Prisoners of Hope: A Tale of Colonial Virginia

audiobook

Prisoners of Hope: A Tale of Colonial Virginia

by Mary Johnston

EN·~9 hours·37 chapters

Chapters

37 total
1

PRISONERS OF HOPE - CHAPTER I - A SLOOP COMES IN

22:12
2

CHAPTER II - ITS CARGO

18:40
3

CHAPTER III - A COLONIAL DINNER PARTY

22:02
4

CHAPTER IV - THE BREAKING HEART

15:50
5

CHAPTER V - IN THE THREE-MILE FIELD

15:49
6

CHAPTER VI - THE HUT ON THE MARSH

17:11
7

CHAPTER VII - A MENDER OF NETS

23:08
8

CHAPTER VIII - THE NEW SECRETARY

7:18
9

CHAPTER IX - AN INTERRUPTED WOOING

13:42
10

CHAPTER X - LANDLESS PAYS THE PIPER

12:43

Description

In the lush, marsh‑lined outskirts of 17th‑century Virginia, a genteel household watches the tide pull a sleek sloop into view. The young lady on the porch, radiant in a gown of green dimity and silk, is thrilled by the promise of three crates arriving from England—fine dresses, glittering accessories, and even a new rapier for her father. Her cousin, a dashing cavalier in the latest Parisian fashion, teases her about the extravagance, while the surrounding wilderness of oyster beds, tobacco fields, and native woods provides a vivid backdrop to their genteel banter.

Their conversation reveals a colony striving to mirror English elegance amid the raw frontier, where social gatherings like the upcoming Green Spring ball become stages for displaying imported splendor. As anticipation builds, the story captures the clash between cultured aspirations and the rugged realities of colonial life, inviting listeners to step onto the porch and feel the humming excitement of a world poised between old‑world refinement and new‑world adventure.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~9 hours (566K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2007-06-21

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Mary Johnston

Mary Johnston

1870–1936

A bestselling American novelist of the early 1900s, she brought colonial Virginia and the Civil War era vividly to life for a wide audience. She was also a determined advocate for women's suffrage and spoke out on social issues beyond her fiction.

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