The Return of the Native

audiobook

The Return of the Native

by Thomas Hardy

EN·~13 hours·57 chapters

Chapters

57 total
1

The Return of the Native - by Thomas Hardy

0:02
2

Contents

2:35
3

PREFACE

1:00
4

BOOK FIRST—THE THREE WOMEN

0:01
5

I. A Face on Which Time Makes but Little Impression

9:01
6

II. Humanity Appears upon the Scene, Hand in Hand with Trouble

12:32
7

III. The Custom of the Country

42:38
8

IV. The Halt on the Turnpike Road

9:56
9

V. Perplexity among Honest People

25:11
10

VI. The Figure against the Sky

28:12

Description

A bleak, windswept expanse stretches beneath a twilight sky, the infamous Egdon Heath—a place where time seems to linger and the land itself feels alive with an unsettling stillness. The opening paints the heath in stark contrasts of darkness and light, a backdrop that both comforts and unnerves those who wander its margins. This atmospheric canvas invites listeners into a world where the ordinary and the uncanny coexist, setting a tone of quiet tension that permeates every footstep.

Within this moody landscape, a handful of solitary souls emerge, each wrestling with their own desires and disappointments. A young woman, Thomasin, returns home with hopes of reshaping her future, while the brooding Clym Yeobright seeks purpose beyond the confines of his inherited estate. Their interactions hint at love, ambition, and the inevitable clash between personal longing and the inexorable pull of the heath itself. As the story unfolds, the characters’ inner struggles echo the land’s relentless, haunting rhythm, promising a poignant exploration of duty, yearning, and the cost of change.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~13 hours (779K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2006-03-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Thomas Hardy

Thomas Hardy

1840–1928

Best known for bringing the countryside of southwest England vividly to life, this major Victorian writer paired memorable stories with a deep sense of fate, chance, and human longing. His novels and poems still feel strikingly modern in the way they look at love, class, and the pressures of society.

View all books

You may also like