About This Book
The narrator recounts her childhood and adolescence in a domestic setting, describing an early religious conversion and the preserved brightness of a happy summer. She moves into a household called Magnolia where a strict governess, attentive relatives, and loyal servants shape her education, manners, and moral sensibilities. Episodes follow schooling, household tasks, social visits, and small humiliations that provoke self-examination and gradual maturity. Themes of faith, duty, and the negotiation between personal independence and social expectation run through the episodes, with moral instruction arising from ordinary events.
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