Virginia

audiobook

Virginia

by Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow

EN·~14 hours·26 chapters

Chapters

26 total
1

CHAPTER I - THE SYSTEM

38:37
2

CHAPTER II - HER INHERITANCE

43:21
3

CHAPTER III - FIRST LOVE

36:43
4

CHAPTER IV - THE TREADWELLS

42:01
5

CHAPTER V - OLIVER, THE ROMANTIC

28:51
6

CHAPTER VI - A TREADWELL IN REVOLT

23:25
7

CHAPTER VII - THE ARTIST IN PHILISTIA

23:31
8

CHAPTER VIII - WHITE MAGIC

28:54
9

CHAPTER IX - THE GREAT MAN MOVES

19:43
10

CHAPTER X - OLIVER SURRENDERS

25:25

Description

In the warm, fragrant afternoon of May 1884, the Dinwiddie Academy for Young Ladies hums with the soft rustle of lilac petals and the gentle chirp of a caged canary. Miss Priscilla Batte, a dignified teacher in her fifties, stands on the porch, her black silk gown and lace‑trimmed cap framing a face marked by both resolve and quiet tenderness. The garden, a tapestry of roses, syringa, and blooming almond, frames the scene, hinting at the delicate balance between order and the wildness of youth.

Through the iron gate step two girls—Susan Treadwell and Virginia Pendleton—each a picture of Victorian elegance in white lawn dresses and ribbon‑tied hair. Virginia, the shorter of the pair, carries an effortless charm, her blue eyes and bright smile suggesting a heart poised between innocence and the stirrings of desire. Their playful banter and the teacher’s gentle guidance set the stage for a story of friendship, expectation, and the subtle awakenings that accompany a world on the brink of change.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~14 hours (812K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

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

Release date

2008-08-14

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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