About This Book
The narrative opens amid a Southern city’s yellow-fever epidemic and follows social upheaval in both Charleston and New York to examine how fear, self-interest, and social hypocrisy shape responses to illness and moral crisis. Through interwoven scenes and characters, it portrays the alluring forms of vice and the gradual consequences that follow, contrasting bright appearances with underlying ruin. Prefatory remarks frame the story as a deliberate exposure of causes and temptations, and the work repeatedly contrasts virtue, faith, and reformist zeal with indifference, secrecy, and the seductive roads that lead people astray.
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