
Step into a quiet afternoon with a collection of genuine Revolutionary-era letters and sketches, each inked by the very hands that shaped a fledgling nation. The listener hears the scratch of hurried pens, the uneven loops of John Adams' earnest script, and the occasional blot that hints at urgency. Treated as living whispers rather than printed records, these documents convey the weight of parchment and the breath behind every phrase. It feels as if you are sitting beside the Continental Congress as tension builds in 1774.
Among the papers are missives from John Adams, written in a small, hurried hand that betrays both anxiety and resolve as the colonies edge toward war. A June 1775 note mentions General Washington and General Lee as comfort to a friend, recorded just days after the clash at Bunker Hill, before news could travel. These fragments capture personal concern and political foresight, inviting listeners to imagine the palpable fear and hopeful ambition that underpinned each line.
Language
en
Duration
~36 minutes (34K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger and Al Haines.
Release date
2005-11-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1804–1864
Best known for The Scarlet Letter, this American master of dark, symbolic fiction turned guilt, secrecy, and moral conflict into unforgettable stories. His novels and tales still shape how readers imagine Puritan New England and the shadows of the human conscience.
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