
MRS. MOODIE,
CHAPTER I. - MRS. GILBERT RUSHMERE.
CHAPTER II. - HOW PEOPLE ARE TAUGHT TO HATE ONE ANOTHER.
CHAPTER III. - A DEAD DOG.
CHAPTER IV. - DEATH IN ANOTHER SHAPE.
CHAPTER V. - THE FALSE ACCUSATION.
CHAPTER VI. - A PROPOSAL.
CHAPTER VII. - A CONFESSION.
CHAPTER VIII. - MR. FITZMORRIS READS A TEMPERANCE LECTURE.
CHAPTER IX. - THE OLD MAN IN PRISON.
A modest Victorian household gathers around a well‑cooked dinner, where the clatter of silverware masks deeper currents of unease. Mrs. Rushmere, her daughter Dorothy, and the one‑armed Gilbert navigate a web of polite conversation, each offering a glimpse of their strained loyalties and unspoken desires. The scene is vivid with period detail—cracked plaster walls, a single bay window, and the quiet hum of a house that feels both intimate and cramped.
Against this domestic backdrop, the novel probes the uneasy balance of power between spouses, the shame and resilience tied to physical injury, and the restless yearning for independence that simmers beneath genteel manners. As whispers of jealousy and unfulfilled affection surface, the characters wrestle with expectations of kindness, duty, and the lingering ache of past choices. The first act sets a tone of bittersweet humor and tender melancholy, inviting listeners to linger in a world where love and propriety clash in the most ordinary of rooms.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (249K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Sue Fleming and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Print project.)
Release date
2013-02-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1803–1885
Best known for Roughing It in the Bush, this English-born Canadian writer turned the hardships of pioneer life into vivid, witty, and enduring nonfiction. Her work remains a cornerstone of early Canadian literature.
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by Susanna Moodie

by Susanna Moodie

by Susanna Moodie

by Susanna Moodie

by Susanna Moodie

by Susanna Moodie

by Susanna Moodie