About This Book
The story follows a middle‑class husband whose desire for social standing collides with chronic indebtedness and domestic demands. Humorous domestic scenes portray his petty vanities, awkward attempts to preserve appearances through dress and dining, and the strain those efforts place on family life. A dreamlike conceit literalizes his anxieties about money, producing satirical encounters that reveal how wealth and credit shape personal identity and social relations. The narrative alternates comic realism with allegorical invention to examine materialism, pride, and the fragile pretenses of respectability.
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