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1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales

THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO JOAN by MARY E. WILKINS FREEMAN

1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales

Jon Hagadorn

Fiction, Arts

4.51.2K Ratings

🗓️ 21 December 2020

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

 

🎙️ SHOW NOTES — "The Gospel According to Joan" at 1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales Podcast

1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales

Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, one of America's finest chroniclers of New England life, brings her trademark blend of realism, tenderness, and quiet moral insight to "The Gospel According to Joan." This is a story about the power of innocence, the unexpected wisdom of a child, and the way simple goodness can soften even the hardest of adult hearts.

Set in a small New England village — the kind Freeman knew intimately — the story unfolds in a world of modest homes, close‑knit neighbors, and the unspoken burdens people carry behind closed doors. Into this world steps Joan, a young girl whose sincerity and unfiltered kindness become a kind of "gospel" in themselves.

🌾 A Glimpse of the Storyline (Spoiler‑Safe)

At the heart of the story is Joan's gentle but unwavering belief in doing right — not because she's been taught to, but because her heart naturally leans toward compassion. Through her eyes, we see adults wrestling with pride, disappointment, and old grievances. Joan's presence becomes a quiet catalyst for change.

Her simple acts — a word spoken honestly, a gesture offered without calculation — begin to shift the emotional landscape around her. Freeman shows how a child's moral clarity can illuminate truths adults have forgotten, and how innocence can sometimes accomplish what reason and argument cannot.

The story moves toward a moment of emotional revelation, where Joan's "gospel" — her instinctive kindness — brings healing to a strained relationship and reminds the community of the power of grace.

✍️ About Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

Freeman (1852–1930) was a master of regional realism, known for her vivid portrayals of New England women, families, and small‑town life. Her stories often explore:

  • The quiet heroism of everyday people

  • The emotional lives of women and children

  • The tension between duty and desire

  • The moral weight of seemingly small decisions

She wrote with empathy, precision, and a deep understanding of how communities shape — and sometimes constrain — the individuals within them. "The Gospel According to Joan" is a perfect example of her ability to reveal profound truths through simple, human moments.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

And the Yeah, Welcome back everyone to 1001 classic Classic Short Stories and Tales.

0:33.4

This is your host, John Hagadored.

0:35.4

And today, a Christmas story, The Gospel According to Joan,

0:39.5

by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman. This story first appeared in Harper's Monthly magazine in December of 1919.

0:47.0

Her story is about generosity and compassion with a twist,

0:51.0

when a young girl named Joan, the down and out minister's daughter, knocked on

0:54.8

Sarah's door to sell her familiar hand-worked linens just before Christmas, who's to say what's

0:59.9

right or wrong when it's for charity.

1:06.0

And now our story.

1:10.0

My, don't you think I've done pretty well? Sarah Bannister, you know as well as I do. It's wonderful. The two women stood in the best

1:16.6

parlor, a long room, furnished with aggressive plush and mahogany and onyx tables, and a marble

1:22.3

plighty drooping her head impudently in her out-of-place state in the New England parlor. The room was chilly in spite of the radiators, glaring with glit and the most conspicuous wall spaces.

1:32.6

Every piece of furniture, old-fashioned square tables, chairs, and piano, was covered with

1:38.1

dainty things, large and small, of all colors and fabrics. To think you made everything here with your own hands

1:46.0

commented Miss Lottie Dodd. She was a distant relative of Mrs. Banisters who lived

1:51.4

with her a month at a time.

1:53.0

Yes, and the worst of it is, it isn't quite a week to Christmas, and I haven't got the things done yet.

1:59.0

Land, I should think you had enough here for the whole town.

2:03.0

I'm giving to about the whole town this year.

2:06.0

Then you know all our cousins out west,

2:08.0

and the raft of relations we never see except that our funerals that live in Watchboro and Center Watchboro and

2:13.8

south and north and east. I didn't know you remembered them Christmas. I don't

...

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