Agnes Grey
Anne Brontë
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
The novel tells the story of Agnes Grey, the daughter of a minister, whose family comes to financial ruin. Desperate to earn the money to care for herself, she takes one of the few jobs allowed to respectable women in the early Victorian era – the role of governess to the children of the wealthy. In working with two different families (the Bloomfields and the Murrays), she comes to learn about the troubles that face a young woman who must try to rein in unruly, spoiled children for a living, and about the ability of wealth and status to destroy social values. After her father's death, Agnes opens a small school with her mother and finds happiness with a man who loves her for herself. They have three children at the end of the novel, Edward, Agnes and Mary (Wikipedia) (6 hr 41 min)
Chapters
Chapter 01 - The Parsonage | 24:00 | Read by Melissa |
Chapter 02 - A Few Lessons in the Art of Instruction | 15:00 | Read by Melissa |
Chapter 03 - A Few More Lessons | 23:20 | Read by Melissa |
Chapter 04 - The Grandmamma | 18:55 | Read by Melissa |
Chapter 05 - The Uncle | 13:58 | Read by Melissa |
Chapter 06 - The Parsonage Again | 12:38 | Read by Melissa |
Chapter 07 - Horton Lodge | 32:55 | Read by Melissa |
Chapter 08 - The 'Coming Out' | 5:22 | Read by Melissa |
Chapter 09 - The Ball | 8:56 | Read by Melissa |
Chapter 10 - The Church | 11:08 | Read by Melissa |
Chapter 11 - The Cottagers | 26:59 | Read by hpark |
Chapter 12 - The Shower | 6:54 | Read by Christine Blachford |
Chapter 13 - The Primroses | 12:23 | Read by Christine Blachford |
Chapter 14 - The Rector | 22:48 | Read by Christine Blachford |
Chapter 15 - The Walk | 19:12 | Read by Lucy Burgoyne (1950 - 2014) |
Chapter 16 - The Substitution | 10:23 | Read by Lucy Burgoyne (1950 - 2014) |
Chapter 17 - Confessions | 22:25 | Read by Neeru Iyer |
Chapter 18 - Mirth and Mourning | 19:16 | Read by Collee McKinnon |
Chapter 19 - The Letter | 7:01 | Read by Neeru Iyer |
Chapter 20 - The Farewell | 15:26 | Read by Lucy Burgoyne (1950 - 2014) |
Chapter 21 - The School | 17:12 | Read by Lucy Burgoyne (1950 - 2014) |
Chapter 22 - The Visit | 16:35 | Read by Neeru Iyer |
Chapter 23 - The Park | 9:46 | Read by Gesine |
Chapter 24 - The Sands | 13:24 | Read by Neeru Iyer |
Chapter 25 - Conclusion | 15:19 | Read by Lucy Burgoyne (1950 - 2014) |
Reviews
The Governess
katknit
Less dramatic than her own Tenant of Wildfell Hall, and less read than her more famous sisters' works, Agnes Grey is a straightforward, semi-fictional chronicle of the experiences of a governess in 19th century England. Agnes is the younger daughter of a mother whose wealthy family disowned her for loving marrying an impoverished clergyman. To help ameliorate her family's dire financial condition , Agnes chooses to seek a situation as companion and teacher to the children of wealthier people. Though she understands well how to raise responsible children, their selfish parents undermine her attempts by neglecting yet overindulging them. Treated as underling by her employers, ignored by their servants, and plague by her students, poor Agnes must struggle alone under impossible working conditions, determined to help her own family regardless of the cost to herself. Her story comes to a happy conclusion, but Bronte was not interested in writing about "felicitous" times. Her intention with this book, to reveal some of the injustices of the class system, is achieved by example rather than preaching. Reminiscent of some of Jane Austen's stories, particularly Persuasion, Agnes Grey is a gracefully narrated, unpretentious story told with impressive effect.
The Better Bronte?
Clearspace
Beautifully woven ideas through characters. How people are the same today as all those years ago. Astonishing to be able to identify exactly those personalities in the 21st century. Great novel.
Sweet Story
AlisonLangerman
I really enjoyed this. Beautifully written. Most of the readers were easy to listen to and clear. Overall worth the few hours for sure.
Veronica Yowell
A good book but the various readers made it hard for me to follow and stay interested.
ktura
whoever read chapter 13. made me dizzy. she didn't even pause for a breath
Emelyn
Good plot, a bit dull at times. Main character was nice and relatable.
ok story
Gina
I found having several different readers quite distracting and probably will steer clear of books read by “various” in the future. The story was fine. I enjoyed it but have certainly read much better as well.
terrible readers
A LibriVox Listener
The first few chapters were quite adequately read, but I couldn’t endure past the 10th chapter. I strongly suggest one find a different recording.