INDEX
A
- Abbey, Edwin A., [274], [307]
- Accident, its part in literary work, [181]-[185]
- Aldrich, Thomas Bailey, [174], [191], [192]
- Alexander, Gen. E. P., [94]
- America. See United States
- American authors visiting England, [265], [269]
- "American Idea," [296], [297]
- American life, 1840-50, [18]-[20]
- American literature provincial, [269]-[271]
- Americanism, birthplace of, [27]
- Amour, [117]
- Anonymous literary criticism, [203]-[205]
- "Appleseed, Johnny," [141]
- Appleton's Journal, [153], [181]
- Armitage, Rev. Dr., [113]-[115]
- Armstrong, Henry, [291]
- Army of Northern Virginia, [87], [93], [94]
- Arnold, Matthew, [268]
- Arthur, T. S., novels of, [25]
- Ashland, Va., [77]
- Associated Press, [180], [188], [302], [303]
- Astor Library, books mutilated, [271]
- Atlantic Monthly, [148], [149], [181]
- Authors, and editors, [167]-[172];
- Authors Club, organized, [272];
- presidency, [273];
- eligibility, [273];
- meeting-places, [274], [275];
- in Twenty-fourth Street, [277];
- social in character, [277], [278];
- women, [278]-[280];
- plainness of quarters, [280];
- Watch Night, [281], [284];
- diplomats and statesmen, [284];
- "Liber Scriptorum," [285], [286]. Also [85], [176]-[178], [228], [232], [254], [258]
- Authorship, esteemed in Virginia, [66], [67]
- "Autocrat of the Breakfast Table," Holmes's, [219]
B
- "Bab Ballads," Gilbert's, [137]
- Bacon-Shakespeare controversy, [220]
- Bar Harbor, [295], [320]-[326]
- "Barnwell C. H.," [242]
- Bates House, Indianapolis, [28], [29]
- Bath, American habits as to, [30], [31]
- Beauregard, Gen., [87], [237]-[241]
- Beecher, Henry Ward, [108]
- "Ben Bolt," [255]
- Benjamin, Judah P., [237]
- Bernhardt, Sara, [229], [230]
- Berry, Earl D., [290]
- "Big Brother, The," [181]-[183]
- Bigelow, John, [188], [228], [289], [303]
- Bludso, Jim, [160]-[162]
- Blunders, compositors', [241]-[243];
- Bohemianism, [177]
- Book-editing, [234]-[237]
- Book notices, [190]
- Book reviewers, [190]
- Book reviewing, newspaper, [217]
- Book sales, predicting, [252]-[254]
- Book titles, [154]-[157]
- Books, mutilation of, [271];
- in Virginia, [66]
- Booth, Edwin, [275], [276]
- Booth, Postmaster of Brooklyn, [125]
- "Boots and Saddles," Mrs. Custer's, [252]-[254]
- Boston, literary center, [148]
- Boucicault, Dion, [153]
- Bound boys and girls, [14], [16]
- Bowen, Henry C., [100], [128]
- Boys' stories, [181]-[185]
- Bragg, Gen., [238]
- "Breadwinners, The," [165]
- Briars, The, [71]
- Briggs, Charles F., [100]-[107]
- British authors visiting America, [265], [268], [269]
- British condescension, [268]
- Broadway Journal, [100]
- Brooklyn. N. Y., [31], [99], [115], [117]
- Brooklyn Daily Eagle, [126]
- Brooklyn Union, [99], [100], [105], [107], [110], [113], [115], [116], [128]
- Brooks, Elbridge S., [185]
- "Browneyes, Lily," [256]-[258]
- Bryan, Wm. J., and the World in 1896, [324]-[326]. Also [335]-[337]
- Bryant, Wm. C., [68], [129], [143];
- conduct of the N. Y. Evening Post, [187]-[189];
- as a reviewer of books, [190];
- appoints G. C. Eggleston literary editor of the Evening Post, [192]-[194];
- character, [194]-[196];
- relations with Washington Irving, [196]-[198];
- consideration for poets, [199]-[202], [205], [206];
- views of anonymous literary criticism, [203]-[205];
- estimate of Poe, [207];
- Index Expurgatorius, [209]-[213];
- his democracy, [214];
- opinion of English society, [215]-[217];
- estimate of Tennyson and other modern poets, [219];
- his judgment of English literature, [220], [221]
- Bull Run, [78]
- Byron, quoted, [83], [84]
C
- Cairo, Ills., [96], [99]
- "Campaign of Chancellorsville," Dodge's, [208]
- Campbell, Thomas, [254]
- Cannon, Capt. John, [161]
- "Captain Sam," [183]
- Cary, Alice and Phœbe, [137]
- Carlisle, John G., [330], [331]
- Catholicism, [26]
- Cavalry life, [77]-[81]
- Chamberlin, E. O., [329], [330]
- Champlin, John D., [285]
- Chance, its part in literary work, [181]-[185]
- Charleston, S. C., [86], [164], [241]
- Checks, bank, in Virginia, [50]
- Children's stories. See Boys' stories
- Church, Col. Wm. C., [204]
- Civil service system, [235]
