Synopsis
Book One
Book One takes place over August and September 1790 in fourteen chapters. These are the main developments: * With Ross set to go to trial on charges that he fomented the disastrous rioting on Hewlandra Beach in January , the Warleggan family hires several agents to collect testimony against Ross. This includes securing damaging testimony from Ross's former employee, Jud Paynter, and paying him in advance. * Unwin Trevaunance is the younger brother of local landowner Sir John Trevaunace. He is "thirty-six or thirty-seven, tall, lion-faced, and masterful". Unwin is in the area to run for Parliament and to pay court to Caroline Penvenen. Caroline, an orphan of about 18 years of age, will come into money and is the niece of local landowner Ray Penvenen; she visits him periodically. Unwin successfully wins the election. He is less successful in securing the devotion of Caroline. * Local smuggler Ted Carkeek's crew is apprehended by the authorities. This leads the locals to suspect that there is an informant in their midst. * Ross's trial is set to take place in Bodmin, at the "summer assizes", in early September, with two judges and a jury. The assizes are set for the same days as the election, which means that Bodmin is full to the gills. Ross is required to be jailed in Bodmin for several days before the trial. Demelza comes to Bodmin, and so do Verity, Francis and Dwight Enys. Ross's attorney strongly advises him to take a submissive posture before the judges. Demelza, without consulting with anyone, tries to approach the judges before the trial to lobby for her husband's innocence. * Dwight Enys, in Bodmin to attend the trial of Ross Poldark, is introduced to Caroline Penvenen, who is in Bodmin because Unwin Trevaunance, who is courting her, is running for Parliament in the elections shortly to occur. Her dog becomes ill and she sends for a doctor. Enys is asked to attend and he does, not understanding that the patient is a dog. He refuses the assignment but then relents. Sparks fly between the two. * Dwight Enys and Francis Poldark encounter each other in Bodmin and Dwight offers to share his hotel room with Francis, since there is a shortage of rooms. Francis intends to kill himself, seeing life as bleak because of his impoverishment and because his wife is cold to him. He shoots himself but the gun does not successfully discharge. Dwight enters the room shortly thereafter and sizes up the situation. The two discuss it and Francis decides that the fates have decided that he is to live. * At the packed trial, the crown's case against Ross is strong until Jud Paynter is called to testify against Ross, as he has agreed to do. On the stand, in one of the more dramatic and entertaining parts of the novel, Paynter takes the opposite position that he took when telling agents of the crown as well as agents of the Warleggan interests, what he intended to say on the stand. Rather, he denies that Ross had any involvement at all in the rioting. Ross is acquitted by the jury after a short deliberation. During the trial, Demelza realizes she is pregnant. * Verity and Francis Poldark encounter each other in Bodmin for the first time since her elopement. It is unclear whether a reconciliation will occur. * Home from the trial, Demelza expresses that she would like "a child in the cot". Ross recoils, saying, "Was not the last experience enough for you? I want no more fodder for the epidemics." Demelza decides not to reveal that she is pregnant. * The Warleggan clan meets, to discuss next steps in the wake of Ross's (to them) disappointing acquittal. It becomes evident that George does not want certain aggressive actions to be launched against the Francis Poldark family in spite of a minor altercation with Francis in Bodmin and that this is because "There is another person to consider". It is implied that this person is Elizabeth Poldark.Book Two
Book Two covers December 1790 through June 1791 in fourteen chapters. * Book Two opens with a description of the growing distance between Ross and Demelza. When Demelza realizes that Ross will need to sell off items in order to raise money to avoid debtor's prison, she encourages him to sell a brooch he gave her, along with farmstock. * Dwight Enys realizes that many local residents are suffering from '' scorbutus''. He is called to attend an ill Caroline Penvenen and determines that the source of her distress is a fishbone caught in her throat. He extracts it. Several days later, he receives a note from Caroline requesting that he visit her to check on her health. In reading this note, he realizes he is desperately in love with her. Visiting her, he becomes aware of her attitudes toward the poor, which are not similar to his. He tells her about the suffering due to '' scorbutus''. Several days later, she arranges for truckloads of fresh oranges to be delivered to him to aid in their relief. * Francis and Elizabeth Poldark invite Ross and Demelza to Christmas in the interest of aReception and analysis
''Jeremy Poldark'' has been described as a "dazzling Cornish drama". Scholar Ellen Moody argues that "Winston Graham's historical fiction brings into focus areas and perspectives on experience essential to understanding the nature of civil liberty." Specifically in ''Jeremy Poldark'', she notes that in the novel, "George can order a mine closed that Ross has shares in and force Ross and Henshawe (a partner) to fire miners or find jobs for them elsewhere because George wants bigger profits from investments, a loan from a friend could enable Ross to have the money to change the situation so that next time they would have 'freedom to call our souls our own'”.Citations
{{DEFAULTSORT:Poldark Novels, The Cornish culture Novels set in Cornwall 1950 British novels History of Cornwall Ward, Lock & Co. books