A Fool There Was

audiobook

A Fool There Was

by Porter Emerson Browne

EN·~4 hours·36 chapters

Chapters

36 total
1

CHAPTER TWO. - OF CERTAIN OTHER PEOPLE.

7:37
2

CHAPTER THREE. - TWO BOYS AND A GIRL.

6:34
3

CHAPTER FOUR. - THE CHILD AND THE STRANGER.

4:14
4

CHAPTER FIVE. - AS TIME PASSES.

5:12
5

CHAPTER SIX. - AN ACCIDENT.

7:53
6

CHAPTER SEVEN. - AN INCIDENT.

5:29
7

CHAPTER EIGHT. - OF CERTAIN GOINGS.

4:23
8

CHAPTER NINE. - OF CERTAIN OTHER GOINGS.

2:32
9

CHAPTER TEN. - TWO BOYS AND A DOCTOR.

2:06
10

CHAPTER ELEVEN. - A PROPOSAL.

6:21

Description

In the bustling heart of early twentieth‑century New York, a trio of grand brownstone mansions watches the endless parade of society’s fashions, carriages and theater crowds. Across a quiet brick row house, the world feels a little more intimate, its warm glow spilling onto the sidewalk. Within these neighboring homes live two respectable families—the Schuylers, heirs to a proud Dutch‑English lineage, and the Blakes—each bound by duty, propriety, and the quiet expectations of their class.

John Stuyvesant Schuyler embodies the weight of his ancestors: tall, solemn, and meticulously upright, he moves through life with a humor that flickers only at the corners of his mouth. His wife, equally restrained, still carries the lingering beauty of her youth, while their son watches the world from a privileged perch. Yet a strange, darkly beautiful woman haunts the periphery, her presence whispered in verses that speak of foolish devotion and unanswered prayers, hinting at desires and secrets that could unsettle the careful order of their lives.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (231K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-08-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

PE

Porter Emerson Browne

1879–1934

A prolific early-20th-century American playwright, he wrote popular stage works that often found a second life on screen. Best known for plays like A Fool There Was and The Bad Man, he helped shape the lively bridge between Broadway drama and silent-era film.

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