- Civil War, changes wrought in Virginia, [73]-[76]
- Clay, Henry, [20]
- Clemens, Samuel L., [150], [160], [259], [265], [281]
- Cleveland, President, [214], [226], [330], [331]
- Coan, Dr. Titus Munson, quoted, [228]
- Cobham Station, [93]
- Cockerill, John A., [122], [308]-[312]
- Co-education, [57]
- Colman, Mr., [198]
- Collins, Tom, [89]-[93]
- Commercial Advertiser. See under New York
- Compositors, [314], [315]
- Condescension, British, [268]
- Congress, U. S., in Tilden-Hayes controversy, [331]-[333]
- Constitution, U. S., [226], [336]
- Conversion, religious, [92]
- Cooke, John Esten, [59], [67], [69]-[72], [151], [240]
- Copy, following, [241]-[243]
- Copyright, [153], [154], [231]-[234], [268]
- Corruption, political, [124]-[126], [334], [335]
- Courtesy in Boston, New York, Virginia, [55], [56]
- Court-martial, [88], [89]
- Coward, Edward Fales, [291]
- Cowley, Abraham, [192]
- Craig, George, [13], [17]
- Creek War, [183]
- Criticism. See Literary criticism
- "Culross," [338]-[344]
- Curtis, George William, [100]
- Curtis, Gen. Newton Martin, [85]
- Custer, Mrs., [252]-[254]
- Cuyler, Dr. Theo. L., quoted, [147]
D
- "Danger in the Dark," [26]
- Daniel, Senator, of Virginia, [85]
- Davis, James, [291]
- Davis, Jefferson, [164], [165], [237]-[241]
- Death-bed repentance, [93]
- Democracy, Bryant's, [214];
- Cleveland's, [214]
- "Democracy," [269]
- Dictation, [341]
- Dictionaries, [210]
- Dime novel, [275], [276]
- Dodd, Mead, and Co., [244]
- Dodge, Mary Mapes, [131], [132]
- Dodge, Col. Theodore, [208]
- Dranesville, Va., [83]
- Dress, Joaquin Miller on, [175], [176];
- Drinking habits. See Temperance
- Dumont, Mrs. Julia L., [9]
- Dupont, Ind., [21]
- Dutcher, Silas B., [125]
- "Dutchmen," [3]
E
- Eagle, Brooklyn. See under Brooklyn
- Early, Jubal A., [76]
- Editorial responsibility, [207]-[209]
- Editorial writing, [110], [313]-[315], [323], [340]
- Editors and authors, [167]-[172]
- Education, backwoods, [9], [10];
- Eggleston, Edward, [21], [22];
- Eggleston, George Cary, early recollections, life in the West in the eighteen-forties, [1]-[20];
- first railroad journey, [21];
- free-thinking, [22];
- early theological thought and reading, [22]-[26];
- school-teaching, [34]-[45];
- Virginia life, [46]-[59];
- occultism, experience of, [60]-[66];
- creed, [75];
- army life, [77];
- cavalry, [77]-[81];
- two experiences, [81]-[85];
- artillery, [86], [87];
- Army of Northern Virginia, [87]-[96];
- legal practice, [99];
- Brooklyn Union, [99]-[129];
- New York Evening Post, [129]-[131];
- Hearth and Home, [131]-[135], [145], [146], [148], [151], [180];
- first books, [146];
- first novel, [151]-[155];
- New Jersey home, [180], [186];
- boys' stories, [181]-[185];
- financial troubles, [186], [187];
- connection with New York Evening Post, [187]-[231];
- acquaintance with W. C. Bryant, [192]-[228];
- adviser of Harper and Brothers, [231], [234], [236];
- literary editor of the Commercial Advertiser, [287];
- managing editor, [288];
- editor-in-chief, [289];
- health, [292], [306];
- editorial writer for the World, [306]-[337];
- retires from journalism, [337];
- literary habits, [338]-[344]
- Eggleston, Guilford Dudley, [184]
- Eggleston, Joseph, [96], [98]
- Eggleston, Joseph Cary, [9], [14], [15]
- Eggleston, Mrs. Mary Jane, [11]
- Eggleston, Judge Miles Cary, [8]
- Eggleston family, home of, [46]
- Election results, predicting, [326]
- Eliot, George, [255]
- Elliot, Henry R., [291]
- "End of the World," E. Eggleston's, [146]
- English, Thomas Dunn, [172], [255]
- English authors. See British authors
- English language, N. Y. Evening Post's standard, [210]-[214];
- English society, [215]-[217]
- Evening Post, The. See under New York
- Extemporaneous writing, [339]-[341]
F
- "Fable for Critics," [101], [106], [195]
- Familiarity, President Cleveland contrasted with W. C. Bryant, [214]
- Farragut, Admiral, quoted, [77]
- Fawcett, Edgar, [153]
- Fellows, Col. John R., [121], [122]
- Fiction, place in 1840-50, [25], [26];
- "First of the Hoosiers," quoted, [145]
- First Regiment of Virginia Cavalry, [77], [78], [81]
