The Light Princess and Other Fairy Tales by George MacDonald

Summary: George MacDonald claimed that he did not write for children, but for the child-like. Some of his longer works are clearly intended for adults, and this fantastic fiction influenced later writers such as G.K. Chesterton, J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis. But you can find some of his best writing in the stories aimed squarely at children, and these are three of the finest.

The Light Princess. A wicked aunt curses her baby niece so that gravity has no effect on her, and she floats through the air as if it were water.The only way to break the curse is to make the princess cry.

The Giant’s Heart. Two children argue and run away to Giantland. There they find out that one of the Giants steals children from the land of men and eats them, but how can they kill the Giant when he has hidden his heart where no one can find it?

The Golden Key. A boy discovers a Golden Key, but cannot find the lock. He meets a girl, and together they search for the land from where the shadows fall, hoping that the key will allow them in.

(Summary by Clive Catterall for Librivox)

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Total running time:? 3 hours, 31 minutes

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1–The Light Princess, part 1

2–The Light Princess, part 2

3–The Light Princess, part 3

4–The Light Princess, part 4

5–The Giant’s Heart, part 1

6–The Giant’s Heart, part 2

7–The Golden Key

8–The Golden Key


To Have and to Hold by Mary Johnston

Summary: To Have and to Hold is historical fiction, portraying the lives of the first settlers at Jamestown, and it is one of my favorite books.? I’m so thrilled it is now available so we can offer it to you on My Audio School!

Full of exciting twists and turns, the language is so well-rendered that it is truly a pleasure to read. There were many times I found myself repeating certain phrases which seemed almost musical to my ear.

More than that, however, the book gives us heroes and heroines, as well as villains, to consider. To Have and to Hold, as its title would suggest, portrays a beautiful picture of the sanctity of marriage and of the nobility of a wife who embraces her husband’s vision, as well as a husband who cherishes his wife, even as he valiantly fights for her against all odds. You’ll gain a greater understanding of–and appreciation for–what the forefathers of our nation went through to forge the heritage we now enjoy. (Summary by Molly Evert)

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Total running time:? 11 hours, 41 minutes

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Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Raggedy Andy by Johnny Gruelle

Raggedy Andy 1

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Raggedy Andy 2

Total running time: 1 hour, 40 minutes

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Raggedy Andy 3

Introduction

1–How Raggedy Andy Came

Raggedy Andy 5

2–The Nursery Dance

3–The Spinning Wheel

Raggedy Andy 6

4–The Taffy Pull

5–The Rabbit Chase

Raggedy Andy 7

6–The New Tin Gutter

7–Doctor Raggedy Andy

Raggedy Andy 8

8–Raggedy Andy’s Smile

9–The Wooden Horse

Raggedy Andy 9

10–Making ‘Angels’ in the Snow

11–The Singing Shell

John Keats, selected poetry

Grecian Urn, photo released to public domain by its author Bibi Saint-Pol

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Ode to a Grecian Urn

e-text for Ode to a Grecian Urn

To Sleep

e-text for To Sleep

Seascape by Ioannis Altamouras, Thalassografia, public domain image

Sonnet on the Sea

e-text for Sonnet on the Sea

Bright Star

e-text for Bright Star

The Human Seasons

e-text for The Human Seasons

Spring by Henryk Weyssenhoff, public domain image

To One Who Has Been Long in City Pent

e-text for To One Who Has Been Long in City Pent

Ode to a Nightingale

e-text for Ode to a Nightingale

On the Saco by Albert Bierstadt, public domain

Ode to Autumn

Ode to Autumn e-text

On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer

e-text for On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer

The Princess and Curdie by George MacDonald

Princess and Curdie by George MacDonald, 1883, public domain image

Summary: The Princess and Curdie is the sequel to The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald. It’s been a year since the Princess Irene and Curdie first met, and a year since the goblin incident and all appears to be going well in the Kingdom. Or is it? After a visit from Irene’s great-great-grandmother, Curdie finds himself on a mission to save the kingdom, with a rather strange companion in tow.  (Summary by Lizzie Driver for Librivox)

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Total Running Time: 6 hours

This book is the sequel to The Princess and the Goblin.

