Light for Little Ones

audiobook

Light for Little Ones

by Mary F. Waterbury

EN·~50 minutes·12 chapters

Chapters

12 total
1

TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE.

0:19
2

LIGHT FOR LITTLE ONES.

0:15
3

CHAPTER I. FRANKIE AND HIS HOME.

3:03
4

CHAPTER II. THE ADVENTURE IN THE CREEK.

7:39
5

CHAPTER III. ALECK—THE NEW FRIEND.

5:40
6

CHAPTER IV. REMEMBER THE SABBATH DAY.

7:24
7

CHAPTER V. FRANKIE TRUSTS IN CHRIST.

3:51
8

CHAPTER VI. THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL.

5:52
9

CHAPTER VII. THE COASTING MATCH—WHO BEAT?

6:24
10

CHAPTER VIII. ALECK GOES HOME.

3:16

Description

In a quiet riverside village, young Frankie lives in a bright white house surrounded by towering poplars, maples painted by Jack Frost, and a garden of trumpet-shaped honey‑suckles. His mother, Mrs. Western, fills the home with warmth and gentle lessons about temper, kindness, and the “way of holiness,” while his father works far away in California after losing his factory. The story opens with vivid descriptions of the creek’s sparkling waters, the hum of distant mills, and Frankie’s cheerful daily life, hinting at the moral compass that will guide his choices.

When three neighborhood boys arrive at Frankie’s gate, they invite him to trade teasing banter for a splash in the creek, sparking his curiosity and a taste for adventure. Their playful rivalry and camaraderie set the stage for simple but meaningful challenges that test Frankie’s newfound sense of right and wrong. Listeners will enjoy the gentle humor, the picturesque setting, and the early lessons that shape Frankie’s journey toward light and understanding.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~50 minutes (48K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chris Curnow, obstobst and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2014-01-05

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Mary F. Waterbury

Mary F. Waterbury

A little-known 19th-century writer, she is remembered for a gentle children’s book that blends everyday adventure with moral and religious lessons. Her surviving work offers a glimpse of the kind of family reading that shaped many young readers of the era.

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