The Prospector: A Tale of the Crow's Nest Pass

audiobook

The Prospector: A Tale of the Crow's Nest Pass

by Ralph Connor

EN·~9 hours·22 chapters

Chapters

22 total
1

CONTENTS

0:41
2

I. A SOCIAL IMPOSSIBILITY

17:33
3

II. 'VARSITY VERSUS McGILL

43:29
4

III. THE VOICE IN THE WILDERNESS

9:01
5

IV. ONLY ONE CLAIM

29:53
6

V. "YEA, AND HIS OWN LIFE ALSO"

27:33
7

VI. ON THE TRAIL

25:10
8

VII. THE OUTPOST

17:11
9

VIII. THE OLD PROSPECTOR

16:58
10

IX. TIM CARROLL

25:33

Description

A crisp November afternoon drapes the University of Toronto in a gentle purple haze, the campus lawns still emerald before winter’s bite. Two sisters, bright‑eyed and full of youthful vigor, wander among the stone arches and gargoyles, their conversation darting from the beauty of the architecture to the buzz of a football match that will soon pit varsity against McGill. Their banter introduces a cast of charismatic athletes and enigmatic figures—captains, “The Don,” and a mysterious “Shock”—hinting at the intense rivalries and social hierarchies that shape campus life.

Through vivid, almost tactile descriptions, the story captures the thrill of youthful ambition and the undercurrents of competition that pulse through the university’s corridors. As the sisters and their companions prepare for the upcoming game, the narrative subtly foreshadows larger aspirations and conflicts beyond the playing field, inviting listeners to follow a journey that intertwines sport, friendship, and the restless quest for identity.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~9 hours (524K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. HTML version by Al Haines.

Release date

2003-01-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Ralph Connor

Ralph Connor

1860–1937

A bestselling Canadian storyteller and Presbyterian minister, he turned frontier experience into warm, adventurous novels that reached millions of readers. Writing as Ralph Connor, he became one of the most widely read Canadian authors of the early 20th century.

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