A Hero of Romance

audiobook

A Hero of Romance

by Richard Marsh

EN·~7 hours·24 chapters

Chapters

24 total
1

Chapter I - PUNISHMENT AT MECKLEMBURG HOUSE

17:45
2

Chapter II - TUTOR BAITING

20:10
3

Chapter III - AT MOTHER HUFFHAM'S

20:29
4

Chapter IV - A LITTLE DRIVE

19:41
5

Chapter V - AN EVENING AT WASHINGTON VILLA

19:32
6

Chapter VI - AFTERWARDS

19:05
7

Chapter VII - THE RETURN OF THE WANDERERS

19:53
8

Chapter VIII - PREPARING FOR FLIGHT

20:38
9

Chapter IX - THE START

21:59
10

Chapter X - ANOTHER LITTLE DRIVE

20:10

Description

In a drizzly, grey afternoon at Mecklemburg House, a young boy named Bertie Bailey finds himself confined to a dim schoolroom as punishment. The rain rattles the windows and the sky hangs low, mirroring his own gloom as he is forced to copy lines from Milton’s Paradise Lost. Bertie, tall and sturdy for his fourteen years, resists the drudgery with a mix of sarcasm and stubborn ingenuity, even improvising a makeshift pencil point from his pocket‑knife.

Across the room, the dour Mr. Till watches with a thin grin, ready to double the workload if Bertie dawdles. Their uneasy dance of authority and defiance sets the stage for a story that blends sharp humor with the stifling routines of Victorian schooling. As the lesson unfolds, listeners are drawn into Bertie’s inner world, where petty rebellion hints at a larger yearning for freedom and identity.

The narrative captures the stiff cadence of a bygone era while slipping in witty observations that keep the mood light. As Bertie navigates the petty tyrannies of his teachers and the expectations of his peers, deeper questions about conformity and individuality begin to surface. Listeners will find themselves both amused and moved by the boy’s quiet rebellion, setting the stage for a heartfelt journey ahead.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~7 hours (428K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Charles Bowen, from page scans provided by Google Books

Release date

2011-11-28

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Richard Marsh

Richard Marsh

1857–1915

A prolific Victorian and Edwardian storyteller, he is best remembered today for The Beetle, the eerie 1897 thriller that once outsold Dracula. Writing under a pseudonym, he moved easily between horror, crime, romance, and humor, building a huge readership in his own time.

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