
CHAPTER I. - In which some particulars are given of the Fox-Cordery Family.
CHAPTER II. - Poor Cinderella.
CHAPTER III. - A Family Discussion.
CHAPTER IV. - Wherein Cinderella Asserts Herself.
CHAPTER V. - In which John Dixon informs Mr. Fox-Cordery that he has seen a Ghost.
CHAPTER VI. - In which we make the acquaintance of Rathbeal.
CHAPTER VII. - Billy turns the Corner.
CHAPTER VIII. - The Gambler's Confession.
CHAPTER IX. - Mr. Fox-Cordery is not easy in his mind.
CHAPTER X. - In which Mr. Fox-Cordery meets with a repulse.
In a modest English town, Charlotte Fox‑Cordery lives a life of quiet hardship, her days marked by worn clothing, patched stockings and a cramped bedroom that betray the modest means of a woman forced to earn her own keep. Her older brother, who outwardly presents himself as a genteel gentleman despite a wax‑like pallor and an affectation of youth, shares a peculiar habit of swapping attire with his sister, blurring the line between brother and sister in the eyes of the world. When the unassuming but compassionate John Dixon first encounters Charlotte, his sympathy for her apparent vulnerability blossoms into something deeper, hinting at a love that might lift her beyond the confines of her current existence.
The narrative weaves a gentle satire of social pretenses with a tender romance, exploring how appearances can both conceal and reveal true character. As Charlotte navigates the expectations of her family and the society that misreads her, listeners are drawn into her resilient spirit and the subtle humor that underpins her journey toward a home built on more than mere circumstance.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (328K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Charles Bowen from page scans provided by Google Books (the New York Public Library)
Release date
2016-11-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1833–1903
A hugely prolific Victorian storyteller, he turned a restless, globe-spanning life into popular fiction, plays, and journalism. His work moved between London, Australia, and New Zealand, and his family later became literary in its own right.
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