
In a quiet English village the story unfolds around the Mellstock Quire, a modest band of fiddlers, singers, and local musicians who travel on foot each Sunday to keep the parish’s worship alive. Their modest earnings—hand‑measured shillings and occasional supper—are barely enough for fiddle‑strings, rosin and paper, yet their devotion turns every service into a heartfelt communal performance. The narrative opens with vivid sketches of their rehearsals, the pedlar who supplies their supplies, and the gentle humor that stitches sacred and secular tunes together in a single, well‑worn music book.
Against this backdrop, the arrival of a new organist and the shifting expectations of the clergy hint at change, stirring both curiosity and unease among the villagers. Through lively scenes of Christmas celebrations, village dances, and quiet conversations in the churchyard, the listener is invited to experience the rhythms of rural life, the pride of a fading tradition, and the tender bonds that hold the community together.
Full title
Under the Greenwood Tree; Or, The Mellstock Quire A Rural Painting of the Dutch School
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (323K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
David Price, Margaret Rose Price and Dagny
Release date
2001-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1928
One of the great English novelists of the Victorian age, he brought the rural world of Dorset to life with unusual honesty and emotional force. His stories often balance beauty, chance, and heartbreak in ways that still feel strikingly modern.
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