
NEW YORK: ITS UPPER TEN AND LOWER MILLION. - BY GEORGE LIPPARD. - AUTHOR OF "ADONAI," "WASHINGTON AND HIS GENERALS," "THE QUAKER CITY," "PAUL ARDENHEIM," "BLANCHE OF BRANDYWINE," "LEGENDS OF MEXICO," "THE NAZARENE," ETC. ETC. ETC. - CINCINNATI: PUBLISHED BY E. MENDENHALL. - NEW YORK: A. RANNEY. - 1854.
PART FIRST. - "FRANK VAN HUYDEN." - DEC. 23, 1844.—EVENING.
PART SECOND. - "FROM NIGHTFALL UNTIL MIDNIGHT." - DEC. 23, 1844.
PART THIRD. - "THROUGH THE SILENT CITY." - DECEMBER 24, 1844.
PART FOURTH. - IN THE TEMPLE. - FROM MIDNIGHT UNTIL DAWN. - DECEMBER 24, 1844.
PART FIFTH. - THE DAWN, SUNRISE AND DAY. - DECEMBER 24, 1844.
PART SIXTH. - DAY, SUNSET, NIGHT. - DECEMBER 24, 1844.
PART SEVENTH. - THE DAY OF TWENTY-ONE YEARS. - DECEMBER 25, 1844.
Set against a snow‑laden New York night in 1823, the story opens with the Van Huyden family’s opulent banquet, a glittering affair that stretches from dusk well into the early morning. Gulian Van Huyden, the charismatic heir to the family’s fortune, presides over the revelry while his younger brother Charles watches his limited inheritance loom like a quiet shadow. The festive glow of the mansion near Trinity Church masks an undercurrent of rivalry, longing, and whispered conspiracies among the guests.
As the storm rages outside, the banquet becomes a stage for hidden jealousies and secret ambitions, drawing together a cast of friends, rivals, and mysterious strangers. Their interactions hint at tangled loyalties and unspoken crimes that will soon ripple through the city’s elite circles. Listeners are invited to follow the Van Huydens through a labyrinth of intrigue, where every toast may conceal a deeper betrayal.
Language
en
Duration
~18 hours (1073K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Clare Graham and Marc D'Hooghe at Free Literature (Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.)
Release date
2018-08-27
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1822–1854
A fiery nineteenth-century writer turned sensational fiction into a way of talking about city life, injustice, and class. Best known for "The Quaker City," he was hugely popular in his own time and also threw himself into reform and labor causes.
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