
Set against a sweltering September of 1857, two young apprentices abandon their demanding employer for the sheer pleasure of doing nothing. Thomas Idle drifts through life with a natural, effortless laziness, while his companion, Francis Goodchild, labors to perfect the art of idleness, turning even the act of avoiding work into a meticulous project. Their departure is less a grand adventure than a comic protest against the grind of Victorian labour, and Dickens uses their absurd contrast to poke fun at social expectations of productivity.
As the duo wanders northward, their banter turns to playful debates about love, song, and the point of travel itself. They argue over whether it is better to watch the countryside from a carriage window or to trudge through it on foot, all while sketching the oddities of the people they meet. Illustrated with lively drawings, the early chapters weave witty dialogue and vivid observations into a light‑hearted critique of idle ambition, inviting listeners to enjoy a charmingly satirical stroll through mid‑nineteenth‑century England.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (225K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
1997-04-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1824–1889
Best known for The Woman in White and The Moonstone, this pioneering Victorian novelist helped shape the modern mystery and suspense story. His fiction mixed page-turning plots with sharp observations about money, law, identity, and social rules.
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1812–1870
One of the great storytellers of the Victorian age, he turned childhood hardship, sharp observation, and a gift for unforgettable characters into novels that still feel lively and human. His books blend humor, suspense, and social criticism in a way that continues to draw in new readers.
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by Charles Dickens

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