Search
Generic filters
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Search in excerpt
Lọc theo loại bài đăng
Search in posts
Search in pages

Anglo-American Memories Audiobook

Rate this audiobook
14/07/2024
Anglo-American Memories cover
Author:
Genre: ,
Chapter:
45
Listen: 1

“These Memories [1911] were written in the first instance for Americans and have appeared week by week each Sunday in the New York Tribune…. they are mainly concerned with men of exceptional mark and position in America and Europe whom I have met, and with events of which I had some personal knowledge. There is no attempt at a consecutive story.” (Preface) Smalley was an American journalist born in Massachusetts in 1833; he wrote from and about many places in America (including the Civil War) and Europe. – Summary by Book Preface and David Wales

 
 

[chương_files]

 

Đang nghe:
Continue:    
1:
Preface
2:
New England in 1850—Daniel Webster
3:
Massachusetts Puritanism—The Yale Class of 1853
4:
Yale Professors—Harvard Law School
5:
How Massachusetts in 1854 Surrendered the Fugitive Slave Anthony Burns
6:
The American Defoe, Richard Henry Dana, Jr
7:
A Visit to Ralph Waldo Emerson
8:
Emerson in England—English Traits—Emerson and Matthew Arnold
9:
A Group of Boston Lawyers—Mr. Olney and Venezuela
10:
Wendell Phillips
11:
Wendell Phillips and the Boston Mobs
12:
Wendell Phillips—Governor Andrew—Phillips's Conversion
13:
William Lloyd Garrison—A Critical View
14:
Charles Sumner—A Private View
15:
Experiences as Journalist during the Civil War
16:
Civil War—General McClellan—General Hooker
17:
Civil War—Personal Incidents at Antietam
18:
A Fragment of Unwritten Military History
19:
The New York Draft Riots in 1863—Notes on Journalism
20:
How The Prussians after Sadowa Came Home to Berlin
21:
A Talk with Count Bismarck in 1866
22:
American Diplomacy in England
23:
Two Unaccredited Ambassadors
24:
Some Account of a Revolution in International Journalism
25:
Holt White's Story of Sedan and How it Reached the "New York Tribune"
26:
Great Examples of War Correspondence
27:
A Parenthesis
28:
'Civil War?'—Incidents in the 'Eighties—Sir George Trevelyan—Lord Barrymore
29:
Sir Wilfrid Laurier and the Alaska Boundary
30:
Annexing Canada—Lady Aberdeen—Lady Minto
31:
Two Governors-General, Lord Minto and Lord Grey
32:
Lord Kitchener—Personal Traits and Incidents
33:
Sir George Lewis—King's Solicitor and Friend—A Social Force
34:
Mr. Mills—A Personal Appreciation and a Few Anecdotes
35:
Lord Randolph Churchill—Being Mostly Personal Impressions
36:
Lord Glenesk and 'The Morning Post'
37:
Queen Victoria at Balmoral—King Edward at Dunrobin—Admiral Sir Hedworth Lambton—Other Anecdotes
38:
Famous Englishmen Not in Politics
39:
Lord St. Helier—American and English Methods—Mr. Benjamin
40:
Mrs. Jeune, Lady Jeune, and Lady St. Helier
41:
Lord and Lady Arthur Russell and the 'Salon' in England
42:
The Archbishop of Canterbury—Queen Alexandra
43:
A Scottish Legend
44:
A Personal Reminiscence of the Late Emperor Frederick
45:
Edward the Seventh as Prince of Wales—Personal Incidents; Prince of Wales and King of England—The Personal Side; As King—Some Personal and Social Incidents and Impressions