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Alexanderschlacht by Albrecht Altdorfer, public domain image

01 – Chapter 1: The Mountain

02 – Chapter 2: The White Pigeon

03 – Chapter 3: The Mistress of the Silver Moon

04 – Chapters 4-5: Curdie’s Father and Mother and The Miners

Miners in the Sierras by Charles Christian Nahl and Frederick August Wenderoth, photograph by Ad Meskens, public domain

05 – Chapters 6-7: The Emerald and What is In a Name?

06 – Chapter 8: Curdie’s Mission

07 – Chapters 9-10: Hands and The Heath

08 – Chapters 11-12: Lina and More Creatures

09 – Chapters 13-14: The Baker’s Wife and The Dogs of Gwyntystorm

Woman baking bread by Jean Francois Millet, The work of art depicted in this image and the reproduction thereof are in the public domain worldwide. The reproduction is part of a collection of reproductions compiled by The Yorck Project. The compilation copyright is held by Zenodot Verlagsgesellschaft mbH and licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License

10 – Chapters 15-16: Derba and Barbara AND The Mattock

11 – Chapters 17-18: The Wine Cellar AND The King’s Kitchen

Royal Kitchen at the Royal Pavilion in Brighton, England from John Nash's Views of the Royal Pavilion, 1826, public domain

12 – Chapter 19: The King’s Chamber

13 – Chapters 20-21: Counterplotting AND The Loaf

14 – Chapters 22-23: The Lord Chamberlain AND Dr. Kellman

15 – Chapters 24-25: The Prophecy AND The Avengers

16 – Chapters 26-27: The Vengeance AND More Vengeance

17 – Chapters 28-30: The Preacher AND Barbara AND Peter

18 – Chapters 31-32: The Sacrifice AND The King’s Army

19 – Chapters 33-35: The Battle AND Judgment AND The End

The Peterkin Papers by Lucretia P. Hale

Coffee Drinker by Ivana Kobilca, public domain image

Summary: The Peterkins were a lovable but comically inept family that possess ingenuity, logic, resourcefulness, and energy — but not common sense. The general formula is that the family tries to solve some problem in an appealingly roundabout way, fails, and is eventually rescued by “the wise old lady from Philadelphia” who always cuts the Gordian knot with some effective but prosaic solution. The charm of the story is not in the plot, but in the telling, with the building up of layers of complication, and the affectionate fun poked at the not-quite-cartoonish characters. The “wise old lady’s” solution is usually obvious to the reader, or even the young listener, from the start. (From Wikipedia)

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Total running time:  4 hours, 24 minutes

Piano Lesson by Mihály Munkácsy, published by the Bekescsaba Mihaly Munkacsy Museum under the GNU Free Documentation License version 1.2 and under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 license

Chapter 00-01 – Preface/The Lady Who Put Salt in Her Coffee

Chapter 02-03-04 – About Elizabeth Eliza’s Piano/The Peterkins Try to Become Wise/Mrs.
Peterkin Wishes To Go To Drive

The Blue House in Zandaam by Claude Monet, public domain image

Chapter 05-06 – The Peterkins at Home/Why the Peterkins Had a Late Dinner

Chapter 07-08 – The Peterkin’s Summer Journey/The Peterkins Snowed Up

Chapter 09-10 – The Peterkins Decide to Keep a Cow / The Peterkins’ Christmas-Tree

Under the Chestnut Tree by Carl Larsson, public domain image

Chapter 11-12 – The Peterkins’ Tea Party / The Peterkins Too Late For the Exhibition