- "Flat Creek," [37]
- Florida War, [243]
- Folsom, Dr. François, [291]
- Ford, Paul Leicester, [278], [279], [334]
- Foreigners, American attitude toward, 1840-50, [2], [3]
- Francis, Sir Philip, [223]-[225]
- "Franco, Harry," [100], [106]
- Franklin, Benj., [1], [139]
- Free-thinking, [22]
- Free-trade and protection, [20]
- French Revolution, [108], [109]
- Fulton, Rev. Dr., [113]-[115]
G
- G., Johnny, [43]-[45]
- Galaxy, [181], [204]
- Garfield, Gen., [119]
- George Eliot, [255]
- George, Lake, [335], [337]. See also "Culross"
- Ghost story, [60]-[66]
- Gilbert, W. S., [137]
- Gilder, R. W., [172], [272], [273]
- Godkin, E. L., [230], [231]
- Godwin, Parke, [100], [188], [189], [227]-[230], [286]-[289], [295]-[300], [305]
- Gold coin in Plaquemine in 1886, [248]-[251]
- Gosse, Edmund, [177], [265]-[268]
- Gracie, Gen., [96]
- Grant, President, [93], [125], [126], [127], [244]
- Graphic, The. See under New York
- Grebe, Charley, [37], [39]-[45]
- Greeley, Horace, [139], [167]
H
- Halsted, Dr. Wm. S., [294]
- "Harold," Tennyson's, [218]
- Harper and Brothers, [153], [154], [155], [167], [168], [231], [236], [241], [252], [257], [287], [307]
- Harper, J. Henry, [259]
- Harper, Joseph W., Jr., [154], [168], [252], [253], [267], [285]
- Harper's Magazine, [141]
- Hay, John, [157]-[166], [275], [276]
- Hayden's "Dictionary of Dates," [234]
- Hayes-Tilden controversy, [332]
- Hearth and Home, [35], [36], [131]-[135], [145], [146], [148], [151], [157], [180]
- Hendrickses, the, [8]
- "Henry St. John, Gentleman," [69]
- Herald, The. See under New York
- "Heterophemy," [223]-[225]
- Hewitt, Mr., [291]
- Hill, A. P., [87]
- Hilton, Judge Henry, [121]
- Hirsh, Nelson, [291]
- Historical intuition, [47]
- Holmes, Oliver Wendell, [177];
- Bryant's estimate of, [219]
- Home Journal, [140]
- Hoosier dialect, [8], [14]
- Hoosier life, [145], [146]
- "Hoosier Schoolmaster, The," [34]-[36], [37], [41], [145];
- in England, [233]
- Hospitality, [17], [320]
- Hotels in 1840-50, [28]-[31]
- "Houp-la," Mrs. Stannard's, [154]
- "How to Educate Yourself," [147]
- Howells, Wm. D., [1], [148]-[150], [204], [258]
- Humor, newspaper, [282]-[284]
- "Hundredth Man," Stockton's, [135], [136]
- Hurlbut, Wm. Hen., [177]
- Hutton, Laurence, [272], [274]
I
- Ideas, [297], [312]
- Ignorance in criticism, [226], [227]
- Illicit distilling in Brooklyn, [123]-[128]
- Illustration, newspaper, [179], [180]
- Imperialism, [336], [337]
- Independence, personal, 1840-50, [18]-[20]
- Independent, The. See under New York
- Index Expurgatorius, Bryant's, [209]-[213]
- Indian Territory, [183]
- Indiana, a model in education, [10], [11]
- Indiana Asbury University, [11]
- Indianapolis, Ind., [28]
- Intolerance, [26], [251]
- Introductions, [255]-[264]
- Intuition, historian's, [47]
- Irving, Washington, relations with Bryant, [196]-[198]
J
- Jackson, Mr., [314]
- James, G. P. R., [67], [68]
- Jeffersonianism, [296]
- John, a good name, [42], [43]
- "John Bull, Jr.," O'Rell's, [282]
- Johnson, Gen. Bushrod, [96]
- Johnson, Rossiter, [285]
- Johnson's Dictionary, [210]
- Jokes. See Humor
- Jones, J. B., [275]
- Journalism, [116], [292], [293]. See also Newspapers, Pulitzer
- Judd, Orange, and Co., [132]
- Junius letters, authorship, [223]
K
- "Kate Bonnet," Stockton's, [135], [136]
- Kelly, John, [234]
- Kentuckians in the Northwest, [9]-[11]
- Khedive, [244]
- Kossuth, Louis, [297], [298]
L
- "Lady Gay," steamer, [96]-[98]
- Laffan, Wm. M., [304]
- Lakewood, [328]-[330]
- Language. See English language
- Lanier, Sidney, [262]
- "Last of the Flatboats, The," [185]
- "Late Mrs. Null," Stockton's, [135]
- Lathrop, George Parsons, [150]
- Latin, [33]
- Laziness, [17]
- Lecture system, [108]
- Lee, Fitzhugh, [81]-[84], [86]
- Lee, Gen. Robert E., [240]
- Lee family, [83]
- Letcher, John, [76], [91]
- Letters of introduction, [255]-[264]
- Lewis, Charlton T., [129], [130]
- Libel, [117]-[124], [272]
- "Liber Scriptorum," [285]
- Liberty, [296], [336]
- "Liffith Lank," [156]
- Lincoln, President, [84], [85], [334]
- Lindsay's Turnout, [88]
- Literary aspirants, [255]-[259]
