
A lyrical wandering through the capital as seen in the spring of 1917, when the city is emerging from war's shadow. The narrator, a seasoned Cockney observer, steps away from his desk to roam the streets, parks, and markets, letting the fresh‑wet air and brightening sky guide his thoughts. His notebook becomes a companion as he records the ordinary encounters that reveal the city's hidden moods.
Along the way he meets characters ranging from weary war workers to flamboyant Welsh poets, each adding a layer to the portrait of a metropolis in transition. The prose captures the contrast between lingering melancholy and the sudden bursts of colour that spring brings, turning familiar brickwork into something almost poetic. Readers are invited to stroll beside him, feeling the pulse of a London that is both timeless and newly restless.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (225K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-09-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1886–1945
Best known for bringing London's Limehouse district to life, this British writer mixed atmosphere, street detail, and sympathy for people on the margins. His breakthrough book, Limehouse Nights, helped make him one of the distinctive literary voices of early 20th-century London.
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