Chapter 13-14 13 The Peterkins Celebrate the “Fourth” / The Peterkins’ Picnic

Chapter 15-16 The Peterkins’ Charades / The Peterkins are Obliged to Move

Chapter 17-18 The Peterkins Decide to Learn the Languages / Modern

Improvements at the Peterkins

Children's Breakfast by Albert Anker, public domain image

Chapter 19-20 Agamemnon’s Career / The Educational Breakfast

Chapter 21 – The Peterkins at the Carnival of Authors in Boston

Chapter 22 – The Peterkins at the Farm

Understood Betsy by Dorothy Canfield Fisher

Dragonfly, portrait of Vera Rapin, the artist's daughter, by Ilya Repin, public domain image

Summary: Understood Betsy is a 1916 novel for children by Dorothy Canfield Fisher. The story tells of Elizabeth Ann, a 9-year-old orphan who goes from a sheltered existence with her father’s aunt Harriet and cousin Frances in the city, to living on a Vermont farm with her mother’s family, the Putneys, whose child-rearing practices had always seemed suspect to Harriet and her daughter. In her new rural life, Elizabeth Ann comes to be nicknamed “Betsy,” and to find that many activities that Frances had always thought too demanding for a little girl are considered, by the Putney family, ordinary expectations for a child: walking to school alone, cooking, and having household duties to perform.

The child thrives in her new environment, learning to make butter, boil maple syrup, and tend the animals. When Frances announces she is to be married and has come to “save” Elizabeth Ann from the dreaded Putney cousins, she is amazed to discover that the little girl is quite content to stay. The story ends after Frances has returned home, with Betsy, her aunt Abigail, uncle Henry, and cousin Ann sitting quietly and happily around the fireplace enjoying the knowledge they will now be a family for good. (Summary from Wikipedia)

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Pere Trognon and his Daughter at the Bridge by Theodore Robinson, public domain image

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Total running time:  4 hours, 36 minutes

Anna Vasiliyevna Buturlina by Alexey Petrovich Antropov, public domain image

01 – Aunt Harriet Has a Cough

02 – Betsy Holds the Reins

03 – A Short Morning

Angelus by Theodore Robinson, public domain image

04 – Betsy Goes to School

05 – What Grade is Betsy?

06 – If You Don’t Like Conversation in a Book Skip this Chapter!

07 – Elizabeth Ann Fails in an Examination

The Layette by Theodore Robinson, public domain image

08 – Betsy Starts a Sewing Society

09 – The New Clothes Fail

Blossoms at Giverny by Theodore Robinson, public domain image

10 – Betsy Has a Birthday

11 – “Understood Aunt Frances”

Jack and Jill by Louisa May Alcott

Portrait of a pair of children with cherries and a toy, by Felix Mayer-Felice, public domain image

Summary:  Jack and Jill went up a hill
To coast with fun and laughter.
Jack fell down and broke his crown,
And Jill came tumbling after. – Louisa May Alcott

When Jack and Jill tumble off of their sled on the first good snow of the season, their injuries cause them to be bedridden for many months putting an end to their fun and frolics. Their parents and friends fill their long days with the joys of a theatrical production, their own personal mail system and many other imaginative events to make their convalescence time fly by. Both Jack and Jill learn how to become better friend’s to each other and their other school mates through their many trials. This is sure to become a family favorite! Summary by Mary Anderson for Librivox

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Total running time: 9 hours, 40 minutes

Sleeping Angel by John George Brown, public domain image

Chapter 01-The Catastrophe

Chapter 02-Two Penitents

Chapter 03-Ward Number One

Chapter 04-Ward Number Two

detail of The Patient by Felix Vallotton, public domain image

Chapter 05-Secrets

Chapter 06-Surprises

Chapter 07-Jill’s Mission

Chapter 08-Merry and Molly

Chapter 09-The Debating Club

Christmas Morning by Carl Larsson, public domain image

Chapter 10-The Dramatic Club

Chapter 11-Down Brakes

Chapter 12-The Twenty-second of February

Chapter 13-Jack Has a Mystery

Chapter 14-And Jill Finds It Out

Chapter 15-Saint Lucy

Chapter 16-Up at Merry’s

Chapter 17-Down at Molly’s

Flower Still Life by Ambrosius Bosschaert, the Elder, public domain image

Chapter 18-May Baskets

Chapter 19-Good Templars

Chapter 20-A Sweet Memory

Chapter 21-Pebbly Beach

Chapter 22-A Happy Day

Anton Braith, Frühlingsweide, public domain image

Chapter 23-Cattle

Chapter 24-Down the River

Holidays at Roselands by Martha Finley

Summary: This is the second book of the much loved Elsie Dinsmore series and starts where the first book left off. Elsie is still recuperating from her weakness, with her kind and indulgent father by her side.

