
In a sleepy Yorkshire hamlet where summer means fresh potatoes, a well‑kept garden and the occasional bicycle‑bound traveler, life moves to the slow rhythm of corn swaying in the fields. The villagers—Steg, the pragmatic post‑boy, Mrs. Gatheredge busy with her parlor, and Ginger, who knows every turn of the back road—share a practical code for dealing with the world beyond their lanes.
When a “spawer,” a city‑type guest who expects comforts without offering a hand, arrives one July morning, the tight‑knit community feels the subtle shift. Rumors flutter through the tea‑houses, and the locals measure the newcomer’s presence against their own steady customs, wondering what price such a visitor will exact.
Through gentle humor and vivid dialect, the story paints a portrait of rural resilience and the quiet negotiations between tradition and intrusion. The quiet anticipation that a single outsider can stir in even the most settled of places adds a subtle tension to the otherwise steady rhythm of village life.
Language
en
Duration
~12 hours (708K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-09-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
A novelist of Yorkshire life, he wrote stories rooted in everyday communities, local character, and the quiet dramas of ordinary people. His books include The Post-Girl, The Doctor's Lass, Bella, and Fondie.
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