Double Harness

audiobook

Double Harness

by Anthony Hope

EN·~11 hours·30 chapters

Chapters

30 total
1

Transcriber's note: Inconsistent hyphenation and spelling in the original document have been preserved. Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

0:09
2

CHAPTER I SOME VIEWS OF THE INSTITUTION

18:17
3

CHAPTER II THE FAIRY RIDE

21:17
4

CHAPTER III THE WORLDLY MIND

20:39
5

CHAPTER IV INITIATION

21:51
6

CHAPTER V THE BIRTH OF STRIFE

23:38
7

CHAPTER VI NOT PEACE BUT A SWORD

20:16
8

CHAPTER VII A VINDICATION OF CONSCIENCE

21:31
9

CHAPTER VIII IDEALS AND ASPIRATIONS

24:12
10

CHAPTER IX A SUCCESSFUL MISSION

23:33

Description

A breezy summer day finds Tom Courtland lounging on the downs, half‑laughing about the prospect of returning to his newly engaged life, while his old friend Grantley Imason watches with a mix of amusement and weary wisdom. Their conversation drifts from the absurdities of marital expectations to the tangled legalities that might ensnare a man of Parliament, all flavored with witty repartee and a hint of underlying tension. The pair’s easy camaraderie masks Tom’s genuine unease about the “domestic encumbrances” that loom just beyond the horizon.

Leaving the serene garden, they wind down a steep, narrow lane toward the modest village of Milldean, passing the crumbling Old Mill House and its curious rumors of a resident “fairy princess.” The landscape—rolling turf, distant sea mist, and a scattering of red‑brick villas—sets the stage for a story that blends light‑hearted banter with the subtle anxieties of early twentieth‑century English society, promising listeners a portrait of friendship, expectation, and the quiet dramas that unfold in ordinary places.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (661K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Andriy Sen, Suzanne Shell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2013-02-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Anthony Hope

Anthony Hope

1863–1933

Best known for The Prisoner of Zenda, he helped define the swashbuckling romance of imaginary kingdoms and royal intrigue. Trained as a barrister, he turned courtroom discipline into brisk, witty storytelling that still feels lively today.

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