The story revolves around how a strong bond of love and understanding takes root between the father and daughter, as they holiday at Roselands, and visit exciting places, with some of our favorite friends from the first book, Mr. Travilla, Adelaide, Chloe, Lora and the others. (Summary by Neeru Iyer for Librivox)

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Total running time: 8 hours, 53 minutes

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Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3 Part 1

Chapter 3 Part 2

Chapter 3 Part 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6 Part 1

Chapter 6 Part 2

Chapter 7

Chapter 8 Part 1

Chapter 8 Part 2

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12 Part 1

Chapter 12 Part 2

Chapter 13 Part 1

Chapter 13 Part 2

Chapter 14 Part 1

Chapter 14 Part 2

Chapter 15 Part 1

Chapter 15 Part 2

Chapter 16 Part 1

Chapter 16 Part 2

Chapter 17

The Voyages of Doctor Dolittle

Blue-lagoon rangiroa, published by Jnarboux under Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0  unported license and GNU Free Documentation 1.2 or later licenses

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Total running time:  7 hours, 43 minutes

If you enjoy The Voyages of Doctor Dolittle, you’ll also like The Story of Doctor Dolittle!

Summary: Doctor John Dolittle is the central character of a series of children’s books by Hugh Lofting. He is a doctor who shuns human patients in favour of animals, with whom he can speak in their own languages. He later becomes a naturalist, using his abilities to speak with animals to better understand nature and the history of the world. (summary from Wikipedia)

VDD Scarlet Macaw, Yucatan, Mexico, published by author Tony Hisgett under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license

# 00 – Prologue

# 1-01 – The Cobblers Son

# 1-02 – Hear of the Great Naturalist

# 1-03 – The Doctor’s Home

# 1-04 – The Wiff Waff

# 1-05 – Polynesia

A young squirrel Sciurius Vulgaris in Lazienki Park in Warsaw, imgae released to public domain by its author Giorgiomonteforti

# 1-06 – The Wounded Squirrel

# 1-07 – Shellfish Talk

# 1-08 – Are You A Good Noticer

# 1-09 – The Garden Dreams

# 1-10 – The Private Zoo

# 1-11 – My Schoolmaster, Polynesia

# 1-12 – My Great Idea

# 1-13 – A Traveler Arrives

Lightmatter guenon, published by the author Aaron Logan under the Creative Commons Attribution 1.0 Generic license

# 1-14 – Chee-Chee’s Voyage

# 1-15 – I Become A Doctor’s Assistant

# 2-01 – The Crew of The Curlew

# 2-02 – Luke the Hermit

# 2-03 – Jip and the Secret

Duke's Destiny by Janneke Vreugdenhil, image released to public domain by its author

# 2-04 – Bob

# 2-05 – Mendoza

# 2-06 – The Judge’s Dog

# 2-07 – The End of the Mystery

# 2-08 – Three Cheers

# 2-09 – The Purple Bird-of-Paradise

Cunne Shote (painting title), portrait of Cherokee leader Standing Turkey by Francis Parsons, public domain image

# 2-10 – Long Arrow, The Son of Golden Arrow

# 2-11 – Blind Travel

# 2-12 – Destiny and Destination

# 3-01 – The Third Man

# 3-02 – Good-Bye!

# 3-03 – Our Troubles Begin

# 3-04 – Our Troubles Continue

# 3-05 – Polynesia Has a Plan

# 3-06 – The Bed-maker of Monteverde

# 3-07 – The Doctor’s Wager

Olot Bull Fight Arena in Catalunya Spain, image released to public domain by its author, Wamito

