About This Book
A satirical preface examines how modern institutions and social expectations shape a class of meek clerks, rewarding mediocrity while marginalizing genuine talent and valorizing wealth or daring wrongdoing. The essay links educational and governmental selection to the production of these functionaries and critiques the moral logic that confines ambition. The narrative then focuses on a single bank clerk working late in a dim, iron-lined counting-house, using precise domestic and mechanical detail to evoke the claustrophobic routine, security rituals, and social pressures of metropolitan commercial life.
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