Memoirs of Sir Wemyss Reid 1842-1885

audiobook

Memoirs of Sir Wemyss Reid 1842-1885

by T. Wemyss (Thomas Wemyss) Reid

EN·~11 hours·39 chapters

Chapters

39 total
1

AUTHOR'S PREFACE

3:15
2

CHAPTER I. - EARLY DAYS.

48:13
3

CHAPTER II. - PROBATION.

37:08
4

CHAPTER III. - MY LIFE-WORK BEGUN.

21:41
5

CHAPTER IV. - FROM REPORTER TO EDITOR.

40:09
6

CHAPTER V. - WORK ON THE LEEDS MERCURY.

53:23
7

CHAPTER VI. - LIFE IN LONDON.

1:06:25
8

CHAPTER VII. - EDITOR OF THE LEEDS MERCURY.

40:04
9

CHAPTER VIII. - MY FIRST CONTINENTAL TOUR.

27:52
10

CHAPTER IX. - A NEW ERA IN PROVINCIAL JOURNALISM.

49:36

Description

The memoir opens with a heartfelt tribute from a sister to her late brother, painting a vivid picture of a mid‑nineteenth‑century household in Newcastle. Their father, a diligent preacher with a modest library, infused the home with a quiet sense of duty, while their mother, bright‑tempered and well‑read, brought a lively counterpoint that drew friends from beyond the chapel walls. Together they created an atmosphere where love, responsibility, and curiosity coexisted, shaping the siblings’ early outlook on the world.

From those formative years the brother emerges as a spirited, self‑reliant youth, drawn to politics, the press, and the art of correspondence. He dazzles his classmates with prizes, delivers audacious speeches, and begins to fill his father’s dusty shelves with fresh titles. His talent for securing replies from notable figures and even inviting an Arctic explorer to town hints at a future steeped in public engagement and literary ambition, setting the stage for the remarkable life that the memoir later recounts.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (680K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-12-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

T. Wemyss (Thomas Wemyss) Reid

T. Wemyss (Thomas Wemyss) Reid

1842–1905

A leading Victorian journalist and editor, he turned a career in newspapers into a second life as a popular biographer and novelist. His writing moved easily between public affairs, literary lives, and fiction, giving him a lively place in late 19th-century British letters.

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