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Fuel of Fire

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(3 Sterne; 2 Bewertungen)

"Then was there war in the house of Baxendale. Guy had made up his mind to wed the fair daughter of the forester; while Sir Stephen and Dame Alice his wife had made up their minds — with equal firmness — that no son of their noble name should mate with a daughter of the people". A rumor started that the girl was a witch and so she was burned. However before she was burned she cursed the family who condemned her:
"First by the King, and then by the State,
And thirdly by that which is thrice as great
As these, and a thousandfold stronger and higher
Shall Baxendale Hall be made fuel of fire".
Ever since, the Baxendales cannot be truly happy, for they cannot have true love. What is life without love? They do their duty, rule over the land, but cannot be happy. Can the curse be lifted? Can a Baxendale experience true love?
This book is a protest against the prominent view of marriage at the time. Against the values of ambition and duty, and of course against social class. It offers a new way to look at marriage, the modern way of true love. A year after publishing this novel, the author, a daughter of a viscount, would marry a senior teacher at a navy school. Not someone from her own class. However the marriage was described as very happy. - Summary from the book's prolog with additions by Stav Nisser. (9 hr 16 min)

Chapters

Prologue

21:16

Read by John

Chapter I. The Burtons

30:21

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter II. Baxendale Hall

24:24

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter III. Laurence Baxendale

23:28

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter IV. Mrs. Candy

25:24

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter V. Anthony's suggestion

23:22

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter VI. Rufus Webb

20:17

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter VII. A woman tempts

27:12

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter VIII. The course of true love

23:47

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter IX. Another woman tempts

23:00

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter X. Mrs. Candy's holiday

24:20

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XI. The burning of Baxendale

21:51

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XII. Suspicion

14:27

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XIII. The losing of the keys

27:20

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XIV. The finding of the keys

21:10

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XV. In the lanes

23:18

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XVI. Mrs. Candy's opinion

29:09

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XVII. Vain oblations

16:59

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XVIII. Wedding bells

35:43

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XIX. Winter days

11:30

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XX. To what purpose ?

22:18

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XXI. Lady Alicia

20:09

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XXII. The lanes again

17:47

Read by Jim Locke

Chapter XXIII. The professor's visit

27:52

Read by Jim Locke

Bewertungen

Nothing extraordinary, but nice

(4 Sterne)

Noble idiocy and pride can lead even to death, but, thank god, in this case the author spared her characters from this lot. Even if both are present in the novel (idiocy and pride I mean). I liked the ending as well, quite unexpected solution to the mystery.