[72] In Adventures and Enthusiasms.
[73] Men and Books and Cities, by Robert Cortes Holliday, pages 196-197.
[74] See also “Stories and Humorists,” in Roving East and Roving West, page 136 et seq., and also “Chicago,” in the same volume. Mr. Holliday’s full account is in Men and Books and Cities, pages 196-203, inclusive, and also page 206.
[75] Books and Persons, pages 153-154. First appeared as a notice of Mr. Lucas’s One Day and Another in The New Age, London, 7 October 1909.
[76] A writer in John o’ London’s Weekly, London. Reprinted in the Boston Evening Transcript of 3 March 1923.
[77] Article by Anne Carroll Moore in The Bookman for November, 1918. Reprinted in her Roads to Childhood.
[78] See [Chapter 12] for an account of Clyde Fitch and His Letters, by Mr. Moses and Miss Gerson.
[79] See [Chapter 11].
[80] See [Chapter 12].
[81] Yes, in These Charming People; but it is a remarkable coincidence that the identical mot appeared conspicuously in Donald Ogden Stewart’s Perfect Behavior, published in America in autumn, 1922. (These Charming People appeared in England in early summer, 1923.)