
audiobook
[Transcriber's notes]
From The Month. CONSTANCE SHERWOOD. AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY. BY LADY GEORGIANA FULLERTON. - CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
A gentle yet resolute voice guides listeners through the early pages of a Tudor woman’s life, framing each event as a test of faith and a lesson in humility. She recounts the constant ebb of sorrow and comfort, noting that even the smallest cross often arrives alone, yet seems to make space for greater blessings. Through her candid reflections on scripture and the strange ways of providence, the narrative invites a quiet meditation on perseverance in a world that feels as turbulent as a storm‑tossed sea.
Born in 1557 at Sherwood Hall, a modest estate in Staffordshire, she paints vivid pictures of sun‑lit gardens, spacious chambers, and the simple joys of a rural upbringing. Her father, a learned and unassuming gentleman, shows a humility that contrasts with the restless ambitions of the age, while her mother’s brief but tender presence leaves an indelible imprint on the young girl’s heart. Together these recollections set the stage for a life marked by religious devotion, familial loyalty, and the subtle undercurrents of danger that linger beneath even the most tranquil surfaces.
Language
en
Duration
~17 hours (1014K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Don Kostuch
Release date
2012-07-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1812–1885
An English novelist and philanthropist from a prominent political family, she became one of the best-known Roman Catholic novelists in nineteenth-century England. Her life joined society, faith, and practical charity, giving her fiction and biographical writing unusual warmth and conviction.
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