
audiobook
by D. K. (Dorothy Kathleen) Broster, G. Winifred (Gertrude Winifred) Taylor
In the sun‑drenched garden of a Berkshire parish, twenty‑four‑year‑old Horatia Grenville sits among sunflowers and hollyhocks, a copy of Plato on her lap. A learned daughter of the local rector, she reads Greek with ease, shuns the conventional pastimes of embroidery and harp, and carries an air of quiet independence that sets her apart from the village’s expectations of feminine beauty. The idyllic setting masks a deeper tension: the world around her assumes marriage is the inevitable next chapter, yet Horatia feels no longing for domestic routine.
When old acquaintances and respectable suitors appear—most notably Tristram Hungerford, a childhood friend turned would‑be fiancé—Horatia’s resolve is tested. She cherishes the friendship that has always been carefree, fearing that a sudden proposal would turn that bond into something irrevocably formal. Still, she wrestles with a subtle yearning for a life that feels truly complete, one that might reconcile her intellectual passions with the possibilities the future could hold.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (749K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2014-03-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1877–1950
Best known for bringing Jacobite history to life in vivid, romantic adventures, this English novelist wrote popular historical fiction with a strong sense of atmosphere and drama. Her best-known book, The Flight of the Heron, began a widely read trilogy.
View all booksb. 1882
Best known as the co-author of vivid historical adventures with D. K. Broster, this early 20th-century writer helped bring the drama of the French Revolution and the Vendée to life for generations of readers.
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