# 3-08 – The Great Bullfight

# 3-09 – We Depart In A Hurry

# 4-01 – Shellfish Languages Again

# 4-02 – The Fidgit’s Story

# 4-03 – Bad Weather

# 4-04 – Wrecked!

# 4-05 – Land

# 4-06 – The Jabizri

# 4-07 – Hawk’s-Head Mountain

# 5-01 – A Great Moment

# 5-02 – The Men of The Moving Land

# 5-03 – Fire

# 5-04 – What Makes an Island Float

# 5-05 – War!

# 5-06 – General Polynesia

# 5-07 – The Peace Of The Parrots

# 5-08 – The Hanging Rock

# 5-09 – The Election

# 5-10 – The Coronation of King Jong

# 6-01 – New Popsipetel Jong

Cottage in Cranbrook, Kent, from a water color drawing by Herbert Alexander, public domain image

# 6-02 – Thoughts of Home

# 6-03 – The Red Man’s Science

# 6-04 – The Sea Serpent

# 6-05 – The Shellfish Riddle Solved At Last

# 6-06 – The Last Cabinet Meeting

# 6-07 – The Doctor’s Decision

Thanatopsis by William Cullen Bryant

Shelley's Tomb in the Protestant Cemetery in Rome, painted by Water Crane in 1873, this painting actually shows John Keats' gravestone, public domain image

Summary:  The title is from the Greek thanatos (“death”) and the suffix -opsis (literally, “sight”); it has often been translated as “Meditation upon Death”.

Due to the unusual quality of the verse and Bryant’s age when the poem was first published in 1817 by the North American Review, Richard Henry Dana, Sr., then associate editor at the Review, initially doubted its authenticity, saying to another editor, “No one, on this side of the Atlantic, is capable of writing such verses.”

Thanatopsis

e-text of Thanatopsis

Robert Browning, selected poetry

Tulip blossom, image released to public domain by its author, George

Click here to see a selection of downloadable curriculum resources from CurrClick for studying poetry.

My Last Duchess

e-text for My Last Duchess

Robert Browning, print by Julia Margaret Cameron, public domain image

Prospice

e-text for Prospice

The Pied Piper of Hamelin

e-text for The Pied Piper

Pied Piper of Hamelin by Kate Greenaway, public domain image

e-text for Home Thoughts from Abroad

One Way of Love e-text

Samuel Taylor Coleridge, selected poetry

Rime of the Ancient Mariner, illustrated by Gustave Dore, image in the public domain

Click here to see a selection of downloadable curriculum resources from CurrClick for studying poetry.


Kubla Kahn e-text

e-text for Broken Friendship

The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, illustrated by Gustave Dore, public domain image

The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

e-text for The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

Samuel Taylor Coleridge, unknown artist, public domain image

e-text for Fears in Solitude

Grimms’ Fairy Tales by The Brothers Grimm

Little Red Riding Hood by Albert Anker, public domain image

Click here to see a selection of downloadable curriculum resources from CurrClick which could be used to study Fairy Tales. This link will take you away from My Audio School.

The following stories are selected from among Grimms’ most popular fairy tales.  To listen to or to read the unabridged book of Grimms’ Fairy Tales (10 1/2 hours in length), use the following links:

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Summary: A classic collection of oral German folklore, brought together for posterity by the scholarly brothers Grimm in the 1800s, this epitome of fairy tales includes many of the world’s best known stories. In these dark foreboding woods, you will find: Rapunzel, Hansel and Gretel, Rumpelstiltskin, Lily and the Lion (better known as Beauty and the Beast), and Snow White and Rose Red, among other timeless works. These tales were later heavily revised and sanitised, but here are presented closer to their grim and beloved originals. (Summary by Marlo Dianne for Librivox)

