
On the bustling stretch of Chicago’s Archey Road, a sharp‑tongued Irish immigrant named Martin Dooley watches the city’s clamor from his modest porch. With a blend of homespun dialect and philosophical wit, he turns the everyday—cabbage gardens, gas‑house fumes, the roar of electric streetcars—into a stage for broader commentary. His observations are rooted in the simple life of his community yet reach far enough to sketch the nation’s larger currents.
Dooley’s musings, collected in a series of lively essays, tackle everything from local politics to the looming specter of war, always with a dry humor that spares no institution. He reads the newspapers with a skeptical eye, offering counsel that is both earnest and wry, while his Irish anecdotes lend color to the American experience. Listeners will find a portrait of a man who, despite the noise of progress, remains grounded in common sense and a love of honest conversation.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (237K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2007-09-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1867–1936
Best known for creating the sharp-tongued barroom philosopher Mr. Dooley, this Chicago journalist turned everyday talk into some of the funniest and smartest political commentary of his time. His work mixed humor with plainspoken insight, and it still feels lively more than a century later.
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