
Kenelm Chillingly slips away from his family home before dawn, musing that every poet is first an imitator. The early summer light bathes the countryside in a quiet glow, and the lone skylark’s song seems to bless his solitary trek. His thoughts turn to the idea of shedding one’s old skin and stepping into a new, unmarked life.
He reaches a modest town, deliberately choosing a plain shooting‑dress to conceal his gentlemanly origins. After purchasing sturdy country attire and a simple knapsack, he exchanges his former garments in a secluded dell, treating the act as a symbolic rebirth. The ritual feels like a declaration of independence from the expectations of rank and propriety.
With his new guise, Kenelm continues along the dusty road when a frantic cry erupts near a gate. A well‑dressed boy struggles with a restless cob, his shouts mingling with angry, harsher tones. The scene hints at the first real test of Kenelm’s resolve on this uncharted journey.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (201K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

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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