
Mrs. Hignett, a celebrated theosophical author, arrives in bustling New York for a lecture tour, lodging in a tidy rented apartment where she insists on a regimented morning routine. She wakes precisely at eight, savors a modest breakfast, and sifts through fan mail from devoted disciples while her son Eustace, still a sleepy teenager, dutifully handles her correspondence. The calm of her orderly world is punctuated by the clatter of a bustling city beyond the curtained windows, hinting that her stay may be less tranquil than she intends.
Just as she settles back into her routine, the door opens to a gaunt Irish housekeeper announcing an unexpected visitor who claims to be her nephew. Mrs. Hignett’s irritation flares—her mornings are sacrosanct and she has no desire to be disturbed. Yet the newcomer’s arrival sets the stage for a cascade of misunderstandings and witty entanglements, promising the light‑hearted, farcical mishaps that define the story’s charm.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (304K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-11-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1881–1975
Best known for creating Jeeves and Bertie Wooster, he wrote comic fiction so polished and light on its feet that it still feels fresh a century later. His novels, stories, lyrics, and musical comedies helped define English-language humor for generations of readers.
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