Disc 2
 |
 |
1 |
There can be no excuse for this outrage… |
06:46 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
2 |
Where they moored their boat the trees showered down… |
06:52 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
3 |
Coming down the steps a little sideways… |
06:39 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
4 |
But language is wine upon his lips. |
06:44 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
5 |
The laughter died in the air. |
05:54 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
6 |
Chapter 4 |
06:42 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
7 |
It is a tremendous argument. |
06:31 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
8 |
Although it would be possible to knock at the cottage door… |
07:28 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
9 |
Mrs. Durrant took the reins in her hands… |
05:58 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
10 |
But Miss Eliot, tall, grey-headed… |
07:04 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
11 |
'Thank you, Timothy, but I'm coming in,' said Miss Eliot. |
07:05 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
Disc 3
 |
 |
1 |
Chapter 5 |
06:17 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
2 |
Nothing could appear more certain from the steps of St. Paul's… |
06:30 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
3 |
Then two thousand hearts in the semi-darkness remembered… |
06:21 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
4 |
'I like Jacob Flanders,' wrote Clara Durrant in her diary. |
06:40 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
5 |
Chapter 6 |
07:04 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
6 |
At this moment there shook out into the air… |
07:26 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
7 |
They sat at a little table in the restaurant. |
06:56 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
8 |
Chapter 7 |
07:47 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
9 |
'Julia Eliot. It is Julia Eliot!' said old Lady Hibbert… |
06:59 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
Disc 4
 |
 |
1 |
Chapter 8 |
06:50 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
2 |
Let us consider letters… |
05:43 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
3 |
It was as if a stone were ground to dust… |
05:48 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
4 |
The lamps of London uphold the dark… |
05:47 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
5 |
Chapter 9 |
07:15 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
6 |
'Any day this week except Thursday,' wrote Miss Perry… |
07:46 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
7 |
Jacob remained quite unmoved. |
06:15 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
8 |
There is in the British Museum an enormous mind. |
07:08 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
9 |
'Oh, my dear, let me lean on you,' gasped Helen Askew… |
06:53 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
Disc 5
 |
 |
1 |
Chapter 10 |
06:17 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
2 |
Fanny Elmer took down her cloak from the hook. |
06:31 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
3 |
'Dear, miss, she's left her umbrella,' grumbled the mottled woman… |
07:02 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
4 |
At ten o'clock in the morning… |
05:31 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
5 |
Chapter 11 |
07:32 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
6 |
'Have you met all the painter men?' said Jinny. |
07:18 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
7 |
'Jacob's letters are so like him,' said Mrs. Jarvis, folding the sheet. |
07:51 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
8 |
Chapter 12 |
06:32 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
9 |
No doubt we should be, on the whole, much worse off than we are… |
06:21 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
10 |
There are very few good books after all… |
06:42 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
11 |
She laid her spoon upon her plate… |
06:29 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
Disc 6
 |
 |
1 |
Still, a lady of fashion travels with more than one dress… |
07:23 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
2 |
The extreme definiteness with which they stand… |
07:49 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
3 |
Then, making sure that the Frenchwomen had gone… |
07:59 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
4 |
'But sometimes it is precisely a woman like Clara… |
07:56 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
5 |
'Evan is happier alone,' said Sandra. |
07:31 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
6 |
Sandra Wentworth Williams certainly woke… |
07:22 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
7 |
Chapter 13 |
07:13 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
8 |
They had reached the site of the old Exhibition. |
07:52 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
9 |
Even now poor Fanny Elmer was dealing… |
06:40 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
10 |
Timmy Durrant in his little room in the Admiralty… |
07:15 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
 |
 |
11 |
Chapter 14 |
02:21 |
Stevenson, Juliet (Reader)
Total Playing Time: 06:51:21