Old Saint Paul's: A Tale of the Plague and the Fire

audiobook

Old Saint Paul's: A Tale of the Plague and the Fire

by William Harrison Ainsworth

EN·~19 hours·57 chapters

Chapters

57 total

OLD SAINT PAUL'S, A TALE OF THE PLAGUE AND THE FIRE - By William Harrison Ainsworth

1:33

OLD SAINT PAUL'S.

0:01

BOOK THE FIRST.—APRIL, 1665.

0:01

I. THE GROCER OF WOOD-STREET AND HIS FAMILY.

34:20

II. THE COFFIN-MAKER.

37:19

III. THE GAMESTER AND THE BULLY.

20:43

IV. THE INTERVIEW.

13:53

V. THE POMANDER-BOX.

19:04

VI. THE LIBERTINE PUNISHED.

15:02

VII. THE PLAGUE NURSE.

18:36

Description

In the summer of 1665 London is gripped by a relentless pestilence, and the streets of Cheapside hum with the quiet panic of a city on the brink. At the heart of this turmoil lives Stephen Bloundel, a meticulous grocer whose household—wife, children, apprentices, and servants—observes prayer with clockwork precision. When the plague reaches its fiercest, he seals his home, hoping that strict discipline and devout supplication might shield his family from the invisible foe.

Bloundel’s nightly prayers blend personal fear with a stark moral indictment of a city he sees as steeped in vice, invoking biblical warnings and pleading for divine mercy. The narrative captures the claustrophobic tension of a household cut off from the bustling market, every creak of the shutters echoing the dread outside. As London’s streets empty and the specter of fire looms on the horizon, the story offers a vivid portrait of faith, survival, and the fragile line between order and chaos.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~19 hours (1119K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Etext produced by Dave Morgan, Terry Gilliland and PG Distributed Proofreaders HTML files produced by David Widger

Release date

2004-02-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

William Harrison Ainsworth

William Harrison Ainsworth

1805–1882

Best known for vivid historical romances like Rookwood and The Tower of London, this prolific Victorian writer helped turn the past into fast-moving popular fiction. His books were loved for their color, energy, and sense of spectacle.

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