
NOTE.
CHAPTER I. FATHER, CHILD, AND NURSE.
CHAPTER II. STEPMOTHER AND NURSE.
CHAPTER III. THE FLIGHT.
CHAPTER IV. THE BOOKBINDER AND HIS PUPIL.
CHAPTER V. THE MANSONS.
CHAPTER VI. SIMON ARMOUR.
CHAPTER VII. COMPARISONS.
CHAPTER VIII. A LOST SHOE.
CHAPTER IX. A HOLIDAY.
A sharp‑edged portrait of Victorian society opens with Sir Wilton Lestrange, a baronet whose impulsive marriage to Robina Armour—daughter of a humble blacksmith— shocks the county’s genteel circles. Their uneasy union, driven as much by vanity and curiosity as by fleeting affection, throws both families into a whirl of gossip and concealed resentment. As the couple navigates the expectations of rank and the stark contrast of their origins, the narrative gently exposes the fragile foundations of their bond.
When tragedy strikes and Robina dies shortly after giving birth, Sir Wilton—more comfortable in London clubs than at his country estate—returns too late, confronting a grief he cannot fully comprehend. He retreats to his library, cigar in hand, to watch the funeral unfold, his mind clouded by a growing sense of emptiness. The story lingers on his inner turmoil, setting the stage for a journey that questions duty, love, and the true cost of social ambition.
Language
en
Duration
~15 hours (908K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Text file produced by Project Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders HTML file produced by David Widger
Release date
2005-09-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1824–1905
A Scottish writer, poet, and minister whose fairy tales helped shape modern fantasy, he wrote stories that still feel dreamlike, spiritual, and surprisingly fresh. Best known for works like Phantastes, At the Back of the North Wind, and The Princess and the Goblin, he influenced later authors including Lewis Carroll and C.S. Lewis.
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