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THE SHIP OF STATE, BY THOSE AT THE HELM. Ginn. .40
Twelve articles describing the life and duties of the servants of the nation. Among the subjects included are The Presidency, by Roosevelt; The Life of a Senator, by Lodge; How Jack Lives, by Long; Good Manners and Diplomacy, by Day; The American Post Office, by Wilson.
TAPPAN, E.M. (p. 176) In the Days of Queen Victoria. Lothrop. 1.00
The celebrated reign of the good queen is faithfully portrayed.
Queen, as true to womanhood as Queenhood, Glorying in the glories of her people, Sorrowing with the sorrows of the lowest! . . . . . . . . . . Henry's fifty years are all in shadow, Gray with distance Edward's fifty summers, Ev'n her Grandsire's fifty half forgotten. TENNYSON.
WHITE, J.S. (Editor). The Boys' and Girls' Plutarch. Putnam. 1.75
Plutarch wrote a hundred books and was never dull. Most of these have been lost, but the portions which remain have found, with the exception of Holy Writ, more readers through eighteen centuries than the works of any other writer of ancient times.—Introduction.
If any substitute for a full translation is desired, this abridgment will serve. It is illustrated.
WRIGHT, H.C. Children's Stories of the Great Scientists. Scribner. 1.25
Miss Wright's language is picturesque and interesting. These sixteen chapters on the famous scientists from Galileo to Darwin and Huxley will fascinate intelligent children.
ZIMMERN, ALICE. Greek History for Young Readers. Longmans. 1.00
A simple, scholarly history; the English excellent. There are maps (p. 177) and many uncommonly good illustrations.
FINE ARTS
Where gripinge grefes the hart would wounde, And dolefulle dumps the mynde oppresse, There musicke with her silver-sound With spede is wont to send redresse. Attributed to RICHARD EDWARDS.
CHAMPLIN, J.D. The Young Folks' Cyclopaedia of Literature and Art. Holt. 3.00
In this an attempt has been made to give a brief account of the acknowledged masterpieces in literature and in art, the latter term being understood to include architecture, sculpture, painting, and music.—Preface.
Short descriptions of great books, popular fairy tales, notable characters and objects in fiction, celebrated buildings, statues, pictures, and operas, are included in this fully illustrated volume.
GEOGRAPHY, TRAVEL, AND DESCRIPTION
When all the world is young, lad, And all the trees are green; And every goose a swan, lad, And every lass a queen: Then hey for boot and horse, lad, And round the world away; Young blood must have its course, lad, And every dog his day. KINGSLEY.
DANA, R.H. (p. 178) Two Years Before the Mast. Houghton. 1.00
It does not often happen that a young man of twenty-five writes a book which becomes a classic in the language.... Yet this is the history of Dana's Two Years before the Mast.—Biographical Sketch.
The author, a boy of nineteen, left Harvard College in 1834 and shipped as a sailor, hoping by this open-air life to cure a serious weakness of the eyes. He sailed around Cape Horn, coasted along the California shore, and returned home by the same route.
EASTMAN, C.A. Indian Boyhood. Illustrated by E.L. Blumenschein. Doubleday. 1.60
Dr. Eastman is himself a Sioux, and this account is the record of his own youth among this wild people when their warriors went on the warpath against the "Big Knives," and his highest ambition was to join them.
FINNEMORE, JOHN. India. Illustrated by Mortimer Menpes. Macmillan. .75
We journey to the court of a native prince, travel through the bazaars, and visit village, jungle, and even the great Himalayas themselves. The book is particularly interesting, because India is less well known to young people than many other lands. Of the twelve colored pictures, two are specially good,—a tailor at work, and a (p. 179) Sikh warrior.
FINNEMORE, JOHN. Japan. Illustrated by Ella du Cane. Macmillan. .75
The volume is devoted rather to the habits, manners, and customs, of this wonderful people than to a description of the country itself. Boy and girl life, games, feast-days, the occupations of a Japanese day, the police, and the soldier, are told about in an entertaining manner. There are eight plates in color.
