
THE ADVENTURES OFAN UGLY GIRL
CHAPTER I.“As ithers see us.”—Burns.
CHAPTER II.“In the world there is no duty more important than that of being charming.”—Victor Hugo.
CHAPTER III.“Tis the unlikely that always happens.”
CHAPTER IV.“There will be no wedding to-day.”
CHAPTER V.“A maiden’s fancies.”
CHAPTER VI.“When venom’d gossip shows her poison-fangs, the watchword is, ‘Beware!’”
CHAPTER VII.“From prying eyes and fingers defend us, good Lord!”
CHAPTER VIII.“Brave hearts and willing hands may foil even Satan himself.”
CHAPTER IX.“How fain are we to turn our backs on that which likes us not.”
In a cramped Victorian household, a young woman wrestles with a relentless chorus of criticism that brands her as “ugly.” Her sister’s sharp remarks and the constant comparison to a more polished sibling leave her feeling isolated and volatile, driving her to burst into tears behind a locked door. The narrative captures her inner turmoil with vivid, confessional prose, inviting listeners to feel the sting of daily rejection. Yet beneath the bitterness lies a yearning for acceptance and a hint of restless curiosity.
When a sudden invitation arrives—promising a chance to leave the suffocating home and explore the world beyond—she seizes it, stepping onto a path that may reshape her sense of self. Along the way she encounters eccentric companions, unexpected kindness, and challenges that test both her courage and her perception of beauty. Listeners will join her as she discovers that adventure can be as much about inner transformation as about far‑flung escapades.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (430K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Mary Glenn Krause, amsibert, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2018-10-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1846–1930
Best known for the bold feminist utopian novel New Amazonia (1889), this English writer also worked as a journalist and wrote popular adventure, society, and detective fiction. Her work pushed at the limits of Victorian expectations while staying lively and readable.
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