The Powder of Sympathy
Christopher Morley
Leído por LibriVox Volunteers





Another collection of mostly short “soliloquys” from Christopher Morley, an American literary luminary, who introduces them thus: “… these pieces were written, day by day, out of the pressure and hilarity and contention of the mind. I have made no attempt to conceal their ephemeral origin. They were almost all written for a newspaper, and contain many references to journalism. … it is remarkable that they should have been written at all: remarkable that any newspaper should take the pains to offer space to speculations of this sort. I have not scrupled, on occasion, to chaff some of the matters newspapers are supposed to hold sacred. …
But a columnist … is only a deboshed Editorial Writer, a fallen angel abjected from the secure heaven of anonymity. … unsuspecting whether intended by his scheming employer as a decoy, or a doormat, or a gargoyle, or a lightning rod (how is he to know, never having been given instruction of any sort except to go ahead and write as he pleases?) … [T]he columnist pursues his task and gradually distils a philosophy of his own out of his duties. Oddly enough, instead of growing more cautious by reason of his exposure, he becomes almost dangerously candid. He knows that if he is wrong he will be set right the next morning by a stack of letters varying in number according to the nature of his indiscretion. - Summary by Winnifred Assmann and excerpts from the Preface
Note: "The word ... niggardly [used in section 42, is] ... etymologically unrelated to the highly offensive and inflammatory racial slur euphemistically referred to as the N-word, despite the ... visual and auditory resemblance to it." Merriam-Webster (8 hr 2 min)
Capítulos
Epigraph and Dedication | 7:24 | Leído por Winnifred Assmann |
An Oxford Symbol | 10:14 | Leído por Winnifred Assmann |
Scapegoats | 7:38 | Leído por quartertone |
To a New Yorker a Hundred Years Hence | 6:12 | Leído por Winnifred Assmann |
A Call for the Author | 4:25 | Leído por ChristopherKloko |
Mr. Pepys’s Christmases | 8:47 | Leído por John Leloup |
Children as Copy | 8:18 | Leído por Winnifred Assmann |
Hail, Kinsprit! | 3:56 | Leído por quartertone |
Round Manhattan Island | 6:36 | Leído por quartertone |
The Unknown Citizen | 6:42 | Leído por quartertone |
Sir Kenelm Digby | 29:05 | Leído por John Leloup |
First Impressions of an Amiable Visitor | 6:21 | Leído por Natalie Fortier |
In Honorem: Martha Washington | 5:54 | Leído por Stacey Malcolm |
According to Hoyle | 4:40 | Leído por SC1701 |
L. E. W. | 4:55 | Leído por Mu |
Our Extension Course | 5:36 | Leído por CCam |
Some Recipes | 6:34 | Leído por Mu |
Adventures of a Curricular Engineer | 7:13 | Leído por SC1701 |
Santayana in the Subway | 13:16 | Leído por valroth |
Madonna of the Taxis | 6:26 | Leído por valroth |
Matthew Arnold and Exodontia | 16:58 | Leído por John Leloup |
Dame Quickly and the Boilroaster | 9:52 | Leído por Amos Buchanan |
Vacationing with De Quincey | 31:39 | Leído por John Leloup |
The Spanish Sultry | 7:21 | Leído por John Leloup |
What Kind of a Dog? | 4:25 | Leído por Winnifred Assmann |
A Letter from Gissing | 4:24 | Leído por Winnifred Assmann |
July 8, 1822 | 6:40 | Leído por AlexaTindallVA |
Midsummer in Salamis | 8:12 | Leído por tshoes76 |
The Story of Ginger Cubes | 41:38 | Leído por tshoes76 |
The Editor at the Ball Game | 11:02 | Leído por AlexaTindallVA |
The Dame Explores Westchester | 10:46 | Leído por Amos Buchanan |
The Power and the Glory | 5:59 | Leído por SC1701 |
Gissing Joins a Country Club | 9:15 | Leído por Winnifred Assmann |
Three Stars on the Back Stoop | 7:28 | Leído por John Leloup |
A Christmas Card | 7:30 | Leído por John Leloup |
Symbols and Paradoxes | 8:10 | Leído por John Leloup |
The Return to Town | 7:11 | Leído por SC1701 |
Maxims and Minims | 54:46 | Leído por tshoes76 |
Two Reviews | 15:21 | Leído por tshoes76 |
Buddha on the L | 12:08 | Leído por Frederick O'Brien |
Intellectuals and Roughnecks | 14:24 | Leído por Ann Boulais |
The Fun of Writing | 5:02 | Leído por April6090 |
A Christmas Soliloquy | 22:21 | Leído por Ann Boulais |