
In the soot‑stained streets of mid‑nineteenth‑century West Bromwich, a young boy learns to navigate a world where the clatter of nail‑makers’ anvils sits beside the quiet hush of rolling countryside. He watches the iron‑laden canals and steam hammers while the surrounding fields still bloom with hedgerow flowers, a fragile border between industry and nature. The narrator’s voice captures both the gritty rhythm of the Black Country and the lingering grace of the English landscape that surrounds it.
One early summer, a simple sprig of common bracken unfurls before him, its green‑red hue and soft down stirring an unexpected sense of beauty that pierces the surrounding clamor. That fleeting encounter becomes the anchor of his memory, a reminder that wonder can arise even in the most unlikely places. The memoir follows his reflections on that first aesthetic awakening, tracing how it shapes his perception of a world caught between progress and pastoral charm.
Full title
Recollections With Photogravure Portrait of the Author and a number of Original Letters, of which one by George Meredith and another by Robert Louis Stevenson are reproduced in facsimile
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (441K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2007-08-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1847–1907
A Victorian novelist and journalist with a sharp eye for everyday life, he turned newsroom experience into popular fiction that mixed social observation with lively storytelling. His work ranged from journalism and novels to collaborations for the stage, making him a versatile literary figure of late 19th-century Britain.
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