About This Book
A woman regarded as puritanical navigates family obligations, social expectations, and private affections amid a respectable, tradition-minded household and wider Geneva circle. Social gatherings and family meals set the scene for psychological observation, as relatives embody inherited pride, moral rigor, and quiet solidarities. A talkative acquaintance probes the protagonist's piety, unveiling tensions between outward austerity and inner complexity, while the narrative examines how custom, scruple, and refinement shape judgments about charity, modesty, and love. Portraits of stubborn convention and subtle emotional undercurrents reveal conflicts between duty and desire without melodrama, privileging close character study and moral ambiguity.
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