
In this sharply observed Victorian satire, a modest barrister‑turned‑novelist named John White receives a thinly veiled critique in the Times: his stories lack backbone because they are drawn from imagination rather than real life. Stung by the public commentary, he confides to his patient wife that he must learn human nature from the streets, not from his study. The opening chapters follow his mildly comical resolve to leave his comfortable home and seek out the ordinary people who populate his world.
The narrative soon finds White at a bustling London tavern, sharing a drink with his longtime friend Anthony Lomax, a fellow lawyer who lives for courtroom drama as much as for cheap brandy. Their banter reveals the absurdities of literary ambition and the social pretensions of the era, while White’s earnest quest to observe “real” characters promises a series of amusing encounters. Listeners are invited into a world where wit, self‑reflection, and the quirks of late‑Victorian society intertwine.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (218K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-05-09
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
b. 1846
A Belfast-born journalist and novelist, he wrote popular late-Victorian fiction with a lively feel for literary life. His work included novels such as Beside Still Waters and the memoir-like Bohemian Days in Fleet Street.
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