Nevermore

audiobook

Nevermore

by Rolf Boldrewood

EN·~11 hours·25 chapters

Chapters

25 total
1

CHAPTER I

17:03
2

CHAPTER II

24:13
3

CHAPTER III

13:31
4

CHAPTER IV

10:15
5

CHAPTER V

19:11
6

CHAPTER VI

19:09
7

CHAPTER VII

18:31
8

CHAPTER VIII

25:16
9

CHAPTER IX

15:25
10

CHAPTER X

35:39

Description

A fierce argument erupts in the stone‑walled hall of Wychwood, where Launcelot Trevanion, the hot‑headed heir, declares he will abandon the family lands, while his father, the stoic Mervyn, reminds him of a lineage bound by duty and a dark, inherited trait. The brothers share the infamous “Trevanion eyes,” a cold gray glare that seems to flare with an unsettling light whenever passion runs high, a legacy whispered about in village folklore as a curse from an ancient pact. This clash of youthful defiance and seasoned pride sets the stage for a story steeped in Cornwall’s rugged history and the weight of ancestral expectation.

Amid the tension, Estelle Chaloner, the bright and beautiful cousin who has married the tempestuous Launcelot, brings a fleeting warmth to the gloomy estate, her presence both soothing and unsettling to the brooding Sir Mervyn. The younger Trevanion brothers watch the drama unfold, aware that the family’s fortunes may hinge on how this generation handles the shadow of the eyes. As the first act closes, the house stands at a crossroads, its future hanging on the fragile balance between rebellion and tradition.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (679K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Edwards, Mary Meehan 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

2010-11-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Rolf Boldrewood

Rolf Boldrewood

1826–1915

Best known for the classic bushranger tale Robbery Under Arms, this Anglo-Australian novelist drew on a life spent in the colonies as a squatter, magistrate, and goldfields official. His stories helped shape how generations of readers imagined nineteenth-century Australia.

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