Farm Legends

audiobook

Farm Legends

by Will Carleton

EN·~2 hours·38 chapters

Chapters

38 total

FARM LEGENDS.

0:04

FARM LEGENDS

0:20

PREFACE.

2:08

ILLUSTRATIONS.

1:36

THE SCHOOL-MASTER'S GUESTS.

7:33

THREE LINKS OF A LIFE.

12:20

ROB, THE PAUPER.

11:03

THE THREE LOVERS.

12:29

THE SONG OF HOME.

7:02

PAUL'S RUN OFF WITH THE SHOW.

3:27

Description

A warm, lyrical portrait of country life unfolds in this modest collection, where the humble rhythms of farmyards mingle with the larger currents of human hope and sorrow. Through vivid sketches of school‑room chatter, wandering laborers, and quiet evenings by a western doorway, the author captures both the comic mishaps and the tender reverence that shape everyday existence. The verses and short tales move from the simple joys of a Christmas infant to the lingering echo of distant trains, each piece echoing the same belief that every soul, no matter how lowly, holds a spark worth preserving.

The preface sets a generous tone, reminding listeners that even the smallest moments can carry the weight of larger truths. As the narrator steps into the “great forest of Human Nature,” the reader is invited to listen for the subtle humor, the pangs of loss, and the quiet optimism that thread through each poem and story, promising a heartfelt journey through the heartland’s timeless legends.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (158K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Carlo Traverso, Brian Wilsden, Lisa Anne Hatfield 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

2017-01-18

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Will Carleton

Will Carleton

1845–1912

Best remembered for poems that brought everyday farm life into American popular culture, this Michigan writer turned plainspoken stories of work, family, and hardship into verse that wide audiences could instantly recognize. His best-known poem, "Over the Hill to the Poorhouse," helped make him one of the most widely read rural poets of his time.

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