- Literary criticism, anonymous, [203]-[205];
- Literary work, [339]. See also Editorial writing
- "Literati," Poe's, [172]
- Literature, place in 1840-50, [23]-[26]
- "Little Breeches," [157]-[159]
- Local independence, 1840-50, [18]
- Logan, Sidney Strother, [291]
- London, and Joaquin Miller, [173], [174]
- Longfellow, Henry W., [208]
- Longstreet, Gen., [87], [93], [94]
- Loomis, Charles Battell, [283]
- Loring, Gen. W. W., [243]-[247]
- Los Angeles, Cal., [31]
- Lothrop Publishing Company, [185], [263]
- Louisville and Cincinnati Mail Line, [30]
- Lowell, James Russell, [101], [106], [195]
M
- McCabe, Gordon, [267]
- McKane, John Y., [120]
- McKelway, Dr. St. Clair, [126]
- McKinley, President, [162]
- Madison, Ind., [15], [21], [36], [43], [44]
- Madison and Indianapolis Railroad, [13]
- Mallon, George B., [291]
- "Man of Honor, A," [151]-[155]
- "Man of Honor, A," Mrs. Stannard's, [154], [155]
- Manassas, [71], [78]
- Mann, Horace, [33]
- Manufactures, 1840-50, [18]-[20]
- Manuscripts for publication, [171], [172]
- "Manyest-sided man," [143]
- Marquand, Henry, [251], [290], [294]
- "Master of Warlock, The," [155]-[157]
- Matthews, Brander, [204], [269]
- Maynard, Judge, [323], [324]
- Mazeppa, quoted, [83], [84]
- Merrill, Wm. M., [312]-[314]
- Methodism and literature, [23]-[26]
- Mexican War, [243]
- "Military Operations of General Beauregard in the War between the States," Roman's, [237]
- Military prisoners, [88]
- Miller, Joaquin, [172]-[176]
- Mims, Fort, [183]
- Mitchell, Donald G., [131]
- Model, artist's, [274]
- Money, its place in Virginia, [49]-[52]
- Munroe, Capt. Kirk, [257]
- Moody, Dwight, [168]
- Morey letter, [119]
- Morgan Syndicate, 1895-6, [327]-[329]
- Mortar service at Petersburg, [94], [95]
- Moses, ex-Governor, [262]-[264]
- Myths, [47]
N
- Nadeau House, Los Angeles, [31]
- Napoleon, Ind., [5]
- Nash, Thomas, [307]
- Nation, The, [231]
- New Orleans, [3], [4], [96], [98], [183]
- New York authors in 1882, [272]
- New York Commercial Advertiser, [251], [286]-[292]
- New York Evening Sun, [304]
- New York Evening Post, [68], [129], [131], [137], [140], [142], [143];
- New York Graphic, [180]
- New York Herald, [162]
- New York Independent, [100], [107], [110]
- New York Sun, [291], [301], [304]
- New York Times, [101]
- New York Tribune, [105], [129], [159], [164], [165]
- New York World, [120], [121], [122], [185], [291], [292], [303]-[331]
- Newspaper book reviews, [217]
- Newspaper correspondents, [245]-[247]
- Newspaper illustration, [179], [180]
- Newspaper libel suits, [117]-[124]
- Newspapers, character, [189];
- Nicoll, De Lancy, [122]
- Nineteenth Century Club, [296]
- North American Review, [223]
- Novels See Fiction, Scott. Dime novel
O
- Occultism, [60]-[66], [299]
- "On March," Mrs. Stannard's, [155]
- O'Rell, Max, [287], [282]
- Osgood, James R., [306], [307]
P
- Pall Mall Gazette, [188]
- "Paul, John," [285]
- Personalities in newspapers, [189]
- Petersburg, [94]-[98]
- Philp, Kenward, [116]-[119]
- Piatt, Donn, [315]-[319]
- "Pike County Ballads," [157]-[159]
- Piracy, of American publishers, [231], [232];
- of English publishers, [233]
- Plagiarism, [137]-[144];
- Planter's life in Virginia, [50]-[53]
- Plaquemine, [248]-[251]
- Platt, Tom, [319]
- Pocotaligo, [87]
- Poe, Edgar Allan, [100]-[102], [172], [207]
- Poetic ambition, [44], [45]
- Poetry, bad, [199]-[202], [205], [206];
- genuine, [221]
- Political corruption, [124]-[126], [334], [335]
- Political prescience, [326]
- "Poor Whites" in the Northwest, [11], [12]
- Potter, Bishop, [283], [284]
- Poverty in Indiana, 1840-50, [13]
- Preachers, stories of, [158], [162], [166], [167]
- Predicting election results, [326]
- Press. See Newspapers, Journalism
- "Prince Regent," [67], [68]
- Princeton Review, [296]
- Printers. See Compositors, Copy
- Prisoners, military, [88]
- Progress, [75], [76]
- Prohibition, [296]
- Proof-reading, [241]-[243]
- "Proverbial Philosophy," Tupper's, [208], [209]
- Provincialism of American literature, [269]-[271]
- Publishing, uncertainties, [254]
- Pulitzer, Joseph, [214], [303]-[305], [308], [311], [312], [314], [319]-[331]
