About This Book
The narrative centers on the Lashmar household: the elderly, morally earnest vicar Philip Lashmar, his assertive wife, and their disappointed son Dyce, whose precarious career and social ambitions strain family life. Social visitors and a persuasive outsider exert influence, drawing Dyce into choices that reveal tensions between conscience, ambition, and respectability. Episodes trace shifting loyalties, domestic frictions, and moral compromise while examining religious doubt, class expectations, and the appeal of charm over substance. The tone combines close domestic detail with ironic observation, leading to consequences that test characters' integrity and expose the costs of self-deception.
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