Tar-Heel Tales in Vernacular Verse

audiobook

Tar-Heel Tales in Vernacular Verse

by J. E. P. (John Edward Parker) Doyle

EN·~36 minutes·11 chapters

Chapters

11 total
1

Tar-Heel Tales IN VERNACULAR VERSE.

0:31
2

Author’s Preface.

1:09
3

HORACE GREELEY.

1:23
4

The Curse of Pedergogue Scott.

3:36
5

Bob Munn of Cape Cod.

3:48
6

My Rerligion.

4:01
7

Little Boots.

3:26
8

The Buzzin’ Bees of Berks.

5:46
9

That Little Black Pet of Our’n.

4:12
10

Old Tom Gin.

3:41

Description

A lively anthology of verse brings the rough‑hewn humor and hard‑won wisdom of post‑war Southern folk to life. Written in the unmistakable dialect of the Tar‑Heel refugees, the poems echo the cadence of campfire storytelling, each line steeped in the grit and camaraderie of soldiers‑turned‑settlers. The narrator’s voice, half‑jocular and half‑nostalgic, invites listeners to hear the everyday miracles and mischief that shaped a generation.

Through mischievous schoolyard antics, buzzing bee raids, mule baptisms, and the colorful characters of a wandering troupe, the collection paints a vivid portrait of a community rebuilding amid pine forests and prairie winds. Illustrated vignettes accompany the verses, adding a visual punch to the rib‑tickling tales of pranks, love‑struck youths, and the stubborn perseverance of those who call the hills home. Listeners will find themselves wrapped in the warm, earthy humor of a world where every “little boot” and “buzzin’ bee” carries a story worth hearing.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~36 minutes (34K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by MFR, Paul Marshall and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2017-07-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

JE

J. E. P. (John Edward Parker) Doyle

1837–1888

Best known for lively dialect verse set in North Carolina, this 19th-century writer brought local voices and newspaper wit onto the page. His surviving books suggest a journalist's ear for speech and a taste for topical controversy.

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