JENKS, TUDOR. The Boy's Book of Explorations. Doubleday. 2.00
A satisfactory introduction to exploration in general, and a comprehensive account of the travel and discovery of recent times in Africa, Asia, and Australia. The journeys of Livingstone, Stanley, and many other well-known African explorers, are related; Rockhill's adventures in Tibet; the experiences of Hedin and Landor; and the opening up of Australia. The beauty of Livingstone's character is dwelt upon. Maps and many illustrations add to the book's value.
LANG, JOHN. The Story of Captain Cook. Dutton. .50
A brief life of England's great explorer, giving details of his three famous voyages and his tragic end. There are eight pictures in color.
LEE, YAN PHOU. (p. 180) When I was a Boy in China. Lothrop. .75
This informing sketch of Chinese boyhood is by a native who left home at the age of twelve years to be educated in the United States.
PARKMAN, FRANCIS. The Oregon Trail. Illustrated by Frederic Remington. Little. 2.00
Valuable not only as literature, but in that it gives the personal experiences of an intelligent observer in crossing the plains, long before the building of a trans-continental railway. Parkman made this trip in 1846.
The Wild West is tamed, and its savage charms have withered. If this book can help to keep their memory alive, it will have done its part. It has found a powerful helper in the pencil of Mr. Remington, whose pictures are as full of truth as of spirit, for they are the work of one who knew the prairies and the mountains before irresistible commonplace had subdued them.—Preface to the Illustrated Edition.
PLUMMER, M.W. Roy and Ray in Canada. Holt. 1.75
"This companion volume to Roy and Ray in Mexico embodies much that is interesting concerning Canadian history, manners, and customs.... The book will be useful as a travel guide, but it is primarily intended to cover a hitherto neglected field for children." Illustrated from photographs, with map, and words and music of Canadian national songs.
Our old friends Roy and Ray enjoyed their trip through Eastern (p. 181) Canada, and so will the boys and girls who join them on their travels.
STARR, FREDERICK. American Indians. Heath. .45
Mr. Starr, an acknowledged authority, tells us of many different Indian tribes; their language, customs, picture-writing, dances, and ceremonies. The author has himself had acquaintance with some thirty tribes. The book is very fully and satisfactorily illustrated.
MYTHOLOGY, FOLK-LORE, LEGENDS, AND FAIRY TALES
Those that Hobgoblin call you and sweet Puck, You do their work, and they shall have good luck. SHAKSPERE.
KIPLING, RUDYARD. Puck of Pook's Hill. Illustrated by Arthur Rackham. Doubleday. 1.50
To Dan and Una, sitting, on Midsummer's Eve, in the old fairy ring, appears Puck. By his magic power on this and succeeding visits incidents based on events in Old England's history are told to the children by those who shared in them. A series of remarkable stories, alternating with even more remarkable poems. The average child will better enjoy hearing them read aloud, as they presuppose a fuller (p. 182) knowledge of English history than most American children are likely to possess. Mr. Rackham's pictures in color are fine work.
POETRY, COLLECTIONS OF POETRY AND PROSE, AND STORIES ADAPTED FROM GREAT AUTHORS
Olympian bards who sung Divine ideas below, Which always find us young And always keep us so. EMERSON.
LANG, ANDREW. The Blue Poetry Book. Longmans. 2.00
The Editor trusts that this book may be a guide into romance and fairy-land to many children.... By way of lending no aid to what is called Education, very few notes have been added. The child does not want everything to be explained; in the unexplained is great pleasure. Nothing, perhaps, crushes the love of poetry more surely and swiftly than the use of poems as schoolbooks.—Introduction.
This excellent collection, for the most part British verse, contains a large proportion of Scotch songs and ballads. The productions of contemporary poets are not included.
LANIER, SIDNEY. The Boy's Percy. Scribner. 2.00
Old Ballads of War, Adventure, and Love, from Bishop Thomas (p. 183) Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry.—Title-page.
But, passing far beyond the plans of these small antiquarian pleasures, Percy's book immediately enriched our whole ordinary existence by making common property of those golden figures which the undying ballad-maker had enameled into the solid tissue of English life.... Each ballad is given here exactly as it stands in the original except that the spelling has been modernized and such parts cut away as cleanliness required.—Introduction.
