City Ballads

audiobook

City Ballads

by Will Carleton

EN·~3 hours·16 chapters

Chapters

16 total

CITY BALLADS - BY - WILL CARLETON

0:24

PREFACE.

2:01

ILLUSTRATIONS.

2:19

CITY BALLADS. - WEALTH. - [From Arthur Selwyn's Note-book.]

36:37

[From Farmer Harrington's Calendar.]

4:41

[From Arthur Selwyn's Note-book.]

3:30

[From Farmer Harrington's Calendar.]

4:09

WANT. - [From Farmer Harrington's Calendar.]

15:48

FIRE. - [From Farmer Harrington's Calendar.]

17:43

WATER. - [From Farmer Harrington's Calendar.]

20:52

Description

In this collection a bright‑eyed student fresh from college and an elderly farmer with quiet philosophy wander the bustling avenues and towering spires of a great metropolis for the first time. Their rural sensibility meets the clamor of markets, the glow of streetlamps, and the hush of hidden courtyards, producing sketches that blend awe, humor, and a gentle critique of urban pretension. Presented as brief, diary‑like entries accompanied by lively illustrations, the verses read like casual conversations, inviting listeners to linger on each observation.

The tone remains conversational, letting the city’s noisy streetcars, soot‑filled alleys, and unexpected moments of kindness unfold in a way that feels both intimate and expansive. Through the pair’s reflections, listeners are prompted to consider how place shapes imagination, compassion, and a sense of justice, all while being entertained by vivid, often humorous snapshots. At roughly a hundred short pieces, the work offers a quick, rewarding journey that leaves a lingering curiosity about the city’s many hidden stories.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (183K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Dianne Nolan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2011-08-03

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Will Carleton

Will Carleton

1845–1912

Best remembered for poems that brought everyday farm life into American popular culture, this Michigan writer turned plainspoken stories of work, family, and hardship into verse that wide audiences could instantly recognize. His best-known poem, "Over the Hill to the Poorhouse," helped make him one of the most widely read rural poets of his time.

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