- Punctuation, serious result of error, [238], [239]
- Putnam, George Haven, [147], [184]
- Putnam, George P., [146], [171]
- "Putnam's Handy Book Series," [136], [147]
- Putnam's Monthly, [101], [171]
R
- Radicalism after Civil War, [108]
- Railroad Iron Battery, [95], [96]-[98]
- Railroads, early, in the West, [20]-[22], [26], [27], [32]-[34]
- Randall, James R., [261], [262]
- Raymond, Henry J., [101]
- "Rebel's Recollections," [148]-[150], [240]
- Reid, Whitelaw, [143], [159], [164]
- "Reirritation," [213]
- Religious intolerance, 1840-50, [26]
- Restfulness of life in Virginia, [48], [49]
- Reviewing. See under Book
- Revision of manuscript, [341]
- Revivals, [168]
- Revue des Deux Mondes, publishes "Hoosier Schoolmaster," [145]
- Rhodes, James Ford, [334]
- Richmond, Arthur, [316], [317]
- Richmond, Va., [67], [68], [69], [84], [85]
- Riddel, John, [42], [43]
- Riker's Ridge, [35]-[45]
- Ripley, George, [167]
- "Rise and fall of the Confederate Government," Davis's, [164], [165]
- Ritchie, Mrs. Anna Cora Mowatt, [67]
- "Robert E. Lee," steamer, [161]
- Roman, Col. Alfred, [237]
- Roman Catholicism. See Catholicism
- Roosevelt, Dr., [294]
- "Rudder Grange," Stockton's, [136]
- Russell, Charles E., [290]
- "Ruth," yacht, [295]
S
- St. Louis newspapers, [327]
- St. Nicholas, [132], [183]
- "St. Twelvemo," [156]
- Sanborn, Frank B., [150]
- Saturday Review, [206]
- Schools and school-teaching, 1850, [32]-[34], [45];
- Schurz, Carl, [208], [230], [332]-[337]
- Scotch-Irish, [9]
- Scott's novels, [275]
- Scott, Gen., [243], [244]
- Sexes, relations in Virginia, [53]-[59]
- Shakespeare, [220], [221]
- Shams of English society, [215]-[217]
- Sherman, Gen., his March to the Sea, [280];
- quoted, on war, [80]
- Shiloh, battle, [238]
- "Shiveree," [14], [15]
- "Shocky," [41]
- Shooting, [14]-[16]
- Sidney, Sir Philip, [224], [225]
- Sieghortner's, [274]
- "Signal Boys, The," [183]
- "Skinning," [139], [144]
- Sloane, Dr. Wm. M., [296]
- Smith, Ballard, [309]
- Social conditions, 1840-50, [18]-[20]
- "Solitary Horseman," [67]
- "Son of Godwin, The," [220]
- "Song of Marion's Men," Bryant's, [196]
- Southern Literary Messenger, [68]
- Spanish-American War, [81]
- Sperry, Watson R., [191], [193], [208], [209]
- Springfield Republican, [208]
- Stannard, Mrs., [154], [155]
- Stapps, the, [8]
- Steamboats, 1850, [30]
- Stedman, E. C., [143], [144], [177], [178], [262]
- Stephens, Alexander H., [223]
- Stevens, Judge Algernon S., [8]
- Stewart, A. T., [121], [122]
- Stockton, Frank R., [133]-[139], [281], [283]
- Stoddard, Richard Henry, [202], [261], [262]
- Stowe, Harriet Beecher, [131]
- "Stranded Goldbug," [251]
- Stuart, J. E. B., [70], [71], [77], [78], [81]
- Sullivan, Judge Algernon S., [8]
- Sumter, Fort, [164]
- Sun, The. See under New York
- Supernatural. See Occultism
- Surnames in fiction, [156]
- "Surrey of Eagle's Nest," [69]
- Swinton, William, [244]
T
- Tariff. See Free trade and protection
- Taylor, Judge, of Madison, [15]
- Temperance, [104], [112]. See also Prohibition
- Tennyson, [143]-[145], [218]
- "Thanatopsis," Bryant's, [221], [222]
- Thompson, John R., [67], [68], [190]
- Thompson, Wm. Gilman, [294]
- Tilden, Samuel J., [228]
- Tilden-Hayes controversy, [332]
- Tile Club, [274], [275]
- Tilton, Theodore, [99], [100], [107]-[116], [125], [129], [259]
- Times, The. See under New York
- Titles, book, [154]-[157]
- Travel, 1840-50, [20], [21], [28]-[30]
- Tribune, The. See under New York
- "Tristram Shandy," saves life, [80]
- Tupper, Martin Farquhar, [208], [209]
- Tuttle, Dr., [294]
- Twain, Mark, [150], [160], [259], [265], [281]
- Tweed, Wm. M., [226]
U
- Union, Brooklyn. See under Brooklyn
- United States, lack of nationality, 1840-50, [6], [7]
- United States Government, bond issue, 1895-6, and the N. Y. World, [327]-[331];
- United States Treasury, [327]-[331]
V
- Vevay, Ind., [2], [18]
- "Victorian Poets," Stedman's, on Tennyson's plagiarism, [143], [144]
- Virginia, home of the Egglestons, [46];
- "Virginia Comedians, The," [69]
- Virginian English, [59]
- "Virginians, The," society, [82]
- Voice, Virginia girls', [59]
