
In the smoky streets of 1689 Boston, a restless crowd gathers as the governor’s red‑coats march through the town, their drums echoing a summons to a people long accustomed to self‑rule. The narrative immerses listeners in the stark atmosphere of a colony chafing under Sir Edmund Andros’s heavy‑handed policies—taxes imposed without consent, charters revoked, and freedoms trampled. Through vivid portraits of stern Puritan descendants, battle‑scarred veterans, and solemn ministers, the story captures a community poised on the brink of rebellion, its faith and resolve tested by the looming threat of tyranny.
The tale weaves together personal and political stakes, highlighting whispered rumors of a foreign prince’s promise to restore civil and religious rights. As tension mounts, the colonists’ quiet agitation hints at a collective awakening that will echo through generations. Listeners are drawn into the charged pre‑revolutionary moment, feeling the weight of history and the first stirrings of a fight for liberty.
Language
en
Duration
~14 hours (838K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-10-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1804–1864
Best known for The Scarlet Letter, this American master of dark, symbolic fiction turned guilt, secrecy, and moral conflict into unforgettable stories. His novels and tales still shape how readers imagine Puritan New England and the shadows of the human conscience.
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