Barrington. Volume 1 (of 2)

audiobook

Barrington. Volume 1 (of 2)

by Charles Lever

EN·~10 hours·33 chapters

Chapters

33 total
1

BARRINGTON - Volume I.

0:01
2

By Charles James Lever - With Illustrations By Phiz.

2:26
3

BARRINGTON.

0:00
4

CHAPTER I. THE FISHERMAN'S HOME

23:07
5

CHAPTER II. A WET MORNING AT HOME

21:02
6

CHAPTER III. OUR NEXT NEIGHBORS

37:03
7

CHAPTER IV. FRED CONYERS

20:01
8

CHAPTER V. DILL AS A DIPLOMATIST

13:39
9

CHAPTER VI. THE DOCTOR'S DAUGHTER

16:55
10

CHAPTER VII. TOM DILL'S FIRST PATIENT

27:56

Description

The story opens on a secluded riverside inn on the banks of the Irish River Nore, a modest refuge known only to a handful of anglers. The Fisherman's Home, with its tin trout sign and surrounding orchard of pear and damson, offers a quiet world where the only sounds are buzzing bees and the splash of fish. Its landlord, a reduced gentleman, guards the place fiercely, preferring the simplicity of modest hospitality over bustling commerce. The tranquil setting frames a community of locals whose lives intersect in subtle, often humorous ways.

Among them is Tom Dill, a young country doctor whose first patients arrive under the shade of a sycamore, and the sharp‑tongued Dr. Conyers, whose daughter adds a touch of genteel intrigue. As they navigate daily duties—tending to illnesses, sharing meals, and trading stories—their relationships reveal the gentle rivalries and secret ambitions of a small town. Listeners are drawn into the rhythm of rural life, where every calm river bend hints at the possibilities of adventure and change.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (596K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger

Release date

2011-01-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Charles Lever

Charles Lever

1806–1872

A lively Irish novelist with a gift for wit, adventure, and fast-moving storytelling, he became famous for exuberant tales of soldiers, rogues, and life on the road. His books helped bring a swaggering, humorous version of nineteenth-century Irish and European life to a wide audience.

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