
THE SURGEON'S DAUGHTER. - CHRONICLES OF THE CANONGATE. - By Sir Walter Scott
INTRODUCTION.—(1831.)
APPENDIX TO INTRODUCTION.
MR. CROFTANGRY'S PREFACE.
THE SURGEON'S DAUGHTER.
CHAPTER THE FIRST.
CHAPTER THE SECOND.
CHAPTER THE THIRD.
CHAPTER THE FOURTH.
CHAPTER THE FIFTH.
In early‑nineteenth‑century Scotland, a self‑made magistrate known as the “Thane of Fife” has built a thriving manufactory and risen to civic prominence in his burgh. His ambition reshapes the community, yet he must entrust his enterprise to a wayward relative, a young man of reckless habits whose future hangs in the balance. Meanwhile, in a nearby village, a respectable surgeon lives with his beautiful daughter, Emma, whose quiet charm catches the eye of the same errant youth.
When the young man secures a post with the East India Company, he and Emma exchange miniature portraits as tokens of a secret affection that neither family knows. Their correspondence, carried across the seas, fuels hope and anxiety as Emma awaits news from a distant frontier town. The story unfolds with the tension of hidden love, the pull of duty, and the clash between provincial expectations and the promise of a far‑off empire.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (385K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Text file produced by D Garcia, David Moynihan, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team HTML file produced by David Widger
Release date
2004-09-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1771–1832
A giant of Scottish literature, this poet and novelist helped invent the historical novel and turned Scotland’s past into gripping, widely loved stories. His books blended adventure, memory, and folklore in ways that shaped fiction across Europe.
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by Walter Scott

by Walter Scott

by Walter Scott

by Walter Scott

by Walter Scott

by Walter Scott

by Walter Scott

by Walter Scott