
audiobook
by Religious Tract Society (Great Britain)
Transcribed from the 19th Century Religious Tract Society edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
In a bleak, cold evening on the Irish countryside, laborer Peter Lacy returns home empty‑handed after a day of cutting turf. He lives with his outspoken wife Susan, whose sharp tongue often turns small troubles into larger quarrels. Their modest cottage stands opposite the humble home of Michael and Mary Connor, a couple whose quiet faith and generous spirit offer a stark contrast to Peter’s cynicism.
The story unfolds through simple, earnest dialogue as Peter and his neighbors discuss money, work, and the role of religion in a life of hardship. Mary’s gentle insistence that “the Bible is the bread of life” clashes with Peter’s practical skepticism, setting up a quiet moral tug‑of‑war. As the characters navigate daily chores, unpaid wages, and the ever‑present threat of famine, listeners are drawn into a vivid portrait of 19th‑century Irish peasant life, where hope, humility, and the search for meaning coexist with the harsh realities of poverty.
Language
en
Duration
~23 minutes (22K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2020-05-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

A major force in 19th-century religious publishing, this British evangelical society helped shape what countless families read at home, in schools, and in Sunday libraries. Its books and magazines mixed moral instruction, popular reading, and missionary purpose in a way that reached far beyond church walls.
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