At the Relton Arms

audiobook

At the Relton Arms

by Evelyn Sharp

EN·~3 hours·11 chapters

Chapters

11 total

AT THE RELTON ARMS - BY EVELYN SHARP

0:12

CHAPTER I.

14:01

CHAPTER II.

20:30

CHAPTER III.

19:33

CHAPTER IV.

16:14

CHAPTER V.

22:51

CHAPTER VI.

19:22

CHAPTER VII.

17:06

CHAPTER VIII.

25:43

CHAPTER IX.

23:36

Description

In a bustling late‑night reception at a fashionable West End musician’s studio, the remaining guests form a sort of modern Greek chorus, lingering long after the polite society has slipped away in their carriages. The host, shifting from a genial entertainer to a fervent prophet, launches into lofty theories while his hand‑picked pupils perform his compositions, their applause quickly eclipsed by the weight of his words. The atmosphere hums with a mixture of genuine admiration and the faint, self‑conscious rustle of social ambition.

Among the lingering crowd, Mrs. Reginald Routh presides with a practiced poise, her conversation a delicate dance of flattery and self‑assertion. She weaves references to distant concert halls and obscure composers, all while subtly challenging the musician’s assertions. When the earnest Mr. Digby Raleigh enters, his passionate musings on socialism and the moral purpose of music spark a spirited exchange that hints at deeper ideological currents stirring beneath the polished veneer of the gathering.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (198K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

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

Release date

2012-11-18

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Evelyn Sharp

Evelyn Sharp

1869–1955

Known for graceful fiction and fearless activism, this English writer moved from popular children’s books and stories to a public life shaped by the women’s suffrage movement. Her work and career show how literary talent and political conviction could grow side by side.

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