
A quiet Swiss salon becomes the stage for a charmingly odd encounter, where a seemingly carefree young girl arrives drenched, luggage‑free, and armed with a tuning hammer. She slips into the room, offers a few haunting piano notes, and then sets to work restoring the instrument’s harmony, sparking curiosity and bewilderment among the assorted guests. The scene swirls with subtle humor, from the aristocratic Miss Blake’s sharp commentary on “unfeminine” pursuits to the bemused tennis players watching the girl’s gentle play with a wandering goat.
The story hints at a larger world of eccentric travelers and unexpected talents that weave through the collection, each vignette revealing characters who balance propriety with hidden passions. Harraden’s prose captures the delicate tension between social expectation and individual whimsy, inviting listeners to linger over moments of quiet rebellion and the simple, mysterious joys that arise when strangers cross paths in an Alpine retreat.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (149K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2013-11-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1864–1936
Best known for the wildly popular novel Ships That Pass in the Night, this British writer brought romance, wit, and a strong independent streak to late Victorian fiction. She also put her energy behind the campaign for women’s suffrage, linking her literary career with public activism.
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