Sách nói: Letters of Mrs. Adams, the Wife of John Adams, Vol. 1
Letters of Mrs. Adams, the Wife of John Adams, Vol. 1
1 - 01 - The Memoir, Part 1, The Years 1744-1774
- Download 01 - The Memoir, Part 1, The Years 1744-1774 audio
- Download 02 - Yourthful Letters, 1761-1767 audio
- Download 03 - The Memoir, Part 2 audio
- Download 04 - The Letters, 1774 audio
- Download 05 - Memoir, Part 3, 1775 audio
- Download 06 - Letters, 1775, Part 1 audio
- Download 07 - Letters, 1775, Part 2 audio
- Download 08 - Letters, 1775, Part 3 audio
- Download 09 - Letters, 1775, Part 4 audio
- Download 10 - Memoir, Part 4 audio
- Download 11 - Letters, 1776 audio
- Download 12 - Letters, 1776-1777 audio
- Download 13 - Letters, 1777-1778 audio
- Download 14 - Letters, 1778-1779 audio
- Download 15 - Letters, 1780-1781 audio
- Download 16 - Letters, 1781-1782 audio
- Download 17 - Letters, 1782-1783 audio
- Download 18 - Letters, 1783 audio
- Download 19 - Memoir, Part 5 audio
- Download 20 - Memoir, Part 6 audio
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Tác giả
Giới thiệu
Abigail Adams lived the American Revolution as the wife of one of its central figures--John Adams. Her family correspondence, published along with a memoir by her grandson, Charles Francis Adams, brings that era into eloquent focus. What was it like to hear the cannon's roar from your window? to face pestilence? food shortages? rampant inflation? devalued coinage? to raise four children alone--and earn the money to keep your household afloat, while your husband was engaged in politics and diplomacy miles and oceans away . . . for years at a time? It's all there in her private letters, letters that were never meant for public eyes, letters that she repeatedly asked to be burned!
Writing to her husband, Abigail expressed anguish at nearby fighting: June 18, 1775, "Charlestown is laid in ashes . . . How many have fallen we know not. The constant roar of the cannon is so distressing, that we cannot eat, drink, or sleep." Yet, she displayed constant fortitude: August 5, 1777, "It is almost thirteen years since we were united, but not more than half that time have we had the happiness of living together. The unfeeling world may consider it in what light they please. I consider it as a sacrifice to my country . . ."
And she enlivened her writing with pithy accounts of Revolutionary doings: July 31, 1777, "You must know that there is a great scarcity of sugar and coffee . . . An eminent, wealthy, stingy merchant had a hogshead of coffee in his store, which he refused to sell . . . under six shillings per pound. A number of females . . . assembled with a cart and trucks, marched down to the warehouse, and demanded the keys, which he refused to deliver. Upon which, one of them seized him by his neck . . ." The women "then opened the warehouse, hoisted out the coffee themselves, put it into the truck and drove off. . . .A large concourse of men stood amazed, silent spectators of the whole transaction."
Abigail’s letters, letters of "a vigorous mind," are a fascinating read. (Introduction by Sue Anderson)
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