Crying for the Light; Or, Fifty Years Ago. Vol. 1 [of 3]

audiobook

Crying for the Light; Or, Fifty Years Ago. Vol. 1 [of 3]

by J. Ewing (James Ewing) Ritchie

EN·~4 hours·13 chapters

Chapters

13 total
1

Transcribed from the 1895 Jarrold and Sons edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org. Many thanks to Norfolk and Norwich Millennium Library, UK, for kindly allowing their copy to be used for this transcription.

0:28
2

Crying for the Light or Fifty Years Ago

0:17
3

CONTENTS OF VOL. I.

0:20
4

CHAPTER I. PARKER’S PIECE, SLOVILLE.

26:09
5

CHAPTER II. THE ACTRESS AND THE WAIF.

23:49
6

CHAPTER III. GOING UP TO TOWN.

22:20
7

CHAPTER IV A YOUNG PREACHER.

14:20
8

CHAPTER V. AFTER THE SERVICE.

21:12
9

CHAPTER VI. AT SLOVILLE AGAIN.

19:45
10

CHAPTER VII. THE CHARTISTS.

29:47

Description

In the opening chapters we are thrust into Parker’s Piece, a cramped, squalid quarter at the heart of the burgeoning town of Sloville. The narrator paints a vivid contrast between the fresh, open countryside he longs for and the foul, overcrowded streets where tramps, vagrants and desperate families eke out a precarious existence. A once‑hopeful charitable endowment now fuels a tangled web of tenements, illicit taverns and daily violence, turning the area into a notorious symbol of urban decay.

Against this bleak backdrop, the story introduces a cast of ordinary people—an embittered husband, a weary wife, a young preacher seeking purpose, and other residents whose lives intersect in moments of hardship and fleeting compassion. As a shocking death and a sensational newspaper expose bring unwanted attention to the slum, the narrative begins to explore how poverty, ambition, and fleeting hope collide, setting the stage for deeper struggles and unexpected alliances.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (234K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2011-07-21

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

J. Ewing (James Ewing) Ritchie

J. Ewing (James Ewing) Ritchie

1820–1898

A Victorian journalist with a reporter’s eye for the life around him, this English writer turned London streets, public figures, and far-off journeys into lively nonfiction. His books range from social sketches of nineteenth-century London to political biographies and travel writing.

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