
A richly detailed scene opens in a lavish drawing‑room where a flamboyant actress, Miss Howe, confronts the modest Laura Filbert. Their exchange crackles with theatrical flair and subtle rivalry, as Miss Howe’s extravagant gowns and worldly confidence clash with Laura’s quiet humility and earnest faith. The dialogue weaves together humor, religious allusion, and a hint of cultural tension, hinting at the broader social currents of empire, class, and identity that will shape their intertwined lives.
Through witty repartee and vivid description of exotic décor, the novel sketches a world where performance extends beyond the stage into everyday interactions. As the two women navigate expectations of gender, status, and spirituality, the story promises a keen exploration of personal ambition versus moral duty, set against the backdrop of a society poised between tradition and the allure of a rapidly changing world. Listeners will be drawn into the elegant yet probing portrait of late‑Victorian life, where every gesture carries the weight of hidden motives.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (484K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Don Lainson; David Widger
Release date
2006-06-06
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1861–1922
A sharp-eyed journalist turned novelist, she wrote witty, socially observant fiction that moved between Canada, Britain, and India. Her work is still remembered for its humor, independence, and close attention to the worlds women were expected to navigate.
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