Hans in Luck by Anne Anderson, public domain image

The Golden Bird

Hans in Luck

The Travelling Musicians

The Straw, the Coal, and the Bean

Briar Rose

The Twelve Dancing Princesses

The Fisherman and his Wife

The Frog Prince

Frog Prince by Anne Anderson, public domain image

The Cat and Mouse in Partnership

The Goose Girl

The Adventures of Chanticleer and Partlet

Rapunzel

The Valiant Little Tailor

The Valiant Little Tailor by Offterdinger, public domain image

Hansel and Gretel

Little Red-Cap (or Little Red Riding Hood)

The Robber Bridegroom

Tom Thumb

Rumpelstiltskin

Hansel and Gretel by Offterdinger, public domain image

Clever Gretel

Ashputtel  (or Cinderella)

The Elves and the Shoemaker

Clever Hans

The Four Clever Brothers

The Lily and the Lion (or Beauty and the Beast)

The Golden Goose

The King of The Golden Mountain

Snow White and Rose Red

Percy Bysshe Shelley, selected poems

Western Meadowlark, photo by Kevin Cole from Pacific Coast, USA, published under Creative Commons Attribution Generic License

Ozymandias

etext for Ozymandias

Ode To a Skylark (excerpt from Poems Every Child Should Know)

etext for Ode To a Skylark

Lines

Lines e-text

e-text for To The Men of England

Moon and Volcanoes in Guatemala, photo by Luisfi, published under the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 3.0 Unported license

The Moon e-text

Summer and Winter e-text

Achensee Winter in Tirol, published by author friedrich under the Creative Commons attribution Share Alike 2.5 generic license

One Word e-text

The Story of Doctor Dolittle

Edward Cross by Jacques Laurent Agasse, public domain

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To hear this book, click play in the box below or click on the chapter titles.

tn_Dolittle, Papageienmann, 1902, by Max Liebermann, public domain image

Book summary from Librivox: In The Story of Doctor Dolittle (1920), the first of Hugh Lofting’s Doctor Dolittle books, we are introduced to the good doctor who gives up treating people after Polynesia, his parrot, teaches him animal languages. His fame in the animal kingdom spreads throughout the world and soon he sets off to cure a monkey epidemic in Africa, finding all sorts of exciting adventures on the way.

This recording is of the original edition, which is in the public domain. Later editions, which are still under copyright, changed some language and plot elements that are considered racially derogatory.
(Summary adapted from wikipedia.org by Annie Coleman)

Author’s Note and Dedication ; Introduction – 00:08:55

The First Chapter – Puddleby – 00:06:10

The Second Chapter – Animal Language – 00:13:08

Man's Best Friend by Repin, 1908, public domain

The Third Chapter – More Money Troubles – 00:07:28

The Fourth Chapter – A Message From Africa – 00:06:19

The Fifth Chapter – The Great Journey – 00:06:24

The Sixth Chapter – Polynesia and the King – 00:06:07

Junge Angorakatze, painting by German-Hungarian painter Arthur Heyer, public domain image

The Seventh Chapter – The Bridge of Apes – 00:11:04

The Eighth Chapter – The Leader of the Lions – 00:07:07

The Ninth Chapter – The Monkeys’ Council – 00:06:20

The Tenth Chapter – The Rarest Animal of All – 00:09:13

The Eleventh Chapter – The Black Prince – 00:10:33

The Twelfth Chapter – Medicine and Magic – 00:15:07

The Menagerie by Melchior d'Hondecoeter, public domain image

The Thirteenth Chapter – Red Sails and Blue Wings – 00:07:27

The Fourteenth Chapter – The Rats’ Warning – 00:08:21

The Fifteenth Chapter – The Barbary Dragon – 00:10:37

The Sixteenth Chapter – Too-Too the Listener – 00:07:58

The Seventeenth Chapter – The Ocean Gossips – 00:07:28

The Eighteenth Chapter – Smells – 00:12:19

The Nineteenth Chapter – The Rock – 00:08:29

The Twentieth Chapter – The Fisherman – 00:07:09

The Last Chapter – Home Again – 00:05:02