W
- Walker, Gen. Lindsay, [87]
- Wappoo Cut, [86]
- War, [70], [71], [80], [81]
- War correspondents, [244], [245]
- Warlock, Mr., [155]-[157]
- Warner, Charles Dudley, [283]
- Washington executive departments, [235], [236]
- Wason, Rev. Hiram, [8]
- Wass, Jerome B., [127]
- Waste, saving, [52]
- Webb, Charles Henry, [156], [285]
- Wedding customs in Indiana, 1840-50, [14], [15]
- West, the, homogeneity in eighteen-forties, [7];
- White, Horace, [230]
- White, Richard Grant, [222]-[225], [274]
- Wickham, Williams C., [77]
- "Wild Western Scenes," Jones's, [275]
- Wilderness, [93]
- Will, story of a, [61], [62]
- Williams, Timothy Shaler, [290]
- Willis, N. P., [68]
- Winter, John Strange, [154], [155]
- Wise, Henry A., [77]
- Wister, Mrs., [142]
- Women, deference to, [56], [57];
- World, The. See under New York
- "Wreck of the Redbird, The," [184], [185]
- Wright, Henry, [291]
Y
- Yachting, [294]
- Yerger, E. M., of Jackson, Miss., [105]
- Yerger, Judge E. M., of Memphis, Tenn., [105]
- Youmans, Dr., [274]
Z
JANE G. PERKINS'S
THE LIFE OF THE HONOURABLE MRS. NORTON
With portrait, 8vo. $3.50 net; by mail, $3.68.
Mrs. Norton was the great Sheridan's grand-daughter, beautiful and witty, the author of novels, poems and songs, contesting contemporary popularity with Mrs. Browning; her influence was potent in politics; Meredith undoubtedly had her in mind when he drew "Diana of the Crossways."
"Reads like a novel ... seems like the page from an old romance, and Miss Perkins has preserved all its romantic charm.... Miss Perkins has let letters, and letters unusually interesting, tell much of the story.... Indeed her biography has all the sustained interest of the novel, almost the irresistible march of fate of the Greek drama. It is eminently reliable."—Boston Transcript.
"Brilliant, beautiful, unhappy, vehement Caroline Norton.... Her story is told here with sympathy, but yet fairly enough ... interesting glimpses ... of the many men and women of note with whom Mrs. Norton was brought into more or less intimate association."—Providence Journal.
"The generous space allowed her to tell her own story in the form of intimate letters is a striking and admirable feature of the book."—The Dial.
"She was an uncommonly interesting personage and the memoir ... has no dull spots and speedily wins its way to a welcome."—New York Tribune.
"So exceptional and vivid a personality ... of unusual quality ... very well written."—The Outlook.
YUNG WING'S
MY LIFE IN CHINA AND AMERICA
With portrait, 8vo. $2.50 net; by mail, $2.65.
The author's account of his early life in China, his education at Yale, where he graduated in 1854 (LL.D., 1876), his return to China and adventures during the Taiping rebellion, his intimate association with Tsang Kwoh Fan and Li Hung Chang, and finally his great work for the "Chinese Educational Movement" furnish highly interesting and good reading.
"It is his native land that is always the great heroic character on the stage his mind surveys; and his mental grasp is as wide as his domiciliation. A great life of action and reflection and the experiences of two hemispheres. It is not so much a knowledge of isolated facts that is to be got from the book as an understanding of the character of the Chinese race."—Hartford Courant.
"There is not a dull line in this simply told but fascinating biography."—Literary Digest.
"He has given Occidental readers an opportunity to behold the machinery of Chinese custom and the substance of Chinese character in action. No foreigner could possibly have written a work so instructive, and no untravelled native could have made it intelligible to the West ... a most interesting story both in the telling and in the acting.... Mr. Yung presents each of his readers with a fragment of China herself."—Living Age.
HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
By R. M. JOHNSTON
Assistant Professor in Harvard University
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
A Short History. 12mo, 278 pp., with special bibliographies following each chapter, and index. $1.25 net; by mail, $1.37.
