John Gayther's Garden and the Stories Told Therein

audiobook

John Gayther's Garden and the Stories Told Therein

by Frank R. Stockton

EN·~9 hours·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total
1

John Gayther's Garden and the Stories Told Therein

0:22
2

ILLUSTRATIONS

0:33
3

JOHN GAYTHER'S GARDEN

3:16
4

WHAT I FOUND IN THE SEA

45:22
5

THE BUSHWHACKER NURSE

50:01
6

THE LADY IN THE BOX

57:49
7

THE COT AND THE RILL

1:10:26
8

THE GILDED IDOL AND THE KING CONCH-SHELL

1:08:33
9

MY BALLOON HUNT

30:32
10

THE FOREIGN PRINCE AND THE HERMIT'S DAUGHTER

38:19

Description

In a sprawling, aristocratic garden that seems to stretch forever, a seasoned gardener named John Gayther tends the beds, hedges, and fruit trees with a devotion that rivals the house’s own lineage. The Mistress of the House, delighted by her own reckless pruning, leaves a trail of uprooted blossoms for John to gather, a silent partnership that hints at deeper, unspoken respect. Through his careful eyes the garden becomes more than a collection of plants; it is a living archive of memory, labor, and quiet ambition.

John, a former sailor, soldier, and miner, now finds his greatest adventure in the soil beneath his feet, yet his mind often drifts to the wider world. The stories he tells—like the mysterious “What I Found in the Sea”—blend the ordinary rhythm of hoe‑ing peas with flashes of distant horizons, inviting listeners to wonder what secrets the earth and tide might share. As the garden blooms, so too does a tapestry of modest wonder and lingering curiosity, perfect for anyone who loves gentle narratives rooted in place and imagination.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~9 hours (519K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Alexander Bauer, Suzanne Shell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2007-09-23

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Frank R. Stockton

Frank R. Stockton

1834–1902

Best known for the deliciously unsettling ending of The Lady, or the Tiger?, this 19th-century American writer mixed humor, fantasy, and sharp storytelling in ways that still feel fresh. His work ranges from playful fairy tales to witty novels and short stories that love a clever twist.

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