
THE GREAT HOUSE - BY THE SAME AUTHOR
THE GREAT HOUSE - BY - STANLEY J. WEYMAN - Author of “The Castle Inn,” “Chippinge,” “A Gentleman of France,” etc., etc. - NEW YORK - LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO. - FOURTH AVENUE AND 30th STREET - 1919
Contents
THE GREAT HOUSE
CHAPTER I THE HÔTEL LAMBERT—UPSTAIRS
CHAPTER II THE HÔTEL LAMBERT—DOWNSTAIRS
CHAPTER III THE LAWYER ABROAD
CHAPTER IV HOMEWARD BOUND
CHAPTER V THE LONDON PACKET
CHAPTER VI FIELD AND FORGE
In the spring of 1840, a twenty‑year‑old girl watches the bustling Seine from a stark attic on the Île St‑Louis. The room is a white‑washed cage of pallet beds, its only view a lively river lined with soldiers, cabriolets and lovers strolling the King’s Garden. On her birthday she feels the weight of dependence and the ache of a life that seems to pass beyond her window, while the world below celebrates in colors she cannot touch. A sudden knock and a sharp‑tongued maid break the silence, hinting that her quiet existence may soon be stirred.
Beyond that opening scene, the novel unfurls a tapestry of intertwined lives—lawyers returning from foreign courts, merchants navigating the Corn Law crisis, and a cast of memorable figures from the Great House at Beaudelays to the mysterious “Man in Black.” Through letters, meetings at maypoles, and whispered conspiracies, the story paints a vivid portrait of mid‑century France and England, where personal ambitions clash with social expectations.
Listeners will be drawn into the atmospheric rooms, the clatter of Parisian streets, and the quiet yearning of a young woman whose world may soon expand far beyond the attic’s cold walls.
Language
en
Duration
~11 hours (667K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2012-03-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1855–1928
Best known for fast-moving historical romances, this English novelist helped make swashbuckling fiction wildly popular in the 1890s. His stories, often set in turbulent periods of French history, mix danger, politics, and adventure with an easy storytelling touch.
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by Stanley John Weyman

by Stanley John Weyman

by Stanley John Weyman

by Stanley John Weyman

by Stanley John Weyman

by Stanley John Weyman

by Stanley John Weyman

by Stanley John Weyman