The Cockaynes in Paris; Or, 'Gone abroad'

audiobook

The Cockaynes in Paris; Or, 'Gone abroad'

by Blanchard Jerrold

EN·~3 hours·20 chapters

Chapters

20 total
1

WITH SKETCHES BY - GUSTAVE DORÉ, - AND OTHER ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE ENGLISH ABROAD FROM A FRENCH POINT OF VIEW.

0:11
2

PREFACE.

2:04
3

ILLUSTRATIONS.

0:52
4

CHAPTER I. - MRS. ROWE'S.

16:31
5

CHAPTER II. - HE'S HERE AGAIN!

7:34
6

CHAPTER III. - MRS. ROWE'S COMPANY.

4:57
7

CHAPTER IV. - THE COCKAYNES IN PARIS.

16:18
8

CHAPTER V. - THE COCKAYNE FAMILY.

28:22
9

CHAPTER VI. - A "GRANDE OCCASION."

11:33
10

CHAPTER VII. - OUR FOOLISH COUNTRYWOMEN.

6:43

Description

A witty, observant narrator guides listeners through the bustling English enclave of late‑Victorian Paris, where guidebooks and opera glasses are as essential as a good cup of tea. From the glittering boulevards to the cozy cafés, he sketches the charming absurdities of expatriates comparing veal cutlets, negotiating servants, and debating the merits of French versus English domestic life. The early chapters brim with lively anecdotes that capture the city’s elegance and the peculiar habits of its British residents.

The tone shifts as the narrator reflects on the aftermath of recent upheavals, noting how once‑glorious monuments have become scarred and familiar faces grow distant. Through gentle humor and a touch of melancholy, he explores how political change reshapes the everyday rituals of the Cockayne family and their circle, while still celebrating the enduring allure of Paris for those who have made it a second home. Listeners will feel the pulse of a city caught between past splendor and uncertain future.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (203K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Carlo Traverso, Janet Blenkinship, and the Online Distributed Proofreaders Europe at http://dp.rastko.net

Release date

2006-05-06

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Blanchard Jerrold

Blanchard Jerrold

1826–1884

A lively Victorian journalist and storyteller, he brought London’s streets, politics, and everyday life vividly onto the page. Best remembered for his partnership with illustrator Gustave Doré, he wrote with the energy of a newspaperman and the eye of a dramatist.

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