The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government, Volume 2
Jefferson Davis
Lu par LibriVox Volunteers





The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government (1881) is written by Jefferson Davis, former President of the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War. Davis wrote the book as a straightforward history of the Confederate States of America and as an apologia for the causes that he believed led to and justified the American Civil War. (Intro modified from Wikipedia)
"The most painful pages of this work are those which . . . present the subjugation of the State governments by the Government of the United States. The patriot, the lover of his country and of the liberties of mankind, can not contemplate these facts without a feeling of grief which will not be comforted. That the work of the fathers of the republic, that the most magnificent system of constitutional government which the wisdom of man has devised, should be turned from its object, changed from its order, rendered powerless to protect the unalienable rights and sovereignty of the people, and made the instrument by which to establish and maintain imperialism, is a revolution unlike any other that may be found in the history of mankind. The result established the truthfulness of the assertion . . . that the Northern people, by their unconstitutional warfare to gain the freedom of certain negro slaves, would lose their own liberties." (from chapter 42)
This project contains Volume 2 (of 2).
Proof-Listened by TriciaG & denisedee (30 hr 15 min)
Chapitres
Part 4, Chapter 15 | 39:33 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 16 | 39:29 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 17 | 40:51 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 18 | 35:45 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 19 | 27:32 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 20 | 44:03 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 21 | 40:45 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 22 | 23:23 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 23 | 26:48 | Lu par Larry Greene |
Part 4, Chapter 24 | 42:46 | Lu par Larry Greene |
Part 4, Chapter 25 | 46:57 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 26 | 35:31 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 27 | 38:13 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 28 | 47:37 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 29 | 34:50 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 30 | 49:05 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 31 | 45:03 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 32 | 24:49 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
Part 4, Chapter 33 | 33:11 | Lu par Scott Foster |
Part 4, Chapter 34 | 36:18 | Lu par Scott Foster |
Part 4, Chapter 35 | 36:24 | Lu par Lucas Chang |
Part 4, Chapter 36 | 17:02 | Lu par William A Crenshaw |
Part 4, Chapter 37 | 34:26 | Lu par KHand |
Part 4, Chapter 38 | 30:01 | Lu par KHand |
Part 4, Chapter 39a | 38:56 | Lu par TriciaG |
Part 4, Chapter 39b | 28:36 | Lu par TriciaG |
Part 4, Chapter 39c | 35:16 | Lu par TriciaG |
Part 4, Chapter 40 | 29:11 | Lu par Dave Gillespie |
Part 4, Chapter 41 | 34:44 | Lu par Dave Gillespie |
Part 4, Chapter 42 | 30:56 | Lu par Daniel Vimont |
Part 4, Chapter 43 | 44:33 | Lu par Dave Gillespie |
Part 4, Chapter 44a | 37:39 | Lu par Katie Riley |
Part 4, Chapter 44b | 36:32 | Lu par Katie Riley |
Part 4, Chapter 45 | 30:09 | Lu par Bria Snow |
Part 4, Chapter 46 | 34:13 | Lu par Daniel Vimont |
Part 4, Chapter 47 | 50:22 | Lu par TriciaG |
Part 4, Chapter 48a | 42:08 | Lu par Larry Greene |
Part 4, Chapter 48b | 40:32 | Lu par Larry Greene |
Part 4, Chapter 49a | 32:48 | Lu par Scott Foster |
Part 4, Chapter 49b | 26:21 | Lu par Scott Foster |
Part 4, Chapter 50 | 35:00 | Lu par Scott Foster |
Part 4, Chapter 51 | 32:47 | Lu par Bill Mosley |
Part 4, Chapter 52a | 31:23 | Lu par TriciaG |
Part 4, Chapter 52b | 30:14 | Lu par TriciaG |
Part 4, Chapter 53 | 43:10 | Lu par TriciaG |
Part 4, Chapter 54a | 32:06 | Lu par KHand |
Part 4, Chapter 54b | 28:39 | Lu par Khaghbboommm |
Part 4, Chapter 55 | 34:26 | Lu par TriciaG |
Part 4, Chapter 56 | 44:03 | Lu par KHand |
Part 4, Chapter 57a | 31:39 | Lu par KHand |
Part 4, Chapter 57b | 25:42 | Lu par KHand |
Conclusion | 3:02 | Lu par BeniaminoMassimo |
Critiques
chloroform in print





Vanityvanityallisvanity
Chloroform in print, That’s what Mark Twain said about a book he once read. That’s said I believe this man was very intelligent and knew the constitution . He makes some very good points about secession , states rights and so forth. It’s a bit self-righteous but it’s still worth listening too . It’s a different perspective from what most people generally learn. I’m thankful to the volunteers who had to endure reading this.In all seriousness this book could’ve been a lot better with some judicious editing. I think if you took the word chivalry out of this book you would lighten it by about 2 pounds. That said in regard to the war and all of its horrors it would be hard to find people who better deserve the title.