
Martha Dolphin watches her centenarian grandfather, Daniel, prepare for his hundredth birthday—a milestone that forces both of them to confront a lifetime of scandal, prison, and loss. Once a ruthless man who buried three wives and five children, he has lately adopted a quiet, almost saintly demeanor, buoyed by the counsel of a local reverend. Their small kitchen scene, filled with cracked jokes and a chipped egg, reveals a fragile humanity beneath his frail, old‑fashioned attire.
On the night before the celebration, Daniel recounts a vivid dream in which a gentlemanly figure with horns— unmistakably the Devil—appears at his bedside, offering a brief audience and a tempting bargain. The apparition’s polite manners contrast sharply with the terror of the promise: that tomorrow’s sunrise may find Daniel already dead, unless he agrees to a mysterious exchange. As the devil’s proposal hangs in the air, Martha senses the fragile line between redemption and ruin, and the story pivots on whether a man of such age and history will gamble his soul for a chance at peace.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (186K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2014-10-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1862–1960
Best known for vivid stories set on Dartmoor, this remarkably prolific English writer produced novels, plays, poems, and mysteries across a career that lasted for decades. His work is closely tied to the landscapes of Devon, which gave many of his books their strong sense of place.
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