Bits from Blinkbonny; or, Bell o' the Manse : a tale of Scottish village life between 1841 and 1851

audiobook

Bits from Blinkbonny; or, Bell o' the Manse : a tale of Scottish village life between 1841 and 1851

by John Strathesk

EN·~6 hours·18 chapters

Chapters

18 total
1

BITS FROM BLINKBONNY

0:33
2

PREFACE.

2:26
3

PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.

0:14
4

PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.

0:23
5

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

0:15
6

CHAPTER I.

28:00
7

CHAPTER II.

26:11
8

CHAPTER III.

22:59
9

CHAPTER IV.

35:41
10

CHAPTER V.

18:08

Description

Set in a modest Scottish hamlet during the turbulent decade of the 1840s, this lively collection captures the everyday rhythms of village life—its bustling markets, the chatter at the parish kirk, and the quiet moments by the loch. Through a series of short, sharply observed sketches, readers meet a cast of characters ranging from the earnest parish doctor to the mischievous children who roam the fields, all rendered in a gentle, Doric‑tinged voice that feels both authentic and warmly accessible.

Interwoven with these personal vignettes is a subtle thread of the nation‑wide “Disruption” of 1843, offering a glimpse of how a small community wrestles with religious upheaval and shifting loyalties. The author's reflective tone, tinged with humor and occasional melancholy, invites listeners to linger over the simple pleasures and quiet struggles of a time when tradition and change walked hand in hand. Illustrated sketches punctuate the narrative, adding visual charm to the verbal portrait of Blinkbonny’s world.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (402K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

Toronto: William Briggs, 1885.

Credits

Susan Skinner, Quentin Campbell, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2023-11-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

JS

John Strathesk

Best remembered for warm, observant stories of Scottish village life, this 19th-century writer published under the name John Strathesk while also being known as John Tod. His surviving books suggest a fondness for local character, everyday speech, and the textures of ordinary community life.

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