
In a bustling little town where the Queen’s birthday is marked by rhymes and lacrosse matches, the story opens on a day of cheap excursions, social posturing, and the subtle clash of class. Elgin’s residents— from the impeccably clean‑faced elites to the “hand” laborers who dare not lower their dignity for a half‑dollar ride—navigate a world of polite conventions, rival orders, and the ever‑present hum of the Grand Trunk railway. The atmosphere crackles with the quirks of a community that prides itself on ceremony even as it wrestles with the absurdities of its own hierarchies.
At the heart of this tableau is the Murchison household, where mother and children negotiate daily life with humor and stubborn pride. Advena, the sharp‑eyed teenage daughter, watches the world through a kitchen window while washing dishes in iridescent soap, and her sister Lorne dreams of a name that will honor the Governor‑General. Their mother’s fierce attachment to a rag‑carpet‑lined bedroom becomes a comic flashpoint, revealing the tender, if sometimes petty, bonds that hold the family together. This slice of life invites listeners to linger over the small dramas that define a town’s identity.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (589K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Gardner Buchanan, and David Widger
Release date
2004-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

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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