The Caxtons

The Caxtons by Edward Bulwer Lytton is a work published by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform on December 28, 2012. This edition spans 464 pages and is presented in English. The book offers a narrative that reflects on the passage of time and the changes it brings to relationships, as illustrated through a chance encounter between two former acquaintances who reconnect later in life.
Readers will find a blend of fiction and classic themes as the story unfolds, exploring the dynamics of personal connections and the impact of time on individual lives. The narrative delves into moments of recognition and reflection, capturing the essence of human experience. This edition, while historic, may contain numerous typos and missing text, and it is noted that purchasers can access a free scanned copy of the original work from the publisher.
Official synopsis Publisher
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1875. Excerpt: … ESSAY XXII. MOTIVE POWER. A Little while ago, as I was walking down Parliament Street, I suddenly found myself face to face with a man who, in the days of my early youth, had inspired me with a warm regard and a lively admiration. Though he was some years older than myself, we had been for a short time very intimate; but after we had once separated, I saw no more of him till thus, towards the evening of life, we two, who had parted company in its morn, recognised each other at the first glance; and, after exclaiming, “Is it you?” halted mute, like men to whom startling news is abruptly told. The past, as when we last separated, the present as we now met, brought before us in the extreme of contrast; the long, gradual, stealthy interval between the dates annulled; so that, in uttering those words, “Is it you?” each saw himself as he was in youth, and simultaneously felt the change time had wrought in his own life by reading the work of time in the face of the other. But such reflection was, as it were, the flash of the moment, and with the next moment it passed away. As I was then hurrying down to the House of Commons, somewhat fearful lest I should not be in time to vote on a question worn so threadbare that it was not likely the patience of members wonld allow it to be long rediscussed, my old acquaintance kindly turned back from his own way to accommodate himself to mine; and when we parted at the doors of Westminster Hall, much to my surprise he had invited me to visit him in the country, and, perhaps still more to his surprise, I had accepted the invitation. Sir Percival Tracey (so let me call the person I have just introduced to the reader) was one of those men to whom Nature gives letters of recommendation to Posterity, which, from some chance or an…
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