Marse Henry: An Autobiography (Volume 2)

audiobook

Marse Henry: An Autobiography (Volume 2)

by Henry Watterson

EN·~5 hours·21 chapters

Chapters

21 total
1

Henry Watterson - Volume II - Illustrated - Illustrations

0:25
2

"MARSE HENRY" - Chapter the Thirteenth

20:29
3

Chapter the Fourteenth

23:03
4

Chapter the Fifteenth

22:00
5

Chapter the Sixteenth

18:19
6

Chapter the Seventeenth

13:04
7

Chapter the Eighteenth

13:01
8

Chapter the Nineteenth

19:42
9

Chapter the Twentieth

15:30
10

Chapter the Twenty-First

13:49

Description

A lively memoir unfolds through the eyes of a seasoned reporter who once roamed Washington’s bustling salons and congressional corridors. He paints vivid portraits of larger‑than‑life figures—an outspoken senator, a charismatic New England diplomat, and a charismatic hostess whose Sunday gatherings became the hub of political discourse. The narrative captures the sharp wit, heated debates, and personal rivalries that defined the capital’s social scene in the post‑Civil War years.

In later chapters the author turns to his deep friendship with a German‑American statesman whose love of piano music and plain‑spoken oratory left a lasting impression. Their shared adventures, from campaign strategy meetings to intimate evenings in a well‑stocked library, reveal the human side of a turbulent era. Listeners will discover a richly detailed portrait of 19th‑century American politics, told with humor, candor, and an earnest affection for the characters who shaped it.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (322K 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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