
audiobook
FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS - OR, JACOB MARLOWE'S SECRET. - BY - HORATIO ALGER, JR. - AUTHOR OF "THE ERIE TRAIN BOY," "FROM FARM BOY TO SENATOR," "THE YOUNG ACROBAT," ETC.
Contents
CHAPTER I. - A NEW ARRIVAL IN LAKEVILLE.
CHAPTER II. - UNCLE JACOB'S RECEPTION.
CHAPTER III. - A VISIT TO THE FACTORY.
CHAPTER IV. - UNCLE JACOB'S STARTLING REVELATION.
CHAPTER V. - UNCLE JACOB RECEIVES HIS WALKING PAPERS.
CHAPTER VI - SQUIRE MARLOWE IS SURPRISED.
CHAPTER VII. - UNCLE JACOB LEAVES LAKEVILLE.
CHAPTER VIII. - DISCHARGED.
A weary traveler with a sturdy cane arrives back in the sleepy farming village of Lakeville after twenty years away, hoping to reconnect with family he barely remembers. He is greeted by Bert Barton, a hard‑working teenager whose mother runs a modest household and whose father’s death left them in debt. The old man’s curiosity quickly turns to the prosperous Squire Marlowe, his nephew, and to the modest shoe factory where Bert earns his living. Their brief conversation hints at a tangled web of kinship, old promises, and a lingering mystery surrounding a modest sum of five hundred dollars.
As the newcomer settles in, whispers of a secret long kept by Uncle Jacob begin to surface, stirring both hope and unease among the townsfolk. The contrast between the Marlowe’s apparent wealth and the Barton family’s struggles sets the stage for a story of hidden debts, unexpected revelations, and the lengths people will go to protect their own. Listeners will be drawn into a quiet community where every handshake may conceal more than it seems.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (289K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Taavi Kalju, Janet Blenkinship 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
2007-05-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1832–1899
Best known for turning the “rags-to-riches” story into a lasting American myth, this 19th-century writer filled his novels with bootblacks, street boys, and hard-won chances. His books helped shape how generations of readers imagined ambition, luck, and self-improvement.
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