
THE FEVER OF LIFE
NEW YORK AND LONDON STREET & SMITH, PUBLISHERS
THE FEVER OF LIFE
CHAPTER I. - PINCHLER'S DOCKYARD.
CHAPTER II. - WANTED, A CHAPERON.
CHAPTER III. - THE WOMAN WITH THE FIERCE EYES.
CHAPTER IV. - WHAT MRS. BELSWIN HAD TO SAY.
CHAPTER V. - THE PRODIGAL SON.
CHAPTER VI. - THE DRAGON.
CHAPTER VII. - THE GARDEN OF HESPERIDES.
At the edge of Marsh‑on‑the‑Sea, a red‑brick house perched on a gentle rise, its tennis lawns and flower‑beds overlooking the Channel, serves as more than a seaside resort. Known locally as Pincher’s Dockyard, the private hotel welcomes guests whose bodies are as weather‑worn as the ships that once docked there—people seeking repair for lungs, livers, and other hidden frailties. The atmosphere hums with polite conversation, the clack of tennis rackets, and the soft sigh of sea breezes, while the proprietor, Mrs. Pincher, runs her establishment with a blend of hospitality and understated scrutiny.
Enter Toby Clendon, a handsome young writer whose sharp wit and satirical pen turn the hotel's daily rituals into a stage for observation. Among the diners, embroiderers, and pipe‑smoking gentlemen, a woman with fierce eyes circulates, hinting at secrets that may ripple through the tranquil setting. As the first act unfolds, the genteel crowd discovers that the soothing seaside veneer may conceal more than simple ailments, setting the tone for a tale of intrigue, humor, and the fragile art of healing.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (500K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Charles Bowen from page scans provided by Google Books (New York Public Library)
Release date
2017-11-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1859–1932
Best known for a Victorian-era bestseller that helped shape early detective fiction, this prolific novelist wrote stories packed with secrets, suspense, and sharp social observation. His life stretched from England to New Zealand and Australia before he returned to Britain and built a remarkably large body of popular fiction.
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