The Life of George Borrow

audiobook

The Life of George Borrow

by Clement King Shorter

EN·~10 hours·38 chapters

Chapters

38 total

Transcribed from the [1920] J. M. Dent & Sons edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org

0:18

INTRODUCTION

1:02

CHAPTER I Captain Borrow of the West Norfolk Militia

16:17

CHAPTER II Borrow’s Mother

6:27

CHAPTER III John Thomas Borrow

18:44

CHAPTER IV A Wandering Childhood

23:53

CHAPTER V The Gurneys and the Taylors of Norwich

17:03

CHAPTER VI At the Norwich Grammar School

14:23

CHAPTER VII In a Lawyer’s Office

9:55

CHAPTER VIII An Old-Time Publisher

11:08

Description

George Borrow emerges from the quiet lanes of early‑19th‑century Norfolk, a region he later described with the same lyrical affection that colored his own prose. Though he liked to say he was born in East Dereham, his first breath actually rose in the modest farmhouse of Dumpling Green, a place framed by thatched roofs, narrow streets and the lingering presence of poet William Cowper, whose legacy loomed large over the young boy’s imagination.

His family traced its roots to an ancient Cornish line, yet by Borrow’s generation they were modest yeoman farmers living a simple, hard‑working life. The stories of his grandfather’s farm, his father’s apprenticeship with a maltster, and the tight‑knit community of Dereham provided the backdrop for the vivid, autobiographical sketches that would later blossom in works like Lavengro. These early experiences shaped a voice that combined humor, pathos, and a deep love for England’s rural heartland.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (620K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2012-01-24

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Clement King Shorter

Clement King Shorter

1857–1926

A lively force in British literary journalism, he helped shape the magazines readers picked up at the turn of the 20th century. He is also remembered for his lasting interest in the Brontë family and for bringing literary history to a wide audience.

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