About This Book
A narrator, urged by a friend, visits an ancient Breton manor, drawn down a distinctive avenue to a moated house whose chapel contains old tombs. The narrative follows the exploration of the estate, meetings with its caretakers and inhabitants, and the slow uncovering of a decayed family's history through architectural detail, local lore, and domestic tensions. Themes of solitude, memory, and inherited obligation are woven into a quietly gothic atmosphere, and the account balances atmospheric description with psychological observation as the narrator reflects on longing, tradition, and the uneasy persistence of the past within a changing present.
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