Cherry and Violet
Anne Manning
Lu par LibriVox Volunteers





A Tale of the Great Plague. 1666 was a difficult year in London. With its sordid materialism and its coarse handling of things most sacred, not merely does Manning see, as an Englishwoman, the grandeur of its struggles, but she sees its best embodiment in the tragedy of an almost perfect life. In her description of the plague (much detail taken from the diarist, Pepys), followed by The Great Fire, Manning is taken out of her comfort zone to the sordid realities. Her answer is to take Mistress Cherry to a country house in Berkshire, where peace and tranquility are to be found. - Summary by Lynne Thompson (4 hr 19 min)
Chapitres
The Reminiscences of Mistress Cherry.—The Fire, & Double Tide.—Mal-conversation | 15:35 | Lu par MichelleLeeVO |
Cherry endeavours to remember if she were pretty.—A Water-party | 17:55 | Lu par Rita Boutros |
Result of the Water-party | 17:53 | Lu par Rita Boutros |
Chelsea Buns | 18:14 | Lu par Rita Boutros |
A Shadow on the House | 17:01 | Lu par Rita Boutros |
Metanoia | 17:03 | Lu par Rita Boutros |
Signs in the Air | 20:00 | Lu par Rita Boutros |
The Plague | 10:32 | Lu par mleigh |
Foreshadows | 14:39 | Lu par Ritu Aarcee |
A Friend in Need | 29:12 | Lu par Ricki |
Distinction between would & should | 5:55 | Lu par Ritu Aarcee |
Camping out in Epping Forest | 16:46 | Lu par Rita Boutros |
Ghosts | 14:20 | Lu par Rita Boutros |
Riding a Pillion | 13:46 | Lu par Rita Boutros |
The Squire’s Garden | 16:39 | Lu par Ritu Aarcee |
The Burning City | 14:18 | Lu par Ritu Aarcee |
Critiques
life in London during e plague tnd great fire.





elm
curiously banal description of