
In a once‑quiet valley, the sleepy village of Crossbourne erupts into a bustling industrial hub, its thatched cottages giving way to factories, bridges, and a humming railway. The narrator paints a vivid picture of the town’s rapid transformation—new streets lined with brass‑handled doors, a gleaming church refurbished, and a flood of workmen’s houses that pulse with both opportunity and vice.
At the heart of this change lives William Foster, a talented ironworker whose skill keeps the mills turning but whose skeptical nature and love of drink keep his life teetering on the edge. With a young wife and infant son, he juggles the demands of a demanding trade, the lure of the local tavern, and his own doubts about faith and purpose. As Crossbourne races toward modernity, Foster must decide whether to cling to his skepticism or seek a steadier footing for his family amidst the town’s roaring progress.
Full title
True to his Colours The Life that Wears Best
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (456K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Release date
2007-04-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
An Anglican priest turned novelist, he is best remembered for winning a temperance-fiction prize with Frank Oldfield, a story set partly in England and partly in South Australia. His life also connects to the early history of Adelaide, where he helped lead church and school life in the mid-1800s.
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