St. George's Cross; Or, England Above All

audiobook

St. George's Cross; Or, England Above All

by H. G. (Henry George) Keene

EN·~3 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total

ST. GEORGE'S CROSS; - OR, ENGLAND ABOVE ALL. An Episode of Channel Island History. - BY - H.G. KEENE - GUERNSEY: FREDERICK CLARKE, STATES ARCADE. LONDON: W.H. ALLEN & CO., 15. WATERLOO PLACE. 1887

0:12

TO THE READER.

0:26

PROLOGUE.

27:30

ACT I. - The King.

34:05

ACT II. - The Manor.

21:22

ACT III. - The States.

26:15

ACT IV. - The Duel.

28:50

ACT V. - Farewell To Jersey.

20:20

EPILOGUE.

38:02

APPENDIX.

0:59

Description

Set against the rugged beauty of the Channel Islands in the turbulent year of 1649, this tale paints a vivid picture of a world caught between the fading echo of royalist loyalties and the rising tide of republican ideals. The prose brings the island’s windswept cliffs, bustling ports, and cramped London lodgings to life, while subtly echoing the larger political upheavals that have upended the lives of its inhabitants.

At the heart of the story are two unlikely companions: a disgraced former Member of Parliament, still clinging to his convictions despite being cast out by both Cavaliers and Roundheads, and Michael Lempriere, a once‑powerful seigneur now reduced to teaching French in exile. Their tense dialogue, sparked by a chance meeting in a London window‑seat, reveals a clash of ambition, loss, and the lingering hope of redemption. As they debate the future of liberty and the role of the individual in a changing world, the narrative captures the fragile balance between personal honor and the harsh realities of political survival.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (190K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Steven Gibbs, Melissa Er-Raqabi and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2004-11-30

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

H. G. (Henry George) Keene

H. G. (Henry George) Keene

1825–1915

Best known for vivid histories of India, this English writer drew on decades of service in the Bengal Civil Service as well as a lifelong interest in the subcontinent's past. His books helped introduce many Victorian readers to medieval and modern Indian history.

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