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

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

Crying for the Light or Fifty Years Ago

0:17

CONTENTS OF VOL. I.

0:20

CHAPTER I. PARKER’S PIECE, SLOVILLE.

26:09

CHAPTER II. THE ACTRESS AND THE WAIF.

23:49

CHAPTER III. GOING UP TO TOWN.

22:20

CHAPTER IV A YOUNG PREACHER.

14:20

CHAPTER V. AFTER THE SERVICE.

21:12

CHAPTER VI. AT SLOVILLE AGAIN.

19:45

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.

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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 lively Victorian journalist and travel writer, he brought nineteenth-century London and the wider world to readers with sharp observation and an easy, readable style. His books range from social sketches and political lives to journeys abroad, reflecting a reporter’s eye for everyday detail.

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