Audiobook: Autobiography of a Super-Tramp
- Download Preface by George Bernard Shaw audio
- Download I. Childhood audio
- Download II. Youth audio
- Download III. Manhood audio
- Download IV. Brum audio
- Download V. A Tramp's Summer Vacation audio
- Download VI. A Night's Ride audio
- Download VII. Law in America audio
- Download VIII. A Prisoner His Own Judge audio
- Download IX. Berry Picking audio
- Download X. The Cattleman's Office audio
- Download XI. A Strange Cattleman audio
- Download XII. Thieves audio
- Download XIII. The Canal audio
- Download XIV. The House-Boat audio
- Download XV. A Lynching audio
- Download XVI. The Camp audio
- Download XVII. Home audio
- Download XVIII. Off Again audio
- Download XIX. A Voice in the Dark audio
- Download XX. Hospitality audio
- Download XXI. London audio
- Download XXII. The Ark audio
- Download XXIII. Gridling audio
- Download XXIV. On the Downright audio
- Download XXV. The Farmhouse audio
- Download XXVI. Rain & Poverty audio
- Download XXVII. False Hopes audio
- Download XXVIII. On Tramp Again audio
- Download XXIX. A Day's Companion audio
- Download XXX. The Fortune audio
- Download XXXI. Some Ways of Making a Living audio
- Download XXXII. At Last audio
- Download XXXIII. Success audio
- Download XXXIV. A House to Let audio
Audiobooks Genres
Author
Description
The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp is an autobiography published in 1908 by the Welsh poet and writer W. H. Davies (1871β1940). A large part of the book's subject matter describes the way of life of the tramp in the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States in the final decade of the 19th century. George Bernard Shaw had become interested in Davies, a literary unknown at the time, and had agreed to write a preface for the book, largely through the concerted efforts of his wife Charlotte. Shaw was also instrumental in keeping the unusual title of the book, of which Davies himself was unsure, and which later proved to be controversial with some reviewers. The book was the third published by Davies, having been preceded by The Soul's Destroyer (1905) and New Poems (1907). The 1920 edition of the book concludes with five poems selected by Davies from The Soul's Destroyer. The book was written in the space of six weeks, "a great achievement for a first book by a man with the minimum of education." ( Wikipedia (edited by Expatriate))
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