NORTON, C.E. (Editor). Heart of Oak Books. Volume VI. Masterpieces of Literature. Heath. .55
The worth of the masterpieces of any art increases with use and familiarity of association. They grow fresher by custom; and the love of them deepens in proportion to the time we have known them, and to the memories with which they have become invested.—Preface.
REPPLIER, AGNES (Editor). A Book of Famous Verse. Houghton. 1.25
In selecting these few poems I have had no other motive than to give pleasure to the children who may read them; and I have tried to study their tastes, and feelings, and desires.—Introduction.
Though issued in 1892, Miss Repplier's excellent collection still holds its own among the very best, because of the high quality and interest of the poems chosen. The little book is of a most convenient size to carry about with one.
RELIGION AND ETHICS (p. 184)
Who is the happy Warrior? Who is he That every man in arms should wish to be? —It is the generous Spirit, who, when brought Among the tasks of real life, hath wrought Upon the plan that pleased his boyish thought: Whose high endeavors are an inward light That makes the path before him always bright. WORDSWORTH.
CARRUTH, W.H. Letters to American Boys. American Unitarian Association. .80
Uncle William (who in real life is Vice Chancellor of the University of Kansas) has a series of clear-headed talks with the boys on reading, sports, manners, various professions, and politics. He is never patronizing, and always has the boy's point of view in mind.
GILLIE, R.C. The Kinsfolk and Friends of Jesus. Macmillan. 2.25
This sequel to The Story of Stories, is told in simple language. The illustrations, part of them in color, are from famous paintings.
SCIENCE, OUT-OF-DOOR BOOKS, AND STORIES OF ANIMALS (p. 185)
Science is, like virtue, its own exceeding great reward. KINGSLEY.
BAKER, R.S. Boy's Second Book of Inventions. Doubleday. 1.60
This second volume is like unto the first in giving accounts of recent marvellous discoveries and inventions, such as radium, flying machines, and the seismograph, used in the measurement of earthquakes. It is fully illustrated.
BLANCHAN, NELTJE (Pseudonym of Mrs. N.B. (DEG.) Doubleday). Birds That Hunt and Are Hunted. Doubleday. 2.00
Illustrated with full-page color plates. Non-technical. Birds grouped according to size and color; no specific color key. Rather full biographies. There are chapters giving the characteristics of the families, the habitats, and the seasons of occurrence. AUDUBON SOCIETY.
One hundred and seventy birds of prey, game birds, and water-fowls, are described. The color plates are forty-eight in number.
DICKERSON, M.C. The Frog Book. Doubleday. 4.00
"The original manuscript for this book concerned Toads and (p. 186) Frogs of Northeastern North America only.... Brief accounts of the species of other parts of North America were added later."
There are sixteen pages of color plates and nearly three hundred half-tones from photographs from life by the author. The wonderful transformation of the tadpole is fully described.
GOOD, ARTHUR. Magical Experiments. McKay. 1.25
Some of the wonders here described are intended merely for amusement, others are of a scientific character and designed to act as an introduction to the study of Physics. No apparatus is needed beyond the simple articles, such as knives, forks, and plates, which every household possesses. The book is instructive and entertaining alike to experimenter and observer.
HEILPRIN, ANGELO. The Animal Life of Our Sea-shore. Lippincott. 1.25
An authoritative manual, prepared with special reference to the New Jersey coast and the Southern shore of Long Island. It is fully illustrated.
HOWARD, L.O. The Insect Book. Doubleday. 3.00
Dr. Howard, Chief of the Division of Entomology, United States Department of Agriculture, and the foremost authority in this (p. 187) country, gives us full life-histories of the bees, wasps, ants, grasshoppers, flies, and other North American insects—exclusive of the butterflies, moths, and beetles. A separate section is devoted to the subject of collecting and preserving the different specimens. There are sixteen pages of color plates, thirty-two pages of half-tones, and about three hundred black and white text illustrations.
MOFFETT, CLEVELAND. Careers of Danger and Daring. Century. 1.50
Vivid accounts of the courage and achievements of steeple-climbers, deep-sea divers, balloonists, ocean and river pilots, bridge-builders, firemen, acrobats, wild-beast trainers, locomotive engineers, and the men who handle dynamite. CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH.
