
关于
Anne Stuart (1665-1714), Queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland, succeeded William III to the throne in 1702. She was the daughter of the deposed Catholic king, James II, but was of the Anglican faith. Liberal, Irish member of Parliament, Justin McCarthy, writing in 1902, creates in sparkling, uncluttered prose a panoramic canvas of Anne and her times. In the second of the two volumes, McCarthy describes the Battle of Malplaquet, where Marlborough meets the French in "a contest of hand-to-hand fighting on a gigantic scale." Then follows "the darkest chapter in the record of Queen Anne's reign," as a parliamentary conspiracy, headed by Bolingbroke, topples Marlborough from power. From Parliament we move to London's coffee houses where Londoners gather to read the "Spectator" and where, in 1714, they anxiously await news of the dying Queen. Scarcely has George I ascended his throne, when Jacobites at home and abroad begin to plot a Stuart Restoration under the son of the ousted James. (Pamela Nagami)
相关有声读物

Theodore Winthrop: A Civil War Narrative Aborted by Death
Theodore Winthrop

Life of Viscount Palmerston
Lloyd Charles Sanders

The Life of Nelson
Robert Southey

Two Diaries From Middle St. John's, Berkeley, South Carolina, February - May, 1865
Susan R. Jervey, Charlotte St. Julien Ravenel, Mary Rhodes Waring Henagan

Campaign For Petersburg
Richard Wayne Lykes

Edward the First
Thomas Frederick Tout

The Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949
International Committee of the Red Cross