13 episodes

This charming book for children is full of interesting facts about all sorts of plants, insects, birds and animals and how they all help to enrich the soil for farmers - each in its own special way. Join our narrator, The Grain of Dust on a fascinating journey around the planet to meet them.

"I don't want you to think that I'm boasting, but I do believe I'm one of the greatest travellers that ever was; and if anybody, living or dead, has ever gone through with more than I have I'd like to hear about it. Not that I've personally been in all the places or taken part in all the things I tell in this book—I don't mean to say that—but I do ask you to remember how long it is possible for a grain of dust to last, and how many other far-travelled and much-adventured dust grains it must meet and mix with in the course of its life. ...Finally, if what we call flesh and blood can think and talk, why not a grain of dust? In fact, what is flesh and blood but dust come back to life? Says the poet—and the poets know:

'The very dust that blows along the street Once whispered to its love that life is sweet.'

You see it's as likely a thing as could happen—this whole story."

Summary by J. M. Smallheer with quotes from the Preface of the book

Adventures of a Grain of Dust, The by Hallam Hawksworth (1863 - ‪)‬ LibriVox

    • Arts

This charming book for children is full of interesting facts about all sorts of plants, insects, birds and animals and how they all help to enrich the soil for farmers - each in its own special way. Join our narrator, The Grain of Dust on a fascinating journey around the planet to meet them.

"I don't want you to think that I'm boasting, but I do believe I'm one of the greatest travellers that ever was; and if anybody, living or dead, has ever gone through with more than I have I'd like to hear about it. Not that I've personally been in all the places or taken part in all the things I tell in this book—I don't mean to say that—but I do ask you to remember how long it is possible for a grain of dust to last, and how many other far-travelled and much-adventured dust grains it must meet and mix with in the course of its life. ...Finally, if what we call flesh and blood can think and talk, why not a grain of dust? In fact, what is flesh and blood but dust come back to life? Says the poet—and the poets know:

'The very dust that blows along the street Once whispered to its love that life is sweet.'

You see it's as likely a thing as could happen—this whole story."

Summary by J. M. Smallheer with quotes from the Preface of the book

    01 - The Little Old Man of the Rock

    01 - The Little Old Man of the Rock

    • 23 min
    02 - Some Early Settlers and Their Bones

    02 - Some Early Settlers and Their Bones

    • 22 min
    03 - The Winds and the World's Work

    03 - The Winds and the World's Work

    • 24 min
    04 - The Bottom-Lands

    04 - The Bottom-Lands

    • 23 min
    05 - What the Earth Owes to the Earthworm

    05 - What the Earth Owes to the Earthworm

    • 22 min
    06 - The Little Farmers with Six Feet

    06 - The Little Farmers with Six Feet

    • 27 min

Top Podcasts In Arts

The Bookshelf with Ryan Tubridy
Ryan Tubridy
Changing Times - The Allenwood Conversations
Mary McAleese & Mary Kennedy - Dundara Television and Media
Dish
S:E Creative Studio
Table Manners with Jessie and Lennie Ware
Jessie Ware
Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver
iHeartPodcasts
I Think You Should Read
Rachel O'Neill and Áine O'Connell

More by LibriVox

Concerning the Spiritual in Art by Wassily Kandinsky (1866 - 1944)
LibriVox
Some Experiences of an Irish R.M. by  Edith Œnone Somerville (1858 - 1949) and  Martin Ross (1862 - 1915)
LibriVox
Interpretation of Dreams, The by Sigmund Freud (1856 - 1939)
LibriVox
Ragged Trousered Philanthropists, The by Robert Tressell (1870 - 1911)
LibriVox
Ten Days in a Madhouse by  Nellie Bly (1864 - 1922)
LibriVox
Sense and Sensibility (version 4) by Jane Austen (1775 - 1817)
LibriVox