Sách nói: Soldier's Letters to Charming Nellie
- Download Introduction audio
- Download Early Experiences in Camp audio
- Download Humorous Incidents audio
- Download Around Yorktown audio
- Download Battle of Seven Pines audio
- Download Gaines' Mill audio
- Download Battle of Second Manassas audio
- Download Second Manassas, Continued audio
- Download Crossing Over Into Maryland audio
- Download Incidents at Fredericksburg audio
- Download In and Around Richmond audio
- Download After Chancellorsville audio
- Download Hood's Texans in Pennsylvania audio
- Download Gettysburg audio
- Download Reminiscences of Chickamauga audio
- Download Forage for Hog Meat audio
- Download A Battle 'Above the Clouds' audio
- Download Strenuous Times in Tennessee audio
- Download The Power of the Fiddle and the Bow audio
- Download Some 'Escape' Stories audio
- Download A Flight to Arms audio
- Download A Thirty Day Furlough audio
- Download Texas in the Battle of the Wilderness audio
- Download Fun in the Trenches audio
- Download Texans in Virginia audio
- Download Hot Skirmishing - Wounded audio
- Download Luxuriating in Feasts and Feather Beds audio
- Download Adventures En Route to Texas audio
- Download Fourth Texas at Gaines' Mill audio
Thể loại sách nói
Tác giả
Giới thiệu
Whether written in camp, in hospital, or in hospitable home, the letters tell a plain, unvarnished, and true story of the observations and experiences, the impressions and feelings, of a soldier whose only personal regret is that he could not be one of those whose paroles at Appomattox are patents incontestable that they fought for the right as they saw it, as long as there was a hope to encourage them. Though not intended as history, they are historical in the respect that they narrate actual occurrences in camp, on the march, and in the battle. The lady to whom all but the last were addressed was no more a myth from 1861 to 1865 than now, when, a gray-haired wife, mother, and grandmother, she presides with the grace and dignity of the truest womanhood over the home made for her by the gallant officer of the Tennessee Army, her first and only beloved, whom she wedded shortly after the close of the war. To her soldier correspondent she was the friend of one more than a friend. It was not until March of 1865 that they ever met. Her letters kept him so well-advised of all that was transpiring in Texas, and were so friendly, entertaining, and altogether "charming," that, without leave or license, he substituted that adjective for the conventional "Miss" to which she was entitled.
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