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The day will come

Chapter 39: Transcriber’s Notes
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About This Book

The narrative opens with a village celebration for a marriage and then centers on a self-made owner of an ancestral estate who balances professional ambition with stewardship of his rural property. It follows his family life at the manor—particularly his daughter—and recounts earlier infant losses that shape parental expectations and emotional distance. Through scenes of local festivity, estate improvement, and private sorrow, the story examines social ascent, ties between town and country, paternal pride and disappointment, and how inherited place and personal ambition interact in shaping domestic relationships.

Transcriber’s Notes

  • pg 22 Changed: Do I ever catch cold, Godfrey?” said cried,
    to: Do I ever catch cold, Godfrey?” Nita cried,
  • pg 35 Changed: you would remember us, at such at time.
    to: you would remember us, at such a time.
  • pg 57 Changed: or entertaiments of any kind.
    to: or entertainments of any kind.
  • pg 61 Changed: Who can have sent me a petit bleue?
    to: Who can have sent me a petit bleu?
  • pg 65 Changed: evidencies of fancies that had passed
    to: evidences of fancies that had passed
  • pg 80 Changed: had paid nearly three hundred pounda
    to: had paid nearly three hundred pounds
  • pg 84 Changed: Ah, my love, what would not do.
    to: Ah, my love, that would not do.
  • pg 86 Changed: oppressed him life a nightmare.
    to: oppressed him like a nightmare.
  • pg 139 Changed: preferred taking of the stars
    to: preferred talking of the stars
  • pg 172 Changed: Her loved her well enough to be able
    to: He loved her well enough to be able
  • pg 195 Changed: one sees more of a horse from tho pavement
    to: one sees more of a horse from the pavement
  • pg 218 Changed: she wore a black satin gownd
    to: she wore a black satin gown
  • pg 237 Changed: so I had alway emptied the waste-paper baskets
    to: so I had always emptied the waste-paper baskets
  • pg 247 Changed: no less famous a locality than Camberwell Green
    to: no less famous a locality than Camberwell Grove
  • pg 271 Changed: You found an improvment in her
    to: You found an improvement in her
  • pg 276 Changed: not unfrequeut consequence of continuous brooding
    to: not unfrequent consequence of continuous brooding
  • pg 316 Changed: he wreaked his vemon upon her
    to: he wreaked his venom upon her
  • pg 352 Changed: soon as possible at Myrtle Cottage, Camberwell Green
    to: soon as possible at Myrtle Cottage, Camberwell Grove
  • pg 355 Changed: To got her away
    to: To get her away