The Voice of the People

audiobook

The Voice of the People

by Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow

EN·~10 hours·46 chapters

Chapters

46 total
1

BY THE - SAME AUTHOR - "THE DESCENDANT" - AND - "PHASES OF - AN INFERIOR PLANET" - CROWNED MASTERPIECES OF MODERN FICTION - SPECIAL SUBSCRIPTION EDITION

0:09
2

The Voice of the People - BY - Ellen Glasgow

0:02
3

NEW YORK, DOUBLEDAY PAGE & COMPANY, 1904 - Copyright, 1900, by ELLEN GLASGOW - Published September, 1902

0:06
4

BOOK I - FAIR WEATHER AT KINGSBOROUGH

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5

I

13:59
6

II

18:11
7

III

17:41
8

IV

20:14
9

V

20:04
10

VI

18:00

Description

In a sun‑baked Southern town, the rhythm of daily life is captured through the bustling scene outside a modest courthouse. The judge, a figure of both authority and genteel charm, drifts among farmers, lawyers, and townsfolk, exchanging pleasantries that reveal the uneasy balance between tradition and change. Amid the chatter about corn, weeds, and the weight of the land, a lean farmer named Burr speaks for his family, while his red‑haired son, Nicholas, watches the proceedings with quiet intensity.

Nicholas, a small and earnest boy, surprises everyone by declaring he would rather be a judge than a ploughman, hinting at a yearning that clashes with the expectations of his community. The narrative weaves vivid dialect and atmospheric detail to explore how personal ambition, social hierarchy, and the stubbornness of the countryside intersect. Listeners are invited into a world where every breath of wind carries the promise of growth—both in the fields and within the hearts of those who tend them.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (601K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Suzanne Shell, Ed Casulli and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2005-08-10

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow

Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow

1873–1945

A sharp-eyed chronicler of the American South, she wrote novels that pushed past nostalgia and looked closely at class, gender, and social change. Her fiction brought realism and wit to Virginia life, and it earned her the 1942 Pulitzer Prize for In This Our Life.

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