To Him That Hath: A Tale of the West of Today

audiobook

To Him That Hath: A Tale of the West of Today

by Ralph Connor

EN·~7 hours·19 chapters

Chapters

19 total
1

TO HIM THAT HATH - A NOVEL OF THE WEST OF TODAY By Ralph Connor

0:39
2

TO HIM THAT HATH

0:01
3

CHAPTER I - THE GAME

26:53
4

CHAPTER II - THE COST OF SACRIFICE

28:06
5

CHAPTER III - THE HEATHEN QUEST

8:30
6

CHAPTER IV - ANNETTE

19:16
7

CHAPTER V - THE RECTORY

27:41
8

CHAPTER VI - THE GRIEVANCE COMMITTEE

18:45
9

CHAPTER VII - THE FOREMAN

21:15
10

CHAPTER VIII - FREE SPEECH

32:35

Description

In a sun‑splashed western town, a lively tennis court becomes the arena for a clash of pride and identity. Captain Jack, a seasoned Canadian player, faces a confident Englishman named Stillwell while a spirited crowd of locals watches, cheering the rivalry of Canada versus the Old Country. Among them, Frances Amory fuels the competition with sharp wit, insisting Jack prove his nation’s worth on the baseline. Their heated volleys and banter reveal not just athletic skill but the simmering cultural tensions of a community still defining itself.

Beyond the court, the town’s labor and social issues begin to surface, hinted at through murmurs of a grievance committee and looming strikes. As friendships tighten and rivalries deepen, Jack must navigate personal loyalties while confronting the broader questions of duty, sacrifice, and what it means to belong. The opening sets a lively stage where sport and societal change intertwine, promising a story that balances spirited competition with the heartbeat of a burgeoning western community.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~7 hours (444K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Donald Lainson; David Widger

Release date

2006-06-03

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Ralph Connor

Ralph Connor

1860–1937

A Canadian minister who turned frontier life, faith, and adventure into hugely popular fiction, this early bestseller wrote with energy and a strong moral sense. Under the pen name Ralph Connor, he became one of the most widely read Canadian novelists of the early 20th century.

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