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A young solicitor’s diary opens a window onto a bustling London of 1908‑09, where work, travel and society intertwine. He records the arrival of the Housmans from Egypt, their house‑warming at Campden Hill, and a lively dinner full of artists, musicians and aristocratic acquaintances. Through witty conversation about portraiture, music and the latest parliamentary appointment, the narrative captures the subtle currents of ambition, taste and the fleeting connections forged by chance encounters.
The prose follows the narrator’s observations of new faces—Lord Ayton, an under‑secretary fresh from big‑game hunting, and his enigmatic private secretary—while hinting at the underlying tensions of status and propriety. As the guests mingle, the diary entries reveal the rhythm of social rituals and the quiet longing for lasting friendships amid a world of people who are, as one character notes, merely “passing by.” The story invites listeners to linger over the details of a bygone era, feeling the pulse of a society both charming and precarious.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (255K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Marc D'Hooghe (Images generously made available by the Internet Archive - Cornell University)
Release date
2013-05-12
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1874–1945
An English man of letters with a reporter’s eye for detail, he wrote poems, novels, essays, and travel books shaped by wide experience in Europe and Russia. His work offers a vivid glimpse of the cultured world that existed before the First World War, while still feeling personal and observant.
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by Maurice Baring

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