Track | Chapter | Length | |
01 | Preface | 3:11 | |
02 | CHAPTER I. | Squire Hawkins and His Tennessee Land—He Decides to Remove to Missouri | 20:54 |
03 | CHAPTER II. | He Meets With and Adopts the Boy Clay | 7:54 |
04 | CHAPTER III | Uncle Daniel's Apparition and PrayeR | 9:14 |
05 | CHAPTER IV | The Steamboat Explosion | 20:57 |
06 | CHAPTER V | Adoption of the Little Girl Laura—Arrival at Missouri—Reception by Colonel Beriah Sellers | 17:47 |
07 | CHAPTER VI | Trouble and Darkness in the Hawkins Family—Proposed Sale of the Tennessee Land | 22:08 |
08 | CHAPTER VII | Colonel Sellers at Home—His Wonderful Clock and Cure for Rheumatism | 15:13 |
09 | CHAPTER VIII | Colonel Sellers Makes Known His Magnificent Speculation Schemes and Astonishes Washington Hawkins | 18:31 |
10 | CHAPTER IX | Death of Judge Hawkins | 12:40 |
11 | CHAPTER X | Laura Hawkins Discovers a Mystery in Her Parentage and Grows Morbid Under the Village Gossip | 16:51 |
12 | CHAPTER XI | A Dinner with Col Sellers—Wonderful Effects of Raw Turnips | 12:00 |
13 | CHAPTER XII | Philip Sterling and Henry Brierly—Arrangements to Go West as Engineers | 15:56 |
14 | CHAPTER XIII | Rail—Road Contractors and Party Traveling—Philip and Harry form the Acquaintance of Col Sellers | 17:34 |
15 | CHAPTER XIV | Ruth Bolton and Her Parents | 12:32 |
16 | CHAPTER XV | Visitors of the Boltons—Mr Bigler "Sees the Legislature"—Ruth Bolton Commences Medical Studies | 17:39 |
17 | CHAPTER XVI | The Engineers Detained at St Louis—Off for Camp—Reception by Jeff | 17:12 |
18 | CHAPTER XVII | The Engineer Corps Arrive at Stone's Landing | 14:19 |
19 | CHAPTER XVIII | Laura and Her Marriage to Colonel Selby—Deserted and Returns to Hawkeye | 16:39 |
20 | CHAPTER XIX | Harry Brierly Infatuated With Laura and Proposes She Visit Washington | 16:41 |
21 | CHAPTER XX | Senator Abner Dilwortliy Visits Hawkeye—Addresses the People and Makes the Acquaintance of Laura 186 | 14:32 |
22 | CHAPTER XXI | Ruth Bolton at Fallkill Seminary—The Montagues—Ruth Becomes Quite Gay—Alice Montague | 14:39 |
23 | CHAPTER XXII | Philip and Harry Visit Fallkill—Harry Does the Agreeable to Ruth | 17:55 |
24 | CHAPTER XXIII | Harry at Washington Lobbying For An Appropriation For Stone's Landing —Philip in New York Studying Engineering | 5:53 |
25 | CHAPTER XXIV | Washington and Its Sights—The Appropriation Bill Reported From the Committee and Passed | 18:11 |
26 | CHAPTER XXV | Energetic Movements at Stone's Landing—Everything Booming—A Grand Smash Up | 11:15 |
27 | CHAPTER XXVI | The Boltons—Ruth at Home—Visitors and Speculations | 16:38 |
28 | CHAPTER XXVII | Col Sellers Comforts His Wife With His Views on the Prospects | 11:22 |
29 | CHAPTER XXVIII | Visit to Headquarters in Wall Street—How Appropriations Are Obtained and Their Cost | 21:22 |
30 | CHAPTER XXIX | Philip's Experience With the Rail—Road Conductor—Surveys His Mining Property | 16:16 |
31 | CHAPTER XXX | Laura and Col Sellers Go To Washington On Invitation of Senator Dilworthy | 6:28 |
32 | CHAPTER XXXI | Philip and Harry at the Boltons'—Philip Seriously Injured—Ruth's First Case of Surgery | 18:04 |
33 | CHAPTER XXXII | Laura Becomes a Famous Belle at Washington | 12:13 |
34 | CHAPTER XXXIII | Society in Washington—The Antiques, the Parvenus, and the Middle Aristocracy | 35:16 |
35 | CHAPTER XXXIV | Grand Scheme For Disposing of the Tennessee Land—Laura and Washington Hawkins Enjoying the Reputation of Being Millionaires | 10:47 |
36 | CHAPTER XXXV | About Senators—Their Privileges and Habits | 13:10 |
37 | CHAPTER XXXVI | An Hour in a Book Store | 10:37 |
38 | CHAPTER XXXVII | Representative Buckstone and Laura's Strategic Coquetry | 7:44 |
39 | CHAPTER XXXVIII | Reception Day in Washington—Laura Again Meets Col. Selby and the Effect Upon Her | 14:13 |
40 | CHAPTER XXXIX | Col. Selby Visits Laura and Effects a Reconciliation | 10:04 |
41 | CHAPTER XL | Col. Sellers' Career in Washington—Laura's Intimacy With Col. Selby is Talked About | 12:54 |
42 | CHAPTER XLI | Harry Brierly Becomes Entirely Infatuated With Laura—Declares His Love and Gets Laughed At | 15:56 |
43 | CHAPTER XLII | How The Hon Mr Trollop Was Induced to Vote For Laura's Bill | 30:12 |
44 | CHAPTER XLIII | Progress of the Bill in the House | 10:39 |
45 | CHAPTER XLIV | Philip in Washington—Visits Laura | 14:08 |
46 | CHAPTER XLV | The Passage of the Bill in the House of Representatives | 21:32 |
47 | CHAPTER XLVI | Disappearance of Laura, and Murder of Col. Selby in New York | 17:19 |
