A Cathedral Singer

audiobook

A Cathedral Singer

by James Lane Allen

EN·~1 hours·8 chapters

Chapters

8 total
1

A Cathedral Singer - BY - JAMES LANE ALLEN - Author of "The Sword of Youth," "The Bride of the Mistletoe," "The Kentucky Car- dinal," "The Choir Invisible," etc. - WITH FRONTISPIECE BY SIGISMOND DE IVANOWSKI

0:15
2

NEW YORK THE CENTURY CO. 1916

0:06
3

A Cathedral Singer - I

17:25
4

II

24:25
5

III

35:08
6

IV

13:13
7

V

9:15
8

VI

10:59

Description

Morning light washes over Morningside Heights, where the soaring spires of St. John the Divine loom above a bustling cityscape, a nearby hospital, an art academy, and the green sweep of Morningside Park. The neighborhood feels like a miniature world of stone and sky, where the rhythm of traffic and the hush of prayer coexist. In this vibrant crossroads, the lives of artists, healers, and wanderers intersect, each searching for a glimpse of something timeless.

Within the academy’s sun‑lit studio, a portrait class awaits a new subject—a mysterious woman who has stepped far from her own station to become a model for a modest fee. Her quiet sacrifice and enigmatic presence stir both curiosity and compassion among the students, prompting the instructor to challenge them to capture more than mere likeness. As they begin this fresh study, the promise of her story hints at deeper ties to the cathedral’s music and the unseen forces shaping their art.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (106K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Kentuckiana Digital Library, David Garcia, Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.

Release date

2005-03-16

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

James Lane Allen

James Lane Allen

1849–1925

Best known for bringing the voices, landscapes, and customs of Kentucky into American fiction, this once hugely popular novelist mixed regional detail with romance, memory, and social observation. His stories helped define the local-color tradition at the end of the 19th century.

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