
A CROOKED PATH - A NOVEL. - BY MRS. ALEXANDER,
CHAPTER I. - "GATHERING CLOUDS."
CHAPTER II. - BREAKING NEW GROUND.
CHAPTER III. - THE LAWYER'S VISIT.
CHAPTER IV. - "A RIFT IN THE CLOUDS."
CHAPTER V. - "INTO THE SHADOWS."
CHAPTER VI. - "SHIFTING SCENES."
CHAPTER VII. - THE BEGINNING OF THE END.
CHAPTER VIII. - "THE LONG TASK IS DONE."
CHAPTER IX. - "TEMPTATION."
In the early days of a bright June, London's genteel season is just beginning to stir, and the bustling streets around Hyde Park set the stage for a chance reunion. Two polished gentlemen—one a stout, middle‑aged officer with a weary gaze, the other a lean, solemn younger man—cross paths at the gate of Apsley House, sharing news of a family crisis that threatens to pull the younger into the tangled world of public affairs. Their conversation hints at duty, ambition, and the weight of inherited responsibilities, while the surrounding crowd moves in the rhythm of horse‑drawn carriages and newly introduced omnibuses.
A sudden panic erupts when a child darts into traffic, and the younger gentleman, Bertie, instinctively saves the boy, earning the gratitude of a distressed aunt. This brave act not only introduces a lively cast of characters—a sharp‑eyed colonel, an anxious mother, and a bustling London backdrop—but also suggests that Bertie's newfound heroism may draw him deeper into the social and political currents that swirl around the aristocracy. The novel promises a portrait of Victorian life where personal honor and public obligations intersect on a crooked, ever‑turning path.
Language
en
Duration
~15 hours (897K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier, Janet Blenkinship and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2006-05-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1825–1902
A popular Irish-born Victorian novelist, she wrote as “Mrs. Alexander” and built a wide readership with stories full of family tensions, money worries, and sharp social observation. Her fiction was prolific, readable, and deeply rooted in the emotional stakes of everyday life.
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