
Chapter One. - In which there is more Ale than Argument.
Chapter Two. - In which the Hero of the Tale is formally Introduced.
Chapter Three. - Train a Child in the Way he should go, and he will not depart from it.
Chapter Four. - In which the Author has endeavoured, with all his Power, to suit the present Taste of the Public.
Chapter Five. - The Sins of the Father are Visited upon the Child.
Chapter Six. - “The World before him, where to choose.”
Chapter Seven. - If you want Employment go to London.
Chapter Eight. - A Dissertation upon Pedigree.
Chapter Nine. - In which the Advice of a Father deserves Peculiar Attention.
Chapter Ten. - In which Major McShane narrates some curious Matrimonial Speculations.
On a blustery November night in 1812, the lonely road near the Devon village of Grassford is lit only by a fleeting moon and the flash of passing clouds. Three unlikely companions—a loquacious pedlar, a philosophizing schoolmaster, and the sober‑minded Byres—stumble upon a drunken, pension‑receiving veteran named Rushbrook lying helpless by the roadside. Their banter, a mix of drunken logic and bitter sarcasm, turns the scene into a darkly comic tableau of rural hardship and misplaced charity.
As the men debate whether to carry Rushbrook home or abandon him to the river’s flow, the conversation spirals into a clash of conscience and self‑interest. Their uneasy alliance hints at deeper entanglements with poaching, poverty, and the harsh codes of survival in early‑19th‑century England. Listeners are drawn into a tale where humor masks a sobering look at the choices that define a community on the brink of moral collapse.
Language
en
Duration
~11 hours (669K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Release date
2007-05-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1792–1848
Best known for lively sea tales drawn from real naval experience, this early master of nautical adventure wrote with the speed, humor, and danger of life aboard ship. His stories helped shape the modern maritime novel and still carry the pull of the open sea.
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