North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell chapter 25 | Audiobook episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 24, 2026 · 31 MIN

North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell chapter 25 | Audiobook

from The Essential Reads · host Isaac Birchall

North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell chapter 25 "Frederick", narrated by Isaac BirchallSubscribe on YT or Join the Book Club on Patreon and support me as an independent creator :D⁠https://ko-fi.com/theessentialreads⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfOFfvo05ElM96CmfsGsu3g/join⁠Summary:Margaret reflects on her relationship with Mr. Henry Lennox and is at least relieved that he seemed only to have a lapse of judgement. With Mr. Thornton, they never had a stage of friendship. She truly cannot understand his feelings and feels even stranger about his statement of continuing his love for her in spite of her refusal. She tries to hide from the idea, but she cannot get it out of her mind. She stays in the room where he left her for a while. All is quiet in the house. Margaret refuses to be alone and decides that she should go to see Bessy Higgins. Bessy is lying by the fireplace, and Margaret sits the girl up so she can be more at ease. She is much worse, and Margaret excuses herself for not coming the previous day, almost letting slip that she was at the Thornton residence. Margaret goes to read her a chapter of the bible, but Bessy is restless and the bursts out with some talk about the riots. It seems that her father wasn’t at the riots, and that the union told everyone that no matter what happens, they should not resort to violence, it would make everyone’s problems much worse and works against the strikers. Mr. Higgins went to Boucher’s the night before, as he was an instigator of the violence, and told him that he would be turned over to the police and the mill owners for his actions. Margaret corrects Bessy and tells her that Boucher was not the first person to react, letting slip that she was at the Mill. Boucher apparently punched her father and ran away, causing Bessy to throw herself at her father’s feet and beg him not to go. After Bessy gets this information off of her chest, she is a lot calmer and receptive to hearing a chapter of the bible. At home, Margaret finds her mother awake and full of praise for the waterbed. She says that it is the best bed she has slept on since she was staying at the Beresford residence. She wonders how it is that people have forgotten how to make comfortable beds. She asks Margaret if she remembers them, to which her daughter replies that she never was at the Beresford residence. He mother remembers that it must have been Frederick and she goes on to talk about her exiled son, causing Mr. Hale to leave the room. Margaret then asks her mother more about her brother, and Mrs. Hale starts to cry and begs Margaret to write to him, feeling deep down, that if she were to see her son, then she would be healed of her malady. Margaret writes to him that day, and takes the letter to the post office herself. SEO stuff I don't want to do. Elizabeth Gaskell's classic, "North and South" sees Margaret Hale's live uprooted as her family moves to the north of England. Initially disgusted by the ugliness of the industrial town of Milton, Margaret develops a strong sense of social justice after seeing the poverty and suffering of local mill workers.

North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell chapter 25 "Frederick", narrated by Isaac BirchallSubscribe on YT or Join the Book Club on Patreon and support me as an independent creator :D⁠https://ko-fi.com/theessentialreads⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfOFfvo05ElM96CmfsGsu3g/join⁠Summary:Margaret reflects on her relationship with Mr. Henry Lennox and is at least relieved that he seemed only to have a lapse of judgement. With Mr. Thornton, they never had a stage of friendship. She truly cannot understand his feelings and feels even stranger about his statement of continuing his love for her in spite of her refusal. She tries to hide from the idea, but she cannot get it out of her mind. She stays in the room where he left her for a while. All is quiet in the house. Margaret refuses to be alone and decides that she should go to see Bessy Higgins. Bessy is lying by the fireplace, and Margaret sits the girl up so she can be more at ease. She is much worse, and Margaret excuses herself for not coming the previous day, almost letting slip that she was at the Thornton residence. Margaret goes to read her a chapter of the bible, but Bessy is restless and the bursts out with some talk about the riots. It seems that her father wasn’t at the riots, and that the union told everyone that no matter what happens, they should not resort to violence, it would make everyone’s problems much worse and works against the strikers. Mr. Higgins went to Boucher’s the night before, as he was an instigator of the violence, and told him that he would be turned over to the police and the mill owners for his actions. Margaret corrects Bessy and tells her that Boucher was not the first person to react, letting slip that she was at the Mill. Boucher apparently punched her father and ran away, causing Bessy to throw herself at her father’s feet and beg him not to go. After Bessy gets this information off of her chest, she is a lot calmer and receptive to hearing a chapter of the bible. At home, Margaret finds her mother awake and full of praise for the waterbed. She says that it is the best bed she has slept on since she was staying at the Beresford residence. She wonders how it is that people have forgotten how to make comfortable beds. She asks Margaret if she remembers them, to which her daughter replies that she never was at the Beresford residence. He mother remembers that it must have been Frederick and she goes on to talk about her exiled son, causing Mr. Hale to leave the room. Margaret then asks her mother more about her brother, and Mrs. Hale starts to cry and begs Margaret to write to him, feeling deep down, that if she were to see her son, then she would be healed of her malady. Margaret writes to him that day, and takes the letter to the post office herself. SEO stuff I don't want to do. Elizabeth Gaskell's classic, "North and South" sees Margaret Hale's live uprooted as her family moves to the north of England. Initially disgusted by the ugliness of the industrial town of Milton, Margaret develops a strong sense of social justice after seeing the poverty and suffering of local mill workers.

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North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell chapter 25 | Audiobook

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North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell chapter 25 "Frederick", narrated by Isaac BirchallSubscribe on YT or Join the Book Club on Patreon and support me as an independent creator...

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