
A bold and mischievous scheme unfolds as a group of publishers decides to compile and print the complete collection of a celebrated artist’s letters, essays, and lectures—without ever asking for his permission. Their plan hinges on a simultaneous release in England and America, a logistical nightmare that quickly unravels when the artist’s legal representatives intervene. The first act is a tense tug‑of‑war between the conspirators’ ambition and the swift injunction that halts the project in its tracks.
The plot then erupts into an international chase, whisking the manuscript from London to New York and finally to the neutral ground of Antwerp. There, a determined lawyer and a vigilant prosecutor seize the printed volumes just as they are about to be dispatched, turning a literary venture into a comic catastrophe. The narrative captures the frantic energy of printers, lawyers, and would‑be editors scrambling to outwit one another.
Through witty commentary and a parade of well‑known cultural figures, the story offers a fascinating glimpse into the world of late‑Victorian publishing, where ambition, secrecy, and a dash of humor collide in a uniquely literary adventure.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (289K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-02-19
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1834–1903
Best known for the iconic portrait often called Whistler’s Mother, this American-born artist built a singular style out of subtle color, mood, and atmosphere. His paintings, prints, and sharp public feuds helped make him one of the most memorable figures in nineteenth-century art.
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