
A cold January night finds a lone stranger boarding a sleeping‑car at Euston, his presence marked by quiet dignity rather than ostentation. Dressed in a crisp white collar and carrying a crocodile‑skin bag, he settles into a private compartment, his keen gray eyes observing the world with a measured, almost scholarly curiosity. As the conductor greets him, their conversation drifts from the mechanics of the railway to the everyday lives of its workers, revealing a man who is as interested in the welfare of others as he is in the details of his own journey.
The traveler’s gentle interrogations soon turn personal, as he learns about a young girl named Caroline and, moved by genuine sympathy, offers a modest but heartfelt gift to secure her future savings. His generosity is delivered with a calm, understated confidence that hints at deeper motives yet to unfold. In this opening act, the novel sets a tone of quiet compassion and intrigue, inviting listeners to accompany a man whose purposeful kindness may shape the lives he touches on the road northward.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (340K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2013-08-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1841–1898
Best known in his own time for warm, vivid novels set in Scotland and beyond, this Glasgow-born writer moved from journalism into fiction and became one of the most popular storytellers of the late Victorian era.
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by William Black

by William Black

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by William Black