REFERENCES
Roosevelt's The Winning of the West.
Turner's Rise of the New West.
Hart's National Ideals Historically Traced.
Johnston's High School History of the United States (612 pp.).
Clemens's Life on the Mississippi.
Clemens's Roughing It.
Schurz's Abraham Lincoln. (Excellent.)
Morse's Abraham Lincoln.
Chubb's Selections from the Addresses, Inaugurals, and Letters of Abraham
Lincoln, edited with an Introduction and Notes. (Macmillan's Pocket
Classics.)
Boynton's Bret Harte.
Pemberton's The Life of Bret Harte.
Erskinels Leading American Novelists, pp. 325-379. (Harte.)
Canby's The Short Story in English, Chap. XIV. (Harte.)
Field's The Eugene Field Book, edited by Burt and Cable. (Contains autobiographical matter and Field's best juvenile poems and stories.)
Thompson's Eugene Field, 2 vols.
Field's The Writings in Prose and Verse of Eugene Field, Sabine Edition, 12 vols.
Garland's A Dialogue between James Whitcomb Riley and Hamlin Garland, in
Me duress Magazine, February, 1894.
In Honor of James Whitcomb Riley, with a Brief Sketch of his Life, by Hughes, Beveridge, and Others, Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1906.
Clemens's Autobiography.
Matthews's Biographical Criticism of Mark Twain, in the Introduction to The Innocents Abroad.
Phelps's Essays on Modern Novelists. (Mark Twain; excellent.)
Henderson's Mark Twain, in Harpers Magazine, May, 1909.
Howells's My Mark Twain.