About This Book
Set in an industrializing community, the narrative contrasts genteel domestic scenes with the frustrations of wage earners and shows how economic anxiety, personal grievances, and reformist rhetoric foster clandestine agitation. It alternates intimate portrayals of families and local elites with meetings and conspiratorial plans that threaten public order, following efforts by authorities and private citizens to uncover and defuse the danger. Throughout, the work examines class conflict, mutual suspicion and reluctant sympathy across social divides, and competing notions of authority, responsibility, and social reform.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
"All's not Gold that Glitters;" or, The Young Californian
by Alice B. Haven
"Bring Me His Ears"
by Clarence Edward Mulford
"Browne's Folly" / (From: "The Doliver Romance and Other Pieces: Tales and Sketches")
by Nathaniel Hawthorne
"Forward, March": A Tale of the Spanish-American War
by Kirk Munroe
"Gentlemen prefer blondes"
by Anita Loos
"George Washington's" Last Duel / 1891
by Thomas Nelson Page





