A Political Romance

audiobook

A Political Romance

by Laurence Sterne

EN·~1 hours·8 chapters

Chapters

8 total

A Political Romance - by Laurence Sterne - Addressed To _____ ________, Esq; of York. To which is subjoined a KEY. - Ridiculum acri Fortius et melius magnas plerumque secat Res - YORK: Printed in the Year MDCCLIX. [Price ONE SHILLING.]

0:14

A POLITICAL ROMANCE, &C.

5:59

MEMORANDUM.

18:20

FINIS.

0:00

POSTSCRIPT.

5:48

THE KEY.

17:47

To —— ——, Esq; of York.

3:29

To Dr. TOPHAM.

8:33

Description

In a witty, letter‑style narration, the narrator recounts the latest uproar in his modest village, where a seemingly trivial dispute over an old pair of black breeches spirals into a full‑blown scandal. He writes to a curious correspondent, promising a detailed chronicle of the curious events that have set the townsfolk chattering. The tone is playful yet sharply observant, capturing the everyday absurdities that feel oddly grand in a close‑knit community.

The heart of the commotion centres on Master Trim, the village sexton, who desperately seeks an ancient watch‑coat hanging in the church to fashion a warm under‑petticoat for his wife and a jerkin for himself. The parish priest, moved by both compassion and a hint of obligation, appears ready to grant the request, but his cautious inquiries into ownership spark suspicion and frantic pleading. Trim’s relentless pressure on the ailing clergyman fuels a cascade of gossip that threatens to upend the parish’s fragile peace.

Listeners will enjoy the lively, 18th‑century prose, the colorful characters, and the clever satire that turns a simple clothing quarrel into a charming portrait of small‑town politics and human foibles.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (57K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Jerry Kuntz

Release date

2007-01-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

Laurence Sterne

Laurence Sterne

1713–1768

Best known for the wildly inventive Tristram Shandy, this 18th-century writer turned digression, wit, and comic surprise into an art form. He was also an Anglican clergyman whose lively, unconventional voice helped reshape the English novel.

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