
Volume One--Chapter One. - Book One — His Vocation. - The Last of a Schoolboy.
Volume One--Chapter Two. - The Flame.
Volume One--Chapter Three. - Entry into the World.
Volume One--Chapter Four. - The Child-Man.
Volume One--Chapter Five. - Mr Shushions’s Tear Explained.
Volume One--Chapter Six. - In the House.
Volume One--Chapter Seven. - Auntie Hamps.
Volume One--Chapter Eight. - In the Shop.
Volume One--Chapter Nine. - The Town.
Volume One--Chapter Ten. - Free and Easy.
On a breezy July day in 1872, a sixteen‑year‑old Edwin Clayhanger leans on a red‑brick canal bridge that spans the boundary between the grim factories of the Five Towns and the greener fields of Hillport. The canal, choked with mud and the clatter of horse‑drawn barges, frames a world where industry and tradition clash, a tension that shapes the lives of the town’s two hundred thousand residents. Edwin watches the scene with a mixture of detachment and curiosity, already feeling the weight of the future pressing on his shoulders.
Beside him stands his longtime friend Charlie Orgreave—known simply as “the Sunday”—whose easy grin and unguarded eyes contrast sharply with Edwin’s more guarded ambition. Fresh from Middle School, Edwin is determined to leave the narrow limits of his provincial upbringing and carve a place for himself in the bustling world of commerce and invention. As the two boys step off the bridge, the promise and peril of the industrial age loom, hinting at the choices that will define Edwin’s path toward adulthood.
Language
en
Duration
~18 hours (1054K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Release date
2007-04-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1867–1931
Best known for bringing the everyday life of England's Potteries to vivid life, this prolific writer turned ordinary streets, families, and ambitions into memorable fiction. His novels helped bridge Victorian storytelling and modern literary realism.
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