Fortitude

audiobook

Fortitude

by Hugh Walpole

EN·~15 hours·44 chapters

Chapters

44 total

FORTITUDE - By Hugh Walpole

0:06

BOOK I — SCAW HOUSE

0:01

CHAPTER I - INTRODUCTION TO COURAGE - I

30:00

CHAPTER II - HOW THE WESTCOTT FAMILY SAT UP FOR PETER - I

24:41

CHAPTER III

28:16

CHAPTER IV - IN WHICH “DAWSON'S,” AS THE GATE OF LIFE, IS PROVED A DISAPPOINTMENT - I

25:11

CHAPTER V - DAWSON'S, THE GATE INTO HELL - I

24:04

CHAPTER VI - A LOOKING-GLASS, A SILVER MATCH-BOX, A GLASS OF WHISKY, AND—VOX POPULI - I

37:39

CHAPTER VII - PRIDE OF LIFE - I

22:42

CHAPTER VIII - PETER AND HIS MOTHER - I

21:25

Description

In a wind‑blown coastal town, a twelve‑year‑old boy named Peter Westcott spends his Christmas Eve hidden in the bustling kitchen of the old inn. Surrounded by roaring firelight, ancient carved chairs, and the salty scent of sea spray, he watches the world through a veil of shadows and mistletoe, absorbing the stories and bravado of the locals. The inn, once a rough‑and‑tumble haunt of sailors, now teeters between its gritty past and a budding genteel future, and Peter is drawn to its paradoxical charm.

Through Peter’s eyes we glimpse a community caught between tradition and change—fishermen battling dwindling catches, townsfolk trading oaths for polite conversation, and the ever‑present echo of the sea outside the walls. As the snow falls silently over the town, his quiet courage begins to take shape, hinting at the inner strength he will need when the world beyond the kitchen’s warmth demands more than youthful curiosity.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~15 hours (914K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Text file produced by The Distributed Proofreading Team HTML file produced by David Widger

Release date

2005-04-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Hugh Walpole

Hugh Walpole

1884–1941

A prolific storyteller with a gift for atmosphere, this English novelist moved easily from psychological drama to ghostly tales and sweeping historical fiction. He was hugely popular in the 1920s and 1930s, and his best books still show why readers were drawn to his vivid settings and strong sense of character.

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