
At twenty‑one, Lady Penelope Brading believes the world can be reshaped by sheer will and intellect. Brilliant, striking, and unapologetically earnest, she devotes herself to a litany of reforms—from public health to the arts—while lecturing the men around her on their selfishness and excess. Her days are filled with reading the great essays of the day, practicing Sandow’s exercises, and delivering pithy sermons that leave listeners both bewildered and inspired.
Her circle includes the gentle Ethel Mytton, whose quiet devotion highlights Penelope’s reluctance to follow conventional expectations of marriage. Their conversations swirl between lofty theory and the everyday, as Penelope searches for an “honest man” while scoffing at societal norms. The novel captures the sparkling clash of a modern, reform‑driven spirit against the comfortable traditions of Edwardian England, offering wit, charm, and a vivid portrait of a woman determined to make her ideas matter.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (418K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2014-05-14
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1857–1942
An adventurous English novelist and travel writer, he turned years of roaming at sea and abroad into vivid fiction and memoir. He is especially remembered for stories shaped by hard travel, sharp observation, and an independent streak.
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