Zina: the Slave Girl; or, Which the Traitor? A Drama in Four Acts

audiobook

Zina: the Slave Girl; or, Which the Traitor? A Drama in Four Acts

by A. (Augustin) Thompson

EN·~2 hours·7 chapters

Chapters

7 total
1

ZINA: THE SLAVE GIRL OR WHICH THE TRAITOR?

0:29
2

CAST OF CHARACTERS.

0:49
3

ACT I.

23:45
4

ACT II.

51:32
5

ACT III.

25:41
6

ACT IV.

30:56
7

TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES

0:27

Description

In the smoky streets of Mobile, a young slave girl named Zina carries a heavy carpet‑bag, her eyes haunted by the cruelty of her master and the relentless beat of the whip. When the genteel Southern gentleman Martelle d’Arneaux spots her, he offers a glimmer of hope—buying her freedom and welcoming her into his cottage. Zina, torn between fear of retribution and the yearning for a life beyond bondage, confides her desperation in a whispered plea, revealing a talent for song and a mind sharper than her circumstances suggest.

Surrounding her are a cast of conflicted figures: the ruthless trader Keele Brightly, the hard‑hearted General Sherman, and a grieving mother whose kindness once taught Zina to read and sing. As the first act unfolds, the drama balances the harsh realities of slavery with the fragile promise of redemption, inviting listeners to feel the tension between duty, compassion, and the courage required to choose a different path.

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Details

Full title

Zina: the Slave Girl; or, Which the Traitor? A Drama in Four Acts A Drama in Four Acts

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (128K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Richard Tonsing, hekula03, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by the Library of Congress)

Release date

2019-10-05

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

A. (Augustin) Thompson

A. (Augustin) Thompson

1835–1903

Best remembered as the inventor of Moxie, he was a Maine-born physician and entrepreneur whose career moved from medicine into one of America’s earliest branded soft drinks.

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