
Edward Bumpus is a man who feels as if he has been torn from the solid granite of his New‑England heritage and set adrift in the shifting shale of a bustling industrial city. Now in his fifties, he serves as the gate‑keeper of the massive Chippering Mill on the banks of a smoky river, a job secured through a childhood friend’s favor. The novel opens with Edward’s bewildered observation of a world that seems to have melted its old certainties into a restless, ever‑moving landscape.
As he watches the canal’s fog roll past the brick walls and the diverse churches that line the streets, Edward wrestles with the loss of the stable, pious order that once defined his family’s identity. The clash between decaying Puritan values and the pragmatic, sometimes chaotic, modern life fuels his inner quest for meaning. Through vivid description and quiet introspection, the story invites listeners to contemplate how a once‑steady life can be reshaped by forces far beyond personal control.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (793K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2004-10-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1874–1965
Best known for leading Britain through the darkest years of World War II, this statesman was also a gifted historian and speaker whose words helped define an era. His books, speeches, and memoirs still shape how many readers understand war, politics, and leadership.
View all books