Mirth and metre

audiobook

Mirth and metre

by Frank E. (Frank Edward) Smedley, Edmund Yates

EN·~2 hours·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total

MIRTH AND METRE.

0:27

PREFACE.

3:27

MIRTH AND METRE. - MAUDE ALLINGHAME; A LEGEND OF HERTFORDSHIRE.

28:05

“YE RIGHT ANCIENT BALLAD OF YE COMBAT OF KING TIDRICH WITH YE DRAGON.”

7:57

ST. MICHAEL’S EVE.

9:30

THE KING OF THE CATS. A RHINE LEGEND.

6:24

THE LAPWING.

1:50

THE ENCHANTED NET.

11:02

A FYTTE OF THE BLUES.

2:38

THE FORFEIT HAND; A LEGEND OF BRABANT.

22:08

Description

The volume opens with a tongue‑in‑cheek preface that declares its ambition to follow in the mischievous footsteps of the famed Ingoldsby Legends. Its pages are filled with short, jaunty poems and prose‑tales that blend the supernatural with everyday folly, all rendered in a lively, sing‑song metre that invites a smile as often as a shiver. From haunted halls and mournful funerals to mischievous cats ruling riverside kingdoms, each piece balances wit with a touch of the uncanny, making the collection feel both timeless and oddly contemporary.

In the first story a solemn funeral procession for Sir Reginald Allinghame sets the stage for a legend of love, loss, and unexpected heirs, while later numbers transport listeners to a Rhine‑dwelling monarch of cats, a daring dragon duel, and a clever wager that tests a gambler’s wits. Illustrated by M’Connell, the work’s vivid imagery and clever rhymes bring these eccentric characters to life, offering a charming escape into a world where humor and the supernatural dance together.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (141K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

United Kingdom: George Routledge & Co., 1855.

Credits

Mark C. Orton and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2022-10-18

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

Frank E. (Frank Edward) Smedley

Frank E. (Frank Edward) Smedley

1818–1864

A popular Victorian novelist, he is best remembered for lively tales of school and college life, especially Frank Fairlegh. Writing under the name Frank E. Smedley, he mixed humor, youthful adventure, and a sharp eye for character.

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Edmund Yates

Edmund Yates

1831–1894

A lively Victorian journalist and novelist, he helped turn society gossip into a popular, respectable form of journalism. His writing blends sharp observation, theatrical energy, and a strong feel for London life.

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