Tell England: A Study in a Generation

audiobook

Tell England: A Study in a Generation

by Ernest Raymond

EN·~10 hours·36 chapters

Chapters

36 total
1

TELL ENGLAND - A Study in a Generation

0:02
2

BY - ERNEST RAYMOND

0:01
3

NEW YORK GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY 1922

0:42
4

TELL ENGLAND

33:09
5

BOOK I FIVE GAY YEARS OF SCHOOL

0:03
6

CHAPTER I - RUPERT RAY BEGINS HIS STORY

41:55
7

CHAPTER II - RUPERT OPENS A GREAT WAR

34:46
8

CHAPTER III - AWFUL ROUT OF RAY

16:30
9

CHAPTER IV - THE PREFECTS GO OVER TO THE ENEMY

51:16
10

CHAPTER V - CHEATING

21:25

Description

A young editor discovers a manuscript that reads like a time‑capsule, capturing the schoolyard adventures and early adulthood of three English boys who later find themselves on the brutal beaches of Gallipoli. The narrative is framed by a gentle, reflective voice that weaves together vivid recollections of public‑school life with the looming shadow of war, offering listeners both the humor of youthful mischief and the weight of a generation’s hopes.

The story opens with a tender scene of a grandfather and his grandson watching swallows over a French river, a moment that hints at the fleeting innocence soon to be tested. As the boys grow, their personalities emerge—brash, loyal, and eager to prove themselves—while the editor’s commentary adds layers of insight into how personal memory and collective history intertwine. The first act promises a poignant portrait of friendship, ambition, and the early signs of the conflict that will reshape their lives.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (626K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Janet Kegg and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team

Release date

2005-02-13

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Ernest Raymond

Ernest Raymond

1888–1974

Best known for the World War I novel Tell England, this prolific British writer published more than fifty books and kept readers coming back for decades. His fiction often blended emotional intensity with a sharp eye for moral conflict, including the celebrated We, the Accused.

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