
audiobook
CHAPTER I. — PARENTAGE.—FATHER'S MARRIAGE.
CHAPTER II. — THE WHITE NUNNERY.
CHAPTER III. — THE NURSERY.
CHAPTER IV. — A SLAVE FOR LIFE.
CHAPTER V. — CEREMONY OF CONFIRMATION.
CHAPTER VI. — THE GREY NUNNERY.
CHAPTER VII. — ORPHAN'S HOME.
CHAPTER VIII. — CONFESSION AND SORROW OF NO AVAIL.
CHAPTER IX. — ALONE WITH THE DEAD.
CHAPTER X. — THE SICK NUN.
Born in 1835 in St. John’s, New Brunswick, the narrator recounts a tangled family history that begins with an Irish father fleeing his native Dublin for the promise of a new life in Quebec. There he finds shelter with the wealthy, Protestant Captain Willard, whose household includes a gentle, romantic fourteen‑year‑old daughter whose beauty and spirit captivate the newcomer. Their secret love ends in a midnight elopement that shatters the Willard family, plunging father and mother into grief and, for the mother, a tragic descent into madness.
The narrative then follows the father's return to his own home, where he discovers his wife’s fragile health and the lingering sorrow of loss. As religious differences surface—Catholic father versus Protestant in‑laws—their marriage fractures, leaving the child in the care of a caring grandfather. Set against the harsh realities of 19th‑century Canada, the story weaves themes of love, faith, and the fragile bonds that hold families together.
Full title
Life in the Grey Nunnery at Montreal An Authentic Narrative of the Horrors, Mysteries, and Cruelties of Convent Life An Authentic Narrative of the Horrors, Mysteries, and Cruelties of Convent Life
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (567K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Text file produced by Gardner Buchanan with help from Charles Franks and Distributed Proofers HTML file produced by David Widger
Release date
2004-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
b. 1835
A little-known 19th-century writer, she is remembered for a sensational memoir that claimed to reveal the hidden cruelties of convent life in Montreal. Her book sits at the crossroads of autobiography, religious controversy, and popular Gothic-style narrative.
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