MORLEY, M.W. Grasshopper Land. McClurg. 1.25
Not only the grasshoppers but other family members of the Orthoptera are here described, including mantes, walking-sticks, katydids, and crickets. There is a long and interesting account of locusts and their migrations. The text illustrations are many and satisfactory.
The poetry of earth is never dead: When all the birds are faint with the hot sun, And hide in cooling trees, a voice will run From hedge to hedge about the new-mown mead. That is the grasshopper's—he takes the lead (p. 188) In summer luxury—he has never done With his delights, for when tired out with fun, He rests at ease beneath some pleasant weed. KEATS.
PARSONS, F.T. (S.) (formerly MRS. W.S. DANA). How to Know the Wild Flowers. Scribner. 2.00
Every flower-lover who has spent weary hours puzzling over a botanical key in the efforts to name unknown plants will welcome this satisfactory book, which stands ready to lead him to the desired knowledge by a royal road. The book is well fitted to the need of many who have no botanical knowledge and yet are interested in wild flowers.—The Nation.
The primary characteristic of this guide to the names, haunts, and habits, of our common wild flowers is that, in moderate compass, it groups and describes them under their different colors. This arrangement was suggested by a passage in one of John Burroughs's Talks about Flowers. There are indices to the Latin and English names and to technical terms. The forty-eight full-page colored and one hundred and ten black and white illustrations are of value.
ST. JOHN, T.M. Real Electric Toy-Making for Boys. St. John. 1.00
Sufficient directions for making and using many simple electric toys.
SHALER, N.S. (p. 189) A First Book in Geology. Heath. .60
It is difficult to see how this subject could be made more interesting to beginners. The fully illustrated volume is of a handy size to be carried on geological tramps.
STORIES
The first time I read an excellent book, it is to me just as if I had gained a new friend. When I read over a book I have perused before, it resembles the meeting with an old one. GOLDSMITH.
ALCOTT, L.M. Little Men. Illustrated by R.B. Birch. Little. 2.00
This sequel to Little Women tells of the home school which Jo and her husband loved and worked for, and from which they sent out into the world, as men, the boys who had sorely needed their loving care.
BARBOUR, R.H. For the Honor of the School. Appleton. 1.50
A satisfactory account of modern boarding-school life. Its standards are good and its tone healthy and sound. There are descriptions of a cross-country race, a foot-ball game, a base-ball match, and interscholastic track athletics. Lads, however, enjoy the writings of this author to such an extent that many, doubtless, read them to (p. 190) the exclusion of more worthy books.
BARBOUR, R.H. Four in Camp. Appleton. 1.50
The compiler of this List believes that young people as well as old occasionally wish for light literature. This story of vacation days spent in a summer camp for boys in the New Hampshire woods is pleasantly diverting. Its standards make for self-control, courage, honesty, and good-fellowship.
CHURCH, A.J. A Young Macedonian in the Army of Alexander the Great. Putnam. 1.25
Young folks of today will like to read of the lad who took part in the great struggle between Macedonia and Persia. Alexander's visit to Jerusalem, recorded by Josephus, is related, and mention is made of Demosthenes and Diogenes.
COOPER, J.F. The Pilot. Houghton. 1.00
From the boy's point of view, any legitimate need for concealment gives an added charm to a narrative, and this account of the secret expedition of John Paul Jones to the English coast is no exception.
COOPER, J.F. (p. 191) The Spy. Houghton. 1.00
Story of the Revolution and the "neutral grounds" around White Plains. The hero, the spy, is a cool, shrewd, fearless man, who is employed by General Washington in service which involves great personal hazard. CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH.
COTES, S.J. (D.). The Story of Sonny Sahib. Appleton. 1.00
The experiences of a little English boy saved, when a baby, by his ayah, at the time of the Cawnpore Massacre, and brought up at the court of the Maharajah of Lalpore. Learning that the English are about to attack the city, Sonny seeks his countrymen, refusing however to give any information in regard to the Maharajah's defenses. In the camp he finds his father, Colonel