48 | CHAPTER XLVII | Laura in the Tombs and Her Visitors | 14:16 |
49 | CHAPTER XLVIII | Mr Bolton Says Yes Again—Philip Returns to the Mines | 14:06 |
50 | CHAPTER XLIX | The Coal Vein Found and Lost Again—Philip and the Boltons—Elated and Then Cruelly Disappointed 443 | 15:12 |
51 | CHAPTER L | Philip Visits Fallkill and Proposes Studying Law With Mr Montague—The Squire Invests in the Mine—Ruth Declares Her Love for Philip | 17:30 |
52 | CHAPTER LI | Col Sellers Enlightens Washington Hawkins on the Customs of Congress | 14:06 |
53 | CHAPTER LII | How Senator Dilworthy Advanced Washington's Interests | 4:11 |
54 | CHAPTER LIII | Senator Dilworthy Goes West to See About His Re—election—He Becomes a Shining Light | 14:53 |
55 | CHAPTER LIV | The Trial of Laura for Murder | 15:56 |
56 | CHAPTER LV | The Trial Continued—Evidence of Harry Brierly | 19:16 |
57 | CHAPTER LVI | The Trial Continued—Col Sellers on the Stand and Takes Advantage of the Situation | 18:34 |
58 | CHAPTER LVII | The Momentous Day—Startling News—Dilworthy Denounced as a Briber and Defeated—The Bill Lost in the Senate | 12:56 |
59 | CHAPTER LVIII | Verdict, Not Guilty !—Laura Free and Receives Propositions to Lecture—Philip back at the Mines | 15:24 |
60 | CHAPTER LIX | The Investigation of the Dilworthy Bribery Case and Its Results | 22:40 |
61 | CHAPTER LX | Laura Decides on her Course—Attempts to Lecture and Fails—Found Dead in her Chair | 15:42 |
62 | CHAPTER LXI | Col Sellers and Washington Hawkins Review the Situation and Leave Washington | 12:56 |
63 | CHAPTER LXII | Philip Discouraged—One More Effort—Finds Coal at Last | 10:51 |
64 | CHAPTER LXIII | Philip Leaves Ilium to see Ruth—Ruth Convalescent—Alice | 14:04 |
Notes
Running Time: 16 hours and 8 minutes
Read by: John Greenman
Book Coordinator: John Greenman
Meta Coordinator: Neeru Iyer
Proof Listener: Ann Sterling
Artwork
Cover: Photo of The Breakers, the summer home of Cornelius Vanderbilt II in Newport, Rhode Island, by Mark Wade August 2009.
DVD Inset: Portrait of Mark Twain (1907) taken by A. F. Bradley.
DVD insert background: Illustration for The Gilded Age first edition cover.
Recordings
These recordings were made using the author’s original published work, which is in the public domain. The readings were recorded by members and volunteers of Librivox.org, which has generously made the recordings available to the public domain. The audio files have been lightly edited and have been engineered using professional audio tools for maximum sonic quality. While Librivox condones the sale and distribution of these recordings, it is not associated with the management or operations of MP3 Audiobook Classics.
One gilds things to make them look better than they really are. Mark Twain, the same writer who turned a skeptical eye to the ostensible advancements made with the post-Civil War urbanization of America, had first focused on those pretensions attendant to the striving for and accumulation of wealth by the very few for the very few. Those in power, the wealthy few, the turn of that century’s 2%, the self-proclaimed elite, sought to title their time as being an American Golden Age, an age when the right people enjoyed the bounty of a Calvinist god, who, as far as they were concerned, finally got it right. Mark Twain saw through the pretense and laughed, and his target is equally those who’ve arrived, as well as those who want to arrive, the ones who feel the need to mimic the greats, all the while mistaking arrogance for class. Written with Charles Duncan Warren, Twain’s Hartford neighbor and friend, The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today (1873) is Twain’s only collaborative work. Its title soon became synonymous with greed, graft, materialism, and corruption in public life. The benefit for us is that Twain, a master, used satire and humor to pull back the outer pretense and falsehoods, the gilded superficial surface, to lay bare the sad remnant underneath the shiny surface – human beings, flawed, greedy, fearful, and ultimately comical, though without any intention to be thought of as such. (Summary by Michael Hogan)
Play sample:
Download a PDF datasheet
Item Info | |
EAN - DVD case | 0684758936288 |
EAN - CD jacket | 0687700169741 |
Media | MP3 CD |
Package | DVD box |
Author | Mark Twain & Charles Dudley Warner |
Recording | |
Read by | John Greenman |
Length | 16 hours 8 minutes |
Type of Reading | Solo |
The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today
- Author: Mark Twain
- Product Code: DB-1068
- Availability: In Stock
-
$11.99