
A young Gabriel Carew recollects his early years in a cramped attic above a squalid London street, where silence and restraint dominate the household. His solitary existence is marked by a taciturn servant, Fortress, and the relentless hum of the Thames below, while the surrounding alleys teem with the desperate toil of the city’s poorest. The stark contrast between his bleak surroundings and fleeting, dream‑like visions of a grander past hints at a life that once might have been very different.
These memories set the stage for a lingering question that haunts Gabriel: why does he feel the weight of a hidden legacy, a secret inheritance whispered by the walls of his modest home? As he watches the world beyond his window—laboring bargemen, grimy steamers, and mischievous boys—he begins to sense that the key to his family’s true standing may lie beyond the poverty that has defined him. The first volume follows his quiet observations, his yearning for meaning, and the subtle clues that suggest his destiny is far from the gloom of his attic.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (214K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Charles Bowen from page images provided by the Web Archive and Google Books.
Release date
2014-06-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1833–1903
A prolific Victorian novelist with a flair for mystery, sentiment, and social observation, he turned years spent in Australia and New Zealand into stories that widened the world of nineteenth-century popular fiction. He also came from a literary family: he was the father of novelist Eleanor Farjeon and writer Herbert Farjeon.
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