Mirk Abbey, Volume 3 (of 3)

audiobook

Mirk Abbey, Volume 3 (of 3)

by James Payn

EN·~3 hours·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total
1

MIRK ABBEY, - By James Payn - The Author of “Lost Sir Massengberd;” “the Clyffards Of Glyffe;” etc., etc. - In Three Volumes. Vol. III. - London: Hurst And Blackett, Publishers, 1866.

0:11
2

CHAPTER I. MADAME DE CASTELLAN.

17:16
3

CHAPTER II. THE PARTIE QUARRÉ.

15:52
4

CHAPTER III. A JOURNEY ON FOOT.

12:15
5

CHAPTER IV. COVETON

17:47
6

CHAPTER V. THE MEMORIAL WINDOW.

14:49
7

CHAPTER VI. JACOB'S GUARD-SHIP.

18:08
8

CHAPTER VII. THE TRIUMPHAL ARCH.

16:31
9

CHAPTER VIII. FLED.

14:52
10

CHAPTER IX. THE UNINVITED GUEST.

16:58

Description

Mirk Abbey teems with the bustling preparations of a grand coming‑of‑age celebration, where the young heir’s future hangs in the balance of propriety and pride. Sir Richard, the baronet, wrestles with his duties as host while his sister‑in‑law, the Lady, balances the estate’s finances against the demands of the ceremony. Their world is a tapestry of genteel obligations, whispered anxieties, and the quiet charm of an English country house poised on the brink of a significant occasion.

When a pressing matter draws the Lady to town, she leaves the abbey in the capable hands of Mistress Forest and the ever‑watchful Sir Richard. Their routine is upended by the arrival of the venerable Madame de Castellan, a frail yet dignified guest whose presence hints at old alliances and hidden expectations. As the household braces for the first meeting between the baronet and his brother’s newly wed wife, the day promises both awkward moments and the subtle stirrings of change within the ancient walls of Mirk.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (214K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger from page images generously provided by the Internet Archive

Release date

2014-12-24

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

James Payn

James Payn

1830–1898

A hugely popular Victorian storyteller, he mixed sharp humor with fast-moving plots and helped shape literary magazines as well as novels. His fiction was known for being readable, lively, and made for a broad audience.

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