About This Book
A young mill worker named John Trott is drawn into the day-to-day life of a rural household and its neighbors, where domestic routines, religious observance, and small social rituals shape interactions. Close, scene-driven chapters follow meals, hymn-singing, work habits, and quiet tensions that reveal character and social position, with attention to bodily detail, domestic labor, and unspoken feelings. The narrative builds through episodic episodes that contrast modest means and practical necessities with community expectations, using intimate observation to probe temper, restraint, and the limits of sympathy in a provincial setting.
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