The Martyrdom of Madeline

audiobook

The Martyrdom of Madeline

by Robert Williams Buchanan

EN·~10 hours·51 chapters

Chapters

51 total

THE MARTYRDOM OF MADELINE - By Robert Buchanan - With A Frontispiece By A. W. Cooper - London: Chatto & Windus, Piccadilly - 1889

0:08

PREFATORY NOTE.

1:29

THE MARTYRDOM OF MADELINE.

0:01

PROLOGUE IN THE NIGHT.

5:07

CHAPTER I.—A DANCING LESSON UNDER DIFFICULTIES.

10:51

CHAPTER II.—‘UNCLE’ LUKE AND ‘UNCLE’ MARK.

10:05

CHAPTER III.—EASTER SOLEMNITIES OF THE BRETHREN.

11:13

CHAPTER IV.—UNCLE MARK PARTS WITH THE OLD BARGE.

16:50

CHAPTER V.—UNCLE MARK SAILS UP THE SHINING RIVER.

11:27

CHAPTER VI.—MADELINE IS ABOUT TO REALISE HER DREAM.

8:23

Description

In rain‑slicked London streets, two young women whose faces could be twins meet beneath a flickering lamplight. One is a restless, fierce figure wrapped in a costly shawl, her eyes sharp with anxiety; the other is a soaked, despairing waif whose voice trembles with thirst and hopelessness. Their brief, tense exchange over a single sovereign—money that might buy a drink or a fleeting hope—reveals a stark clash of privilege and poverty, hinting at the deeper social forces that bind and betray them.

Through this encounter the narrative probes the painful paradox of a society that demands chastity from women while excusing male excess, and it questions the very notion of “purity” that governs personal lives. As the rain pours and the city looms, the reader is drawn into a world where survival and dignity are negotiated in whispered bargains, setting the stage for a poignant exploration of gender, class, and the sacrifices demanded by a rigid moral code.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (577K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

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

Release date

2017-08-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

Robert Williams Buchanan

Robert Williams Buchanan

1841–1901

A restless Victorian writer, he moved easily between poetry, novels, plays, and criticism, earning both admiration and controversy. He is still remembered for his vivid writing and for the literary quarrel he sparked with the Pre-Raphaelites.

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