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Arminell: A Social Romance, Vol. 1 cover

Arminell: A Social Romance, Vol. 1

Chapter 20: TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
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About This Book

The story opens in a draughty, rat-infested basement Sunday-school that frames a comic but critical view of parish life. A conscientious Lady Lamerton insists on maintaining the school while her stepdaughter Arminell Inglett, spirited and impatient, occupies a contrasting moral and emotional stance. Local characters, including a self-important quarry foreman and various villagers, animate scenes of petty disorder, social ritual, and household friction. Through schoolroom episodes, domestic tensions, and small-town manners, the narrative observes duty, moral earnestness, and social pretension, blending satire and sympathy to portray the complexities of rural society and interpersonal relations.

TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE

Punctuation has been normalized. Variations in hyphenation have been retained as they were in the original publication. The following changes have been made:

were banished the laundry —> were banished to the laundry {page 6}
dotted —> jotted down his ideas {page 246}
convertion —> conversion of dirty rags {page 250}

Advertising material “By the Same Author” has been moved to the end of the text.