"An almost ideal book of its kind and within its scope ... a clear idea of the development and of the really significant men of events of that cardinal epoch in the history of France and Europe is conveyed to readers, many of whom will have been bewildered by the anecdotal fulness or the rhetorical romancing of Professor Johnston's most conspicuous predecessors."—Churchman.
"Deserves to take rank as a little classic and as such to be given a place in all libraries. Not only is this admirably written, but it singles out the persons and events best worth understanding, viewing the great social upheaval from a long perspective."—San Francisco Chronicle.
NAPOLEON
A Short Biography. 12mo. 248 pp., with special bibliographies following each chapter, and index. $1.25 net; by mail, $1.37.
"Scholarly, readable, and acute."—Nation.
"It is difficult to speak with moderation of a work so pleasant to read, so lucid, so skillful."—Boston Transcript.
"A quite admirable book."—London Spectator.
"The style is clear, concise and readable."—London Athenæum.
"In a small volume of less than 250 pages he gives us a valuable key to the history of the European Continent from the Reign of Terror to the present day."—London Morning Post.
LEADING AMERICAN SOLDIERS
Biographies of Washington, Greene, Taylor, Scott, Andrew Jackson, Grant, Sherman, Sheridan, McClellan, Meade, Lee, "Stonewall" Jackson, Joseph E. Johnston. With portraits. 1 vol. $1.75 net; by mail $1.88.
In the "Leading Americans" series. Prospectus of the series on request.
"Performs a real service in preserving the essentials."—Review of Reviews.
"Very interesting.... Much sound originality of treatment, and the style is clear."—Springfield Republican.
⁂ If the reader will send his name and address, the publishers will send, from time to time, information regarding their new books.
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WILLIAM DE MORGAN'S
IT NEVER CAN HAPPEN AGAIN
The story of the great love of "Blind Jim" and his little girl, and of the affairs of a successful novelist. Fourth printing. $1.75.
"William De Morgan at his very best."—Independent.
"Another long delightful voyage with the best English company. The story of a child certainly not less appealing to our generation than Little Nell was to hers."—New York Times Saturday Review.
WILLIAM DE MORGAN'S
SOMEHOW GOOD
The dramatic story of some modern English people in a strange situation. Fourth printing. $1.75.
"A book as sound, as sweet, as wholesome, as wise, as any in the range of fiction."—The Nation.
"Our older novelists (Dickens and Thackeray) will have to look to their laurels, for the new one is fast proving himself their equal. A higher quality of enjoyment than is derivable from the work of any other novelist now living and active in either England or America."—The Dial.
WILLIAM DE MORGAN'S
ALICE-FOR-SHORT
The story of a London waif, a friendly artist, his friends and family. Seventh printing. $1.75.
"Really worth reading and praising ... will be hailed as a masterpiece. If any writer of the present era is read a half century hence, a quarter century, or even a decade, that writer is William De Morgan."—Boston Transcript.
"It is the Victorian age itself that speaks in those rich, interesting, over-crowded books.... Will be remembered as Dickens's novels are remembered."—Springfield Republican.
WILLIAM DE MORGAN'S
JOSEPH VANCE
A novel of life near London in the 50's. Tenth printing. $1.75.
"The book of the last decade; the best thing in fiction since Mr. Meredith and Mr. Hardy; must take its place as the first great English novel that has appeared in the twentieth century."—Lewis Melville in New York Times Saturday Review.
"If the reader likes both 'David Copperfield' and 'Peter Ibbetson,' he can find the two books in this one."—The Independent.
⁂ A twenty-four page illustrated leaflet about Mr. De Morgan, with complete reviews of his books, sent on request.
HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
"The most important biographic contribution to musical literature since the beginning of the century, with the exception of Wagner's Letters to Frau Wesendonck."
—H. T. Finck, in the New York Evening Post.
(Circular with complete review and sample pages on application.)
Personal Recollections of Wagner
By ANGELO NEUMANN
Translated from the fourth German edition by Edith Livermore. Large 12mo. 318 pp., with portraits and one of Wagner's letters in facsimile. $2.50 net; by mail $2.65.
Probably no man ever did more to make Wagner's music dramas known than Angelo Neumann, who, with his famous "Wagner Travelling Theatre," carrying his artists, orchestra, scenery and elaborate mechanical devices, toured Germany, Holland, Belgium, Italy, Austria and Russia, and with another organization gave "The Ring" in London. But the account of this tour, interesting as it is, is not the main feature of his book, which abounds in intimate glimpses of Wagner at rehearsals, at Wahnfried and elsewhere, and tells much of the great conductor, Anton Seidl, so beloved by Americans. Among other striking figures are Nikisch and Muck, both conductors of the Boston Symphony orchestra, Mottl, the Vogls, Von Bulow, Materna, Marianna Brandt, Klafsky, and Reicher-Kindermann.
