The Essential Reads podcast

North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell chapter 13 | Audiobook

0:00
17:34
Reculer de 15 secondes
Avancer de 15 secondes

North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell chapter 13 "Soft Breeze In A Sultry Place", narrated by Isaac BirchallSubscribe on YT or Join the Book Club on Patreon and support me as an independent creator :D⁠https://ko-fi.com/theessentialreads⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfOFfvo05ElM96CmfsGsu3g/join⁠Summary:Margaret goes to the Higgins’ house to spend as much time and she can with Bessy. Mary, her sister, has tried to tidy the house but she hasn’t done a very good job of it. Bessy it not doing well and is laying on a short sofa in the living room. Bessy asks Margaret about her clothes and is stunned when Margaret says that she got them from London. Margaret then tells Bessy about Helstone, the first time she has talked about it since they came to Milton. She describes the birds, the farmers, and the trees and Bessy listens attentively. Bessy says that she used to believe that if she just had one day to relax in a place like Helstone, then she would have gotten better. She is afraid that she would even need time to rest before going to heaven. Bessy has an attack of Hysteria from her illness and nearly attacks Margaret but is soon out of breath and Margaret calms her down. Margaret says that she is not afraid of Bessy after what happened. Bessy says that she was well before her mother passed away, but after that, she was forced to work, and in a carding mill, her lungs got full of the fluff from cutting the cards. Bessy says that many people get sick from it, and that she isn’t the only one sick. She says too that there are sorts of fans that millers can buy to help get rid of the dust, but because it doesn’t bring a profit, they don’t get bought. She had to work to help send her sister to school, and her father had a habit of going to costly lectures and now she is sick… Bessy then asks if Margaret could become friends with her sister too. Margaret says that she can, but it would be difficult to get Mary a job in her own home to stop her from going to the Mills. At home and as time goes on, Mrs. Hale is getting sicker. Mr. Hale wishes to dismiss his wife’s illness, but he knows that she is sick. Margaret wishes to send for a doctor, but he doesn’t want to, believing that his wife would tell him if she needed one. He knows however that his wife is indeed ill and just doesn’t want to think about it potentially being his fault for bringing his family to Milton. SEO stuff I don't want to do. Elizabeth Gaskell's classic, "North and South" sees Margaret Hale's live uprooted as her family moves to the north of England. Initially disgusted by the ugliness of the industrial town of Milton, Margaret develops a strong sense of social justice after seeing the poverty and suffering of local mill workers.

D'autres épisodes de "The Essential Reads"