Audiobook: Mosses From An Old Manse
- Download The Old Manse - Part 1 audio
- Download The Old Manse - Part 2 audio
- Download The Old Manse - Part 3 audio
- Download The Birthmark audio
- Download A Select Party audio
- Download Young Goodman Brown audio
- Download Rappaccini's Daughter: Part 1 audio
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- Download Mrs. Bullfrog audio
- Download The Celestial Railroad audio
- Download The Procession Of Life audio
- Download Feathertop: A Moralized Legend audio
- Download Egotism; Or, The Bosom Serpent audio
- Download Drowne's Wooden Image audio
- Download Roger Malvin's Burial audio
- Download The Artist Of The Beautiful: Part 1 audio
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- Download Fire-Worship audio
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- Download Monsieur du Miroir audio
- Download The Hall of Fantasy audio
- Download The New Adam and Eve audio
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- Download The Intelligence Office audio
- Download P.'s Correspondence audio
- Download Earth's Holocaust audio
- Download Passages from a Relinquished Work audio
- Download Sketches From Memory audio
- Download The Old Apple-Dealer audio
- Download A Virtuoso's Collection audio
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"Mosses from an Old Manse" is a short story collection by Nathaniel Hawthorne, first published in 1846. The collection includes several previously-published short stories and is named in honor of The Old Manse where Hawthorne and his wife lived for the first three years of their marriage. A second edition was published in 1854, which added "Feathertop," "Passages from a Relinquished Work, and "Sketches from Memory."
Many of the tales collected in "Mosses from an Old Manse" are allegories and, typical of Hawthorne, focus on the negative side of human nature. Hawthorne's friend Herman Melville noted this aspect in his review "Hawthorne and His Mosses": "This black conceit pervades him through and through. You may be witched by his sunlight, transported by the bright gildings in the skies he builds over you; but there is the blackness of darkness beyond; and even his bright gildings but fringe and play upon the edges of thunder-clouds." William Henry Channing reviewed the collection in The Harbinger and noted that its author "had been baptized in the deep waters of Tragedy" and his work was dark with only brief moments of "serene brightness" which was never brighter than "dusky twilight". (Summary by Wikipedia)
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