About This Book
The novel follows Harvey Rolfe, a cultivated but aimless man of leisure, and his younger friend Cecil Morphew, whose speculative ventures and hopes to improve his prospects for marriage draw them into debt, temptation, and compromised choices. Through interlinked domestic and social episodes, the narrative traces how financial ambition, romantic aspiration, and social expectation create moral strain, pushing characters toward reckless risks and strained relationships. Divided into three parts that heighten consequence, the story examines class anxieties, the psychology of idleness and ambition, and the corrosive effect of money on affection and integrity.
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