Diana Tempest, Volume II

audiobook

Diana Tempest, Volume II

by Mary Cholmondeley

EN·~3 hours·16 chapters

Chapters

16 total
1

E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell, Matthew Wheaton, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive/American Libraries (http://www.archive.org/details/americana)

0:34
2

DIANA TEMPEST.

0:15
3

DIANA TEMPEST. - CHAPTER I.

10:38
4

CHAPTER II.

20:30
5

CHAPTER III.

26:26
6

CHAPTER IV.

26:58
7

CHAPTER V.

16:00
8

CHAPTER VI.

14:46
9

CHAPTER VII.

10:12
10

CHAPTER VIII.

8:52

Description

In the sweltering heat of a late‑July London, a small circle of genteel but financially strained women gathers in a dim drawing‑room, trading idle chatter for the restless dreams that summer awakens. Diana, a bright‑eyed young woman with a sharp wit, confides in her aunt, Mrs. Courtenay, about her longing for a comfortable marriage and the simple pleasures—sea breezes, moonlit balconies, and a life unburdened by the constant tally of expenses. Their conversation reveals a world where social standing and money dictate even the most intimate hopes, and where the “jeunes dorés” of the season drift between opulent weddings and the stark reality of limited means.

As the city’s elite escape to distant moors and rivers, Diana remains rooted in the cramped yet familiar streets of Park Lane, watching friends and relatives depart for distant resorts. Her yearning for a husband who can provide both affection and security fuels a quiet determination to navigate the constraints of her modest inheritance. The novel unfolds as Diana balances her spirited aspirations against the expectations of her class, hinting at choices that may reshape her future without yet revealing the outcomes.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (212K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2011-11-10

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Mary Cholmondeley

Mary Cholmondeley

1859–1925

Best known for the once-scandalous bestseller Red Pottage, this English novelist wrote sharp, readable fiction that questioned religious hypocrisy and the limits placed on women. Her work helped make her one of the notable popular novelists of the late Victorian and early Edwardian years.

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