The Country House

audiobook

The Country House

by John Galsworthy

EN·~7 hours·31 chapters

Chapters

31 total
1

PART I. - CHAPTER I - A PARTY AT WORSTED SKEYNES

27:11
2

CHAPTER II - THE COVERT SHOOT

13:46
3

CHAPTER III - THE BLISSFUL HOUR

8:34
4

CHAPTER IV - THE HAPPY HUNTING-GROUND

12:47
5

CHAPTER V - MRS. PENDYCE'S DANCE

8:38
6

CHAPTER VI - INFLUENCE OF THE REVEREND HUSSELL BARTER

7:59
7

CHAPTER VII - SABBATH AT WORSTED SKEYNES

14:53
8

CHAPTER VIII - GREGORY VIGIL PROPOSES

11:56
9

CHAPTER IX - MR. PARAMOR DISPOSES

27:38
10

CHAPTER X - AT BLAFARD'S

9:29

Description

The story opens on a crisp October morning in 1891, when a procession of carriages and footmen converges on the remote railway station of Worsted Skeynes. Guests in top‑hats and fur coats disembark, each wary of recognition, while the pomp of Mr. Horace Pendyce’s household—coachmen, footmen, and a nervous groom—scrambles to assign rooms and colors to the arriving parties. The scene is rendered with a keen eye for the minutiae of Victorian etiquette, setting the tone for a gathering that feels both grand and slightly claustrophobic.

At the heart of the narrative sits the sprawling country house inherited by Mr. Pendyce, a man convinced that “individualism” has corrupted English life. He runs the estate with an almost ideological rigor, imposing his own tastes on tenants and guests alike. As the first night’s festivities begin, the uneasy balance between social ambition, hidden rivalries, and Pendyce’s own peculiar convictions promises a tangled web of conversation and concealed motives, inviting listeners to linger over every whispered exchange.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~7 hours (433K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger

Release date

2006-06-14

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

John Galsworthy

John Galsworthy

1867–1933

Best known for The Forsyte Saga, this English novelist and playwright wrote with sharp sympathy about money, class, and the quiet pressures of family life. His storytelling earned him the 1932 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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