It is doubtful if any book gives a more vivid and truthful picture of life and "politics" behind the scenes of various opera houses. Many of the episodes, such as those of a bearded Brynhild, the comedy writer and the horn player and the prince and the Rhinedaughter are decidedly humorous.
The earlier portions of the book tell of the Leipsic negotiations and performances, the great struggle with Von Hülsen, the royal intendant at Berlin, Bayreuth and "Parsifal." Many of Wagner's letters appear here for the first time.
ILLUSTRATIONS.—Richard Wagner: Bust by Anton zur Strassen in the foyer of the Leipsic Stadttheater.—Angelo Neumann: From a picture in the Künstlerzimmer of the Leipsic Stadttheater.—Anton Seidl: Bas-relief by Winifred Holt of New York. Replica commissioned by Herr Direktor Neumann.—Hedwig Reicher-Kindermann—Facsimile of letter from Wagner to Neumann, received after the news of Wagner's death.
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RICHARD BURTON'S
MASTERS OF THE ENGLISH NOVEL
A study of principles and personalities by the Professor of English Literature, University of Minnesota, author of "Literary Likings," "Forces in Fiction," "Rahab" (a Poetic Drama), etc. 12mo, 331 pp. and index. $1.25 net.
"Noteworthy American volume of literary criticism ... a well-balanced, discerning and unhackneyed study ... delightfully readable.... In his judgment of individual books and authors Mr. Burton is refreshingly sane and trustworthy ... an inspiring survey of the whole trend of fiction from Richardson to Howells, with a valuable intermediary chapter on Stendhal and the French realists, all presented in a style of genuine charm and rare flexibility ... may be warranted to interest and inspire any serious lover of fiction."—Chicago Record-Herald.
"Rare sympathy and scholarly understanding ... book that should be read and re-read by every lover of the English novel."—Boston Transcript.
RICHARD BURTON'S
RAHAB, A DRAMA OF THE FALL OF JERICHO
119 pp., 12mo. $1.25 net; by mail, $1.33. With cast of characters for the first performance and pictures of the scenes.
"A poetic drama of high quality. Plenty of dramatic action."—New York Times Review.
WILLIAM MORTON PAYNE'S
THE GREATER ENGLISH POETS OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
383 pp., large 12mo. $2.00 net; by mail, $2.15. Studies of Keats, Shelley, Byron, Coleridge, Wordsworth, Landor, Browning, Tennyson, Arnold, Rossetti, Morris, and Swinburne. Their outlook upon life rather than their strictly literary achievement is kept mainly in view.
"The sound and mellow fruits of his long career as a critic.... There is not a rash, trivial, or dull line in the whole book.... Its charming sanity has seduced me into reading it to the end, and anyone who does the same will feel that he has had an inspiring taste of everything that is finest in nineteenth-century poetry. Ought to be read and reread by every student of literature, and most of all by those who have neglected English poetry, for here one finds its essence in brief compass."—Chicago Record-Herald.
If the reader will send his name and address, the publishers will send, from time to time, information regarding their new books.
HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
BEULAH MARIE DIX'S
ALLISON'S LAD AND OTHER MARTIAL INTERLUDES
$1.35 net; by mail, $1.44.
Allison's Lad, The Hundredth Trick, The Weakest Link, The Snare and the Fowler, The Captain of the Gate, The Dark of the Dawn.
These one-act plays, despite their impressiveness, are perfectly practicable for performance by clever amateurs; at the same time they make decidedly interesting reading.
Six stirring war episodes. Five of them occur at night, and most of them in the dread pause before some mighty conflict. Three are placed in Cromwellian days (two in Ireland and one in England), one is at the close of the French Revolution, another at the time of the Hundred Years' War, and the last during the Thirty Years' War. The author has most ingeniously managed to give the feeling of big events, though employing but few players. Courage, vengeance, devotion and tenderness to the weak, are among the emotions effectively displayed.
CONSTANCE D'ARCY MACKAY'S
THE HOUSE OF THE HEART
And Other Plays for Children
Ten well-written one-act plays to be acted by children. A satisfactory book to fill a real need. $1.10 net; by mail, $1.15.
"Each play contains a distinct lesson, whether of courage, gentle manners, or contentment. The settings are simple and the costumes within the compass of the schoolroom. Full directions for costumes, scene setting, and dramatic action are given with each play. All of them have stood the test of actual production."—Preface.
CONTENTS:
"The House of the Heart" (Morality Play)—"The Gooseherd and the Goblin" (Comedy, suitable for June exercises)—"The Enchanted Garden" (Flower Play, suitable for June exercises)—"Nimble Wit and Fingerkin" (Industrial Play)—"A Little Pilgrim's Progress" (Morality Play, suitable for Thanksgiving)—"A Pageant of Hours" (To be given Out of Doors)—"On Christmas Eve"—"The Elf Child"—"The Princess and the Pixies"—"The Christmas Guest" (Miracle Play).
"An addition to child drama which has been sorely needed."—Boston Transcript.
⁂ If the reader will send his name and address the publishers will send, from time to time, information regarding their new books.
HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
34 WEST 33D STREET NEW YORK