A Young Man's Year

audiobook

A Young Man's Year

by Anthony Hope

EN·~11 hours·37 chapters

Chapters

37 total
1

A YOUNG MAN'S YEAR

0:17
2

CHAPTER I - OF THE MIDDLE TEMPLE, ESQUIRE

19:57
3

CHAPTER II - MISS SARRADET'S CIRCLE

16:18
4

CHAPTER III - IN TOUCH WITH THE LAW

16:03
5

CHAPTER IV - A GRATEFUL FRIEND

17:14
6

CHAPTER V - THE TENDER DIPLOMATIST

18:08
7

CHAPTER VI - A TIMELY DISCOVERY

16:34
8

CHAPTER VII - ALL OF A FLUTTER

16:11
9

CHAPTER VIII - NOTHING VENTURE, NOTHING HAVE!

18:27
10

CHAPTER IX - A COMPLICATION

16:56

Description

Arthur Lisle is a young barrister stuck in a drab March morning at the Middle Temple, where the perpetual drizzle mirrors his own sense of stagnation. He loathes Mondays, not just for the routine they impose but for the hollow promise of work that never quite materializes. Living on a modest stipend, he wrestles with doubts about his talent and the purpose of his chosen profession, spending more time observing judges than mastering statutes.

When a clerk bursts in with a bundle of red‑taped papers, Arthur’s world shifts from monotony to a whirlwind of excitement and dread. The brief he receives thrusts him into his first real courtroom challenge, pitting his nervous optimism against the stern, time‑pressured judges Lance and Pretyman. As he scrambles to prepare, the narrative captures the tension of a fledgling lawyer confronting the unforgiving pace of early‑20th‑century English law, offering a vivid portrait of ambition, anxiety, and the fragile hope that a single case might finally define his career.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (649K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Tony De Vita, Suzanne Shell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2013-07-03

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Anthony Hope

Anthony Hope

1863–1933

Best known for The Prisoner of Zenda, he helped define the swashbuckling romance of imaginary kingdoms and royal intrigue. Trained as a barrister, he turned courtroom discipline into brisk, witty storytelling that still feels lively today.

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