The King's Daughters

audiobook

The King's Daughters

by Emily Sarah Holt

EN·~5 hours·42 chapters

Chapters

42 total
1

Chapter One. - Choosing a new gown.

8:52
2

Chapter Two. - Who took care of Cissy?

8:17
3

Chapter Three. - Rose.

8:17
4

Chapter Four. - On the way to Thorpe.

8:51
5

Chapter Five. - In difficulties.

8:58
6

Chapter Six. - Rose asks a Favour.

8:06
7

Chapter Seven. - The Clouds begin to gather.

8:13
8

Chapter Eight. - Not a bit afeard.

7:45
9

Chapter Nine. - Come to the Preaching.

8:29
10

Chapter Ten. - Brought out, to be brought in.

8:52

Description

In the bustling clothier’s shop of 1556 Colchester, the air hums with the clatter of bolts and the chatter of women bargaining for kersey and linen. Master Nicholas Clere, a towering, quick‑tempered merchant, presides over the counter while his wife, a loquacious counterpart, offers sharp counsel on price and pattern. Through their banter we glimpse a world where fabric choices signal status, and every purchase is tinged with the undercurrents of Tudor life.

The story follows a handful of determined shoppers—Alice Mount, recently taunted for alleged heresy, and the indecisive Margaret Thurston, who cannot settle on a single hue. Their quest for the perfect summer gown becomes a stage for gossip, rivalry, and the subtle power plays of a tight‑knit community. Listeners will be drawn into the vivid textures of the market, the humor of daily negotiations, and the hidden tensions that stitch together a portrait of England on the brink of change.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (330K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England

Release date

2007-10-20

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

ES

Emily Sarah Holt

1836–1893

A prolific Victorian writer of historical fiction, she filled her novels with medieval settings, strong moral purpose, and a clear Protestant outlook. Much of her work was written for younger readers, but it still offers a vivid glimpse of 19th-century popular storytelling.

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