Country Luck

audiobook

Country Luck

by John Habberton

EN·~6 hours·31 chapters

Chapters

31 total
1

[](https://www.gutenberg.org/images/cover_lg.jpg)

0:03
2

Country Luck.

0:12
3

C O U N T R Y L U C K. - CHAPTER I. HOW IT CAME ABOUT.

16:45
4

CHAPTER II. FAMILY COUNCILS.

15:04
5

CHAPTER III. “DOWN TO YORK.”

13:13
6

CHAPTER IV. THE TRAMLAY RECEPTION.

10:32
7

CHAPTER V. NOT SO DREADFUL AFTER ALL.

11:14
8

CHAPTER VI. RECONSTRUCTION.

15:07
9

CHAPTER VII. AT HER SIDE.

18:01
10

CHAPTER VIII. HIMSELF FOR COMPANY.

8:43

Description

A wealthy New York iron merchant and his family decide to swap the bustle of the city for a quiet summer on a modest farm. Their arrival is met with a mixture of polite hospitality and quiet curiosity from the Hayn household, especially from Philip, the farmhand who drove the carriage that brought the guests in. The contrast between the Tramlays’ polished manners and the rustic rhythm of country life sets the stage for a gentle clash of worlds.

As the children explore strawberry patches, bramble thickets and old cherry trees, the farm’s simple pleasures begin to erode their preconceived notions of leisure. Their laughter mingles with the rustle of leaves, and the adults find unexpected camaraderie in shared meals and evening conversations. The experience promises both amusement and subtle self‑reflection, hinting at the ways the countryside may reshape the city‑dwelling family’s outlook.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (357K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Edwards, Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2016-07-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

John Habberton

John Habberton

1842–1921

A 19th-century American humorist and journalist, he is best remembered for the hugely popular Helen's Babies, a comic look at family life that helped make him a household name. His career also stretched into newspaper criticism and fiction shaped by post–Civil War America.

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