About This Book
The narrative follows a self-made esquire who retires from shopkeeping to live in a modest coastal house and pursue genteel status. He oscillates between parsimony and ostentatious display, hosting hearty but notorious dinners, hunting social recognition while attracting local satire. His eccentric gestures, such as buying herrings at auction and proposing grand civic schemes to solicit aristocratic favor, expose tensions between aspiration and provincial judgment. Episodes and character sketches examine manners, vanity, and the comic vulnerability of ambition, portraying communal responses to affectation and the small-town rituals that both elevate and lampoon would-be importance.
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