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Elsie Venner

Bernard Langdon is close to earning his degree in medicine when his family finds itself in financial difficulties, forcing Langdon to interrupt his studies for a time in order to earn money with which to fund the rest of his degree. He therefore leaves Boston in order to teach at a school in a village in the area. One of his students is Elsie Venner, a seventeen year-old girl, who is avoided by her peers and keeps apart. Somehow, Elsie exerts a great fascination on Langdon, as there is something distinctly different about her with her strangeness and quick temper. Elsie Venner is one of Oliver Wendell Holmes' "medicated novels", in which he explores a medical condition of a character. Holmes was teaching at Harvard Medical School when this book was published, and he chose to let a professor of medicine narrate the story. Elsie Venner is notable for its strong Boston local colour, being at the same time the book in which Holmes coined the term "Boston Brahmin". - Summary by Carolin (15 hr 57 min)

Chapters

Prefaces

The Brahmin Caste of New England

The Student and his Certificate

Mr. Bernard tries his Hand

The Moth flies into the Candle

An Old-Fashioned Descriptive Chapter

The Sunbeam and the Shadow

The Event of the Season, part 1

The Event of the Season, part 2

The Morning After

The Doctor orders the Best Sulky

The Doctor calls on Elsie Venner

Cousin Richard's Visit

The Apollinean Institute

Curiosity

Family Secrets

Physiological

Epistolary

Old Sophy calls on the Reverend Doctor

The Reverend Doctor calls on Brother Fairweather

The Spider on his Thread

From without and from within

The Widow Rowens gives a Tea-Party, part 1

The Widow Rowens gives a Tea-Party, part 2

Why Doctors differ

The Wild Huntsman

On his Tracks

The Perilous Hour, part 1

The Perilous Hour, part 2

The News reaches the Dudley Mansion

A Soul in Distress

The Secret is Whispered, part 1

The Secret is Whispered, part 2

The White Ash

The Golden Cord is loosed

Mr. Silas Peckham renders his Account

Conclusion