Marse Henry: An Autobiography (Volume 1)

audiobook

Marse Henry: An Autobiography (Volume 1)

by Henry Watterson

EN·~5 hours·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total
1

Henry Watterson - Volume I - Illustrated

0:21
2

Illustrations

0:45
3

"MARSE HENRY" - Chapter the First

38:49
4

Chapter the Second

29:54
5

Chapter the Third

24:23
6

Chapter the Fourth

25:31
7

Chapter the Fifth

16:36
8

Chapter the Sixth

30:32
9

Chapter the Seventh

29:43
10

Chapter the Eighth

16:12

Description

In this vivid memoir the author paints himself as a self‑styled chronicler of a turbulent era, born amid the raucous camps of political rallies and later thrust onto the battlefields of public opinion. With a colloquial yet thoughtful tone, he promises to steer clear of grandiose self‑praise, offering instead a series of candid observations on the men and events that shaped his world. The opening pages already reveal a mind that relishes watching the rise and fall of leaders, from presidents to military generals, while maintaining a wry distance from his own legend.

The narrative traces his early ambitions to join the ranks of literary giants, his brief flirtation with poetry, and the eventual turn toward journalism that defined his career. Interwoven with sketches of figures like Lincoln, Clay, and Confederate generals, the autobiography provides a textured portrait of a nation wrestling with reconstruction and identity. Listeners will find a blend of personal anecdote and historical texture that brings the late‑19th‑century press scene to life.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (332K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Curtis A. Weyant and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team

Release date

2005-07-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Henry Watterson

Henry Watterson

1840–1921

A commanding newspaper editor and political voice of the post–Civil War South, this Pulitzer Prize winner helped make the Louisville Courier-Journal one of the country’s most influential papers. His career mixed sharp commentary, national politics, and a lasting reputation as one of the era’s best-known editorial writers.

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