on the horizon, and Harrison and Rainier spend time together going to
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tells the story of Charles Rainier, a wealthy businessman and politician, from the time he was invalided out of the army during
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Colman and Garson reprised their roles in a radio version on the
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The novel is divided, not into chapters, but five large parts.
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It is set in the period immediately after the outbreak of the
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This article is about the 1941 novel. For the 1942 film, see
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and working. On a lark, they go see an old-fashioned
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The novel was made into a film in 1942, directed by
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The novel is set in the years immediately following
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Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 285:adapted the novel for the screen, and received an 1016: 772:H.R.H.: The Story of Philip, Duke of Edinburgh 577: 329:in 1919, having lost two years of his life. 584: 570: 309:by Harrison, and by means of two extended 265:The novel was successfully adapted into a 136: 116:Learn how and when to remove this message 1017: 565: 457:The 1942 film version was spoofed on 467:as Ronald Colman (Charles Rainier). 54:adding citations to reliable sources 25: 13: 800:"From Information Received" (1938) 14: 1056: 1040:British novels adapted into films 507: 591: 207:Print (hardback & paperback) 30: 803:"The Girl Who Got There" (1938) 380: 269:in 1942 under the direction of 41:needs additional citations for 812:"You Can't Touch Dotty" (1938) 477: 408: 1: 835:(with Barbara Burnham) (1938) 791:"Twilight of the Wise" (1936) 470: 258:, and it was published as an 758:Mr. Chips Looks at the World 7: 829:(with Philip Howard) (1937) 797:"It's a Crazy World" (1937) 253:list of best-selling novels 10: 1061: 1045:Macmillan Publishers books 444:, airing 31 January 1944. 18: 907: 842: 819: 781: 750: 599: 211: 203: 195: 185: 175: 165: 157: 147: 135: 966:The Story of Dr. Wassell 765:The Story of Dr. Wassell 293: 360: 1035:Novels by James Hilton 900:(collaboration) (1943) 460:The Carol Burnett Show 395:combat stress reaction 260:Armed Services Edition 230:is a novel written by 926:Knight Without Armour 881:The Tuttles of Tahiti 873:Foreign Correspondent 794:"The Bat King" (1937) 682:Knight Without Armour 267:film of the same name 21:Random Harvest (film) 866:Lights Out in Europe 788:"The Failure" (1924) 305:. It is told in the 50:improve this article 16:Book by James Hilton 1025:1941 British novels 809:(collection) (1938) 741:Time and Time Again 631:Meadows of the Moon 619:The Passionate Year 437:in the lead roles. 132: 1003:Goodbye, Mr. Chips 997:Goodbye, Mr. Chips 982:Goodbye, Mr. Chips 974:So Well Remembered 942:Goodbye, Mr. Chips 833:Goodbye, Mr. Chips 727:Nothing So Strange 721:So Well Remembered 698:Goodbye, Mr. Chips 558:: 17 February 1949 556:Hallmark Playhouse 491:on 16 October 2011 311:external analepses 243:Goodbye, Mr. Chips 130: 1012: 1011: 897:Forever and a Day 876:(dialogue) (1940) 807:To You, Mr Chips! 625:Dawn of Reckoning 607:Catherine Herself 546:: 31 January 1944 544:Lux Radio Theater 442:Lux Radio Theater 249:Publishers Weekly 223: 222: 196:Publication place 126: 125: 118: 100: 1052: 934:We Are Not Alone 859:We Are Not Alone 706:We Are Not Alone 652:Murder at School 644:The Silver Flame 586: 579: 572: 563: 562: 501: 500: 498: 496: 487:. 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Random Harvest (film)

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James Hilton
War novel
Macmillan
ISBN
0-333-02681-0
James Hilton
Lost Horizon
Goodbye, Mr. Chips
Publishers Weekly
list of best-selling novels
for the year
Armed Services Edition
film of the same name
Mervyn LeRoy
Claudine West
George Froeschel
Arthur Wimperis

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