
Reverend Augustin Ambrose is an aging clergyman‑tutor in a tiny Essex parish, his eyesight dimming and his patience worn thin by years of lesson plans. He spends his days wrestling with the same classical texts—Thucydides, Homer, Horace—while trying to coax both the dull and the clever boys under his charge into genuine understanding. His method, a relentless system of memorisation, has earned a reputation for coaxing even the most reluctant pupils through the rigours of university entry.
Beyond the classroom, Ambrose’s modest parish offers barely enough income to sustain his family, yet his wife’s steady management and his children’s thriving careers bring a quiet pride. His son has risen through the church, his daughter married a successful physician, and the household enjoys good health and spirits. Still, the reverend reflects on the paths he abandoned—scholarship, fame, a richer living—and wonders whether the sacrifices he made for duty were worth the quiet contentment of his present life.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (586K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-10-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1854–1909
Born in Italy to American parents and educated across Europe and the U.S., this cosmopolitan novelist became one of the most popular storytellers of his day. He is especially remembered for vivid Italian settings, historical adventure, and memorable supernatural tales such as The Upper Berth.
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