
In a modest London home off Leicester Fields, the Burney family gathers around breakfast while debating the ever‑present sway of Mr. Garrick, the charismatic theatre impresario whose productions seem to fill the town like an invisible perfume. Mrs. Burney worries that his flamboyant spirit is pulling her children away from their ordinary chores, while Dr. Burney watches the newspaper with a bemused smile and Lieutenant James offers a wry, supportive grin. Their conversations reveal a household caught between respectable domesticity and the alluring promise of a world staged beyond their front door.
At the center of this tension sits young Fanny, a diligent but restless seamstress whose needlework has grown careless under the weight of imagined applause. The whispered winks and theatrical talk ignite in her a curiosity that soon blossoms into a quiet ambition to capture stories of her own making. As the family debates the merits of Mr. Garrick’s influence, Fanny’s mind drifts toward the pages she might fill, hinting at the first steps of a literary adventure that could reshape her modest life.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (472K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger from page images generously provided by the Internet Archive
Release date
2016-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1855–1931
An Irish journalist, novelist, dramatist, and poet, he wrote lively popular fiction while also engaging with the political tensions of his time. His work ranges from historical novels to stage writing, giving a vivid glimpse of late Victorian and early 20th-century literary life.
View all books