Letters From America
Rupert Brooke
Leído por David Wales





"[Rupert Brooke] started in May 1913 on a journey to the United States, Canada, and the South Seas, from which he returned next year at the beginning of June. The first thirteen chapters of this book were written as letters to the Westminster Gazette. He would probably not have republished them in their present form, as he intended to write a longer book on his travels; but they are now printed with only the correction of a few evident slips." The listener interested in Brooke's work may want to skip over Henry James' "so affectionate and desperately unintelligible a preface" (Christopher Morley in Modern Essays) and listen to those four tracks later. (Tracks 2 - 5) ( Book's Prefatory Note and david wales) (4 hr 27 min)
Capítulos
Prefatory Note | 1:13 | Leído por David Wales |
Rupert Brooke by Henry James, Part 1 | 23:13 | Leído por David Wales |
Rupert Brooke by Henry James, Part 2 | 16:33 | Leído por David Wales |
Rupert Brooke by Henry James, Part 3 | 14:21 | Leído por David Wales |
Rupert Brooke by Henry James, Part 4 | 10:49 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 1: Arrival | 10:52 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 2: New York | 14:18 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 3: New York (continued) | 14:02 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 4: Boston And Harvard | 14:34 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 5: Montreal And Ottawa | 12:58 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 6: Quebec And The Saguenay | 15:42 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 7: Ontario | 13:41 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 8: Niagara Falls | 13:56 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 9: To Winnipeg | 12:51 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 10: Outside | 13:31 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 11: The Prairies | 12:16 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 12: The Indians | 12:47 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 13: The Rockies | 13:48 | Leído por David Wales |
Letter 14: Some Niggers | 14:48 | Leído por David Wales |
An Unusual Young Man | 10:50 | Leído por David Wales |
Reseñas
Letter 14?





potuc
That part really shows how savage people were towards Blacks at the time... especially verbally