EPISODE · Jun 28, 2026 · 17 MIN
North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell chapter 26 | Audiobook
from The Essential Reads · host Isaac Birchall
North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell chapter 26 "Mother and Son", 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:Mr. Thornton leaves the house dizzy, almost as if Margaret had punched him. He has a headache and bodily pain. In spite of what Margaret said to him, he resolves himself to go on and continue loving her. A bus passes by and stops, believing that he hailed it, and he decides to get on it and is taken away into countryside and to a small town. He wanders around into the fields and thinks through every detail of the proposal. He believes that he was bewitched by her when she put her arms around him. He doesn’t understand Margaret. It was late in the afternoon when he got back to Milton, and he had so much work to do following the riots, and encounter his mother…Mrs. Thornton has been in the dining room all day, constantly expecting her son to run in and declare that Margaret accepted his proposal, but each time the door opened, it was always a maid, or a worker. She tries to distract herself by going through the linins so that she can give them to the betrothed for their new house and picks out some delicate pieces. She is jealous of Margaret and doesn’t know how to feel, and she feels a pang of pain at the loss of her son. Mrs. Thornton thinks that if Margaret came from Milton, without her southern prejudice, then she would probably like her. She tries to distract herself further with a book and soon hears her son foot on the step. He comes in and stands near his mother while she finished her paragraph. He tries to steel himself against her “Well, John?” but when he leans in to kiss her and say that “no one loves me” his emotions take control of him. She tells him that a mother’s love is forever, but a girls love changes with every wind. Mr. Thornton tells her that he is not fit for Margaret, and that he knew it. His mother curses the girl, but feels lighter, knowing that her son is hers again. He replies that he doesn’t want to hear a word against Margaret and he really loves her. Mrs. Thornton say that she hates the girl. Mr. Thornton rallies himself a little and distracts himself and his mother by talking of the work to come following the riot of the previous day. 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.
What this episode covers
North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell chapter 26 "Mother and Son", 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:Mr. Thornton leaves the house dizzy, almost as if Margaret had punched him. He has a headache and bodily pain. In spite of what Margaret said to him, he resolves himself to go on and continue loving her. A bus passes by and stops, believing that he hailed it, and he decides to get on it and is taken away into countryside and to a small town. He wanders around into the fields and thinks through every detail of the proposal. He believes that he was bewitched by her when she put her arms around him. He doesn’t understand Margaret. It was late in the afternoon when he got back to Milton, and he had so much work to do following the riots, and encounter his mother…Mrs. Thornton has been in the dining room all day, constantly expecting her son to run in and declare that Margaret accepted his proposal, but each time the door opened, it was always a maid, or a worker. She tries to distract herself by going through the linins so that she can give them to the betrothed for their new house and picks out some delicate pieces. She is jealous of Margaret and doesn’t know how to feel, and she feels a pang of pain at the loss of her son. Mrs. Thornton thinks that if Margaret came from Milton, without her southern prejudice, then she would probably like her. She tries to distract herself further with a book and soon hears her son foot on the step. He comes in and stands near his mother while she finished her paragraph. He tries to steel himself against her “Well, John?” but when he leans in to kiss her and say that “no one loves me” his emotions take control of him. She tells him that a mother’s love is forever, but a girls love changes with every wind. Mr. Thornton tells her that he is not fit for Margaret, and that he knew it. His mother curses the girl, but feels lighter, knowing that her son is hers again. He replies that he doesn’t want to hear a word against Margaret and he really loves her. Mrs. Thornton say that she hates the girl. Mr. Thornton rallies himself a little and distracts himself and his mother by talking of the work to come following the riot of the previous day. 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 26 | Audiobook
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