Ruth Erskine's Crosses

audiobook

Ruth Erskine's Crosses

by Pansy

EN·~7 hours·29 chapters

Chapters

29 total
1

RUTH ERSKINE’S CROSSES

0:16
2

CHAPTER I. HER CROSS SEEMS HEAVY.

18:07
3

CHAPTER II. SIDE ISSUES.

16:07
4

CHAPTER III. A CROSS OF LEAD.

17:26
5

CHAPTER IV. BITTER HERBS.

17:42
6

CHAPTER V. SEEKING HELP.

17:14
7

CHAPTER VI. FROM DIFFERENT STANDPOINTS.

17:04
8

CHAPTER VII. ONE DROP OF OIL

18:26
9

CHAPTER VIII. FINDING ONE’S CALLING.

16:13
10

CHAPTER IX. A SOCIETY CROSS.

16:35

Description

Ruth Erskine stands in the hallway of her family home, waiting for a stranger who will upend everything she thought she knew about herself. When her father's carriage rolls in, she learns that a long‑absent sister—her father's second wife—has finally arrived, and Ruth must greet her without any precedent for such an introduction. The scene is charged with the quiet anxiety of a daughter who has never been taught how to welcome a mother, let alone a sister she has never seen.

The narrative captures Ruth’s inner turmoil as she wrestles with feelings of resentment, duty, and a yearning for a more settled childhood. Through crisp dialogue and careful description of the newcomers—a red‑haired woman in a modest dress and a solemn gentleman observing the family—readers sense the social expectations and hidden tensions of a respectable New England household. As Ruth extends a tentative hand, the story invites listeners to wonder how these new relationships will reshape her sense of identity.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~7 hours (442K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Emmy, MFR, Google Print 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

2017-01-31

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Pansy

Pansy

1841–1930

A hugely popular 19th-century writer, she created warm, faith-centered stories for children and families and published under the pen name "Pansy." Her books were known for lively characters, everyday settings, and clear moral purpose without losing their storytelling charm.

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