Ideala
Sarah Grand
Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers
She came among us without flourish of trumpets. She just slipped into her place, almost unnoticed, but once she was settled there it seemed as if we had got something we had wanted all our lives, and we should have missed her as you would miss the thrushes in the spring, or any other sweet familiar thing. But what the secret of her charm was I cannot say. She was full of inconsistencies. She disliked ostentation, and never wore those ornamental fidgets ladies delight in, but she would take a piece of priceless lace to cover her head when she went to water her flowers. And she said rings were a mistake; if your hands were ugly they drew attention to them, if pretty they hid their beauty; yet she wore half-a-dozen worthless ones habitually for the love of those who gave them, to her. It was said that she was striking in appearance, but cold and indifferent in manner. Some, on whom she had never turned her eyes, called her repellent. But it was noticed that men who took her down to dinner, or had any other opportunity of talking to her, were never very positive in, what they said of her afterwards. She made every one, men and women alike, feel, and she did it unconsciously. Without effort, without eccentricity, without anything you could name or define, she impressed you, and she held you —or at least she held me, always—expectant. Nothing about her ever seemed to be of the present. When she talked she made you wonder what her past had been, and when she was silent you began to speculate about her future. But she did not talk much as a rule, and when she did speak it was always some subject of interest, some fact that she wanted to ascertain accurately, or some beautiful idea, that occupied her; she had absolutely no small talk for any but her most intimate friends, whom she was wont at times to amuse with an endless stock of anecdotes and quaint observations; and this made people of limited capacity hard on her. Some of these called her a cold, ambitious, unsympathetic woman; and perhaps, from their point of view, she was so. She certainly aspired to something far above them, and had nothing but scorn for the dead level of dull mediocrity from which they would not try to rise".
This is a new woman novel by the author of the Heavenly Twins, describing the restrictions forced upon 19th century women in unhappy marriages. (Summary by Stav Nisser, with the opening paragraph of the book) (7 hr 11 min)
Kapitel
Dedication | 5:09 | Gelesen von Aimee van den Berg |
Chapter 1 | 21:14 | Gelesen von Kyle Stedman |
Chapter 2 | 15:31 | Gelesen von Colleen Benedicto |
Chapter 3 | 4:29 | Gelesen von WildShimmeringPath |
Chapter 4 | 16:19 | Gelesen von WildShimmeringPath |
Chapter 5 | 4:03 | Gelesen von WildShimmeringPath |
Chapter 6 | 5:20 | Gelesen von Taylor W |
Chapter 7 | 6:30 | Gelesen von Taylor W |
Chapter 8 | 4:47 | Gelesen von Taylor W |
Chapter 9 | 4:40 | Gelesen von Taylor W |
Chapter 10 | 3:04 | Gelesen von Colleen Benedicto |
Chapter 11 | 1:11:54 | Gelesen von VoiceOverMom |
Chapter 12 | 14:28 | Gelesen von VoiceOverMom |
Chapter 13 | 6:10 | Gelesen von Alysson Light |
Chapter 14 | 9:39 | Gelesen von Alysson Light |
Chapter 15 | 14:59 | Gelesen von Alysson Light |
Chapter 16 | 9:17 | Gelesen von Alysson Light |
Chapter 17 | 16:47 | Gelesen von Alysson Light |
Chapter 18 | 20:31 | Gelesen von Alysson Light |
Chapter 19 | 11:26 | Gelesen von Alysson Light |
Chapter 20 | 22:07 | Gelesen von Alysson Light |
Chapter 21 | 16:31 | Gelesen von Alysson Light |
Chapter 22 | 6:40 | Gelesen von Aimee van den Berg |
Chapter 23 | 5:01 | Gelesen von Aimee van den Berg |
Chapter 24 | 18:14 | Gelesen von Aimee van den Berg |
Chapter 25 | 19:54 | Gelesen von Aimee van den Berg |
Chapter 26 | 15:45 | Gelesen von WildShimmeringPath |
Chapter 27 | 20:56 | Gelesen von WildShimmeringPath |
Chapter 28 | 19:42 | Gelesen von WildShimmeringPath |
Chapter 29 | 14:46 | Gelesen von Adrienne Prevost |
Chapter 30 | 5:11 | Gelesen von Adrienne Prevost |