
Jack’s Two Sovereigns
CHAPTER I. EVENING AT HOME.
CHAPTER II. MONEY MATTERS.
CHAPTER III. RELATIONS.
CHAPTER IV. HELP IN NEED.
CHAPTER V. “STOP THIEF!”
CHAPTER VI. WHERE IS FATHER?
CHAPTER VII. MORNING.
CHAPTER VIII. SELF-REPROACH.
CHAPTER IX. AN INVALID.
In a cramped yet lively home on Buxton Street, the Kayll family juggles work, school, and the endless chatter of children. Father Kayll, absorbed in repairing a stubborn clock, offers a quiet counterpoint to his wife’s frantic needlework and the constant demands of a baby in the next room. The household is a micro‑cosm of early‑twentieth‑century working‑class life, where each sibling—Bob, Jack, Jem, Edie, and little Bessie—has a defined role and a modest wage to earn.
Amid the daily quarrels and good‑natured teasing, fourteen‑year‑old Jack stands out as a printer’s apprentice with a quick wit and a penchant for small rebellions. His rivalry with younger brother Jem, a chemist’s errand‑boy, fuels both mischief and moments of unexpected tenderness. As Jack navigates the expectations of his family and his own ambitions, the story paints a vivid portrait of youthful resilience and the quiet battles that shape growing up.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (126K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Tim Lindell, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2019-04-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
1857–1893
Best known for late-Victorian stories for young readers, this elusive writer published a run of warm, morally minded novels in the 1880s, many with girls at the center. Her books often turn on family life, hardship, kindness, and quiet resilience.
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