About This Book
The narrative depicts life on a bleak moor where landscape and weather shape harsh human behavior and livelihoods; interwoven episodes follow villagers such as Brightly and his companion Ju, local families, and figures like Pendoggat as they confront poverty, superstition, and recurring cruelty both human and natural. The author alternates realist scenes of survival—lodging in barns, swaling fires, bankruptcy—with folkloric digressions on fairyland, witchcraft, justice, and pastoral music, producing a portrait of endurance, communal rituals, and moral struggle that culminates in themes of regeneration and renunciation.
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