
In a modest tower that has become the Caxtons’ new home, the family settles into a rhythm of quiet scholarly pursuits. The father's cherished books arrive in a wagon and find their place among the bedrooms and lobbies, while a duck, escorted by Mrs. Primmins, makes itself comfortable by the old stew‑pond. Daily walks beside the water lead the patriarch to observe the resident carp, whose simple feeding habits spark a surprisingly elaborate meditation on nature, logic, and human vanity.
The narrative unfolds through witty, almost theatrical exchanges between the father and the estate’s overseer, Mr. Bolt, whose practical concerns clash with the father’s philosophical reveries. Their banter about the “sacred” Cyprinidae—fish whose lineage the father traces back to medieval England—reveals both the family’s affection for the mundane and the novel’s gentle satire of Victorian pretensions. The opening promises a richly detailed portrait of domestic life, intellectual curiosity, and the subtle humor that binds a family together.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (64K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1803–1873
Best remembered for vivid historical and supernatural fiction, this prolific Victorian writer also left a surprising mark on everyday language with phrases that people still quote today. His stories mix drama, mystery, politics, and the occult in a way that helped shape popular fiction in the 19th century.
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