The Garden Without Walls

audiobook

The Garden Without Walls

by Coningsby Dawson

EN·~14 hours·50 chapters

Chapters

50 total
1

THE GARDEN WITHOUT WALLS - By Coningsby Dawson - New York: Grosset & Dunlap Publishers - 1913

0:06
2

BOOK I—THE WALLED-IN GARDEN

0:08
3

CHAPTER I—MY MOTHER

4:52
4

CHAPTER II—THE MAGIC CARPET

10:56
5

CHAPTER III—THE SPUFFLER

14:08
6

CHAPTER IV—RUTHITA

13:50
7

CHAPTER V—MARRIAGE ACCORDING TO HETTY

11:14
8

CHAPTER VI—THE YONDER LAND

16:09
9

CHAPTER VII—THE OPEN WORLD

13:38
10

CHAPTER VIII—RECAPTURED

13:52

Description

In the opening pages, a child's first conscious moment unfolds in a sun‑lit bedroom, where a gentle mother pulls the infant close while the world beyond the window glitters with dust motes. The narrator treats this quiet tableau as a metaphor for the whole of life, seeing his mother as the embodiment of Nature and the room itself as a boundless garden waiting to be explored. Through brief, vivid vignettes—starlit walks, a mysterious horseman, and whispered promises of a sister—the story sketches a bond that is both tender and fragile.

The narrative then pulls back to reveal the tangled roots of the family: a daring elopement between a free‑spirited Miss Fannie and a modest ship‑chandler, set against the rigid expectations of an aristocratic lineage. Their social mismatch, the father's struggling journalism career, and the mother's recurring attempts to bridge the divide hint at the challenges that will shape the narrator's world. As memories mingle with family lore, the stage is set for a journey that will probe the limits of love, ambition, and the garden without walls.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~14 hours (860K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger from page images generously provided by the Internet Archive

Release date

2017-05-28

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Coningsby Dawson

Coningsby Dawson

1883–1959

A British-born writer who built his career in North America, he turned experience into fiction, journalism, and wartime memoir. His life moved from Oxford and publishing houses to the battlefields of World War I, giving his work an unusual mix of romance, travel, and hard-won realism.

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