
FIVE NIGHTS
FIVE NIGHTS
LIFE'S SHOP WINDOW. - INTRODUCTION
TREVOR LONSDALE. - PART ONE - THE GOLD NIGHT - CHAPTER I - THE TAKU INLET
CHAPTER II - THE TEA-SHOP
CHAPTER III - IN THE WOOD
PART TWO - THE VIOLET NIGHT - CHAPTER IV - AT THE STUDIO
CHAPTER V - THE CALL OF THE CUCKOO
PART THREE - THE BLACK NIGHT - CHAPTER VI - IN MAYFAIR
CHAPTER VII - FREEDOM
The story opens with a narrator who treats memory like a stained‑glass window, each night a different hue that has left its mark on a life lived far from ordinary streets. He calls them the “Five Nights,” episodes that, though not the happiest, are unforgettable because of their strange, vivid colours. As the reader turns the page, the narrator invites us to step into those moments and feel the pulse of his recollections.
The first of these evenings unfolds on a June morning in the far north, where a steamer slips into the icy Taku Inlet of Alaska. The landscape is rendered in electric blues, gold and crystalline white, the silence so complete it seems the world itself is holding its breath. Amid glittering icebergs and a towering glacier, the solitary narrator experiences both awe and a subtle sense of vulnerability, hinting at the adventures and inner reckonings that will follow.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (429K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-07-24
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1868–1952
Best known for bold, unconventional fiction, this British writer published as Victoria Cross and became one of the striking voices associated with New Woman writing. Her novels often pushed at the boundaries of gender, desire, and social respectability.
View all books
by Victoria Cross

by Victoria Cross

by Victoria Cross

by Victoria Cross

by Victoria Cross

by Vinceslas-Eugène Dick

by Philippe Aubert de Gaspé

by Abraham Cahan