Squire Phin

audiobook

Squire Phin

by Holman Day

EN·~9 hours·28 chapters

Chapters

28 total
1

SQUIRE PHIN - By Holman Day - New York: Harper & Brothers - 1913

0:05
2

SQUIRE PHIN

0:00
3

CHAPTER I—“HARD-TIMES” WHARFF COCKS HIS NOSE TO SNIFF TROUBLE

22:15
4

PHINEAS LOOK - Attorney and Notary

5:37
5

CHAPTER II—“HIME” LOOK’S HOMECOMING WITH AN ELEPHANT - AND TROUBLE AND A FEW OTHER THINGS

32:31
6

CHAPTER III—FROM THE MOUTH OF MARRINER AMAZEEN

21:41
7

CHAPTER IV—SQUIRE PHIN FINDS HYMEN’S TORCH BURNING HIS FINGERS

25:07
8

CHAPTER V—HIRAM LOOK MEETS KLEBER WILLARD BRIEFLY AND BRISKLY - AFTER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS

19:39
9

CHAPTER VI—SQUIRE PHIN HAS A WORD OF BUSINESS WITH KING BRADISH

26:10
10

CHAPTER VII—THE BUSINESS OF HUMAN HEARTS - THAT CALLED SQUIRE PHIN TO THE COVE ROAD

19:41

Description

A sleepy summer afternoon settles over the little coastal village of Palermo, where the hum of flies, clatter of dishes, and the lazy song of a cicada paint a picture of quiet rural life. In the shade of a maple, a group of aging locals watches a sleek, city‑bound surrey arrive, its portly passenger and his family a stark contrast to the modest storefront and the worn‑out bananas on display. Their arrival stirs murmurs of curiosity and thinly veiled disdain, hinting at the uneasy meeting of town tradition with outside ambition.

The newcomer’s haughty demeanor and the townsfolk’s sardonic banter set the stage for a subtle clash of worlds. As the carriage rolls onward, the village’s simple rhythm is quietly challenged, leaving listeners to wonder how this brief encounter will ripple through the lives of both the strangers and the steadfast residents of Palermo.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~9 hours (519K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger from page images generously provided by the Internet Archive

Release date

2017-08-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Holman Day

Holman Day

1865–1935

A lively Maine storyteller, journalist, and poet, his books turned the state’s woods, coast, and small-town politics into energetic fiction. He also crossed into early filmmaking, giving his career a wider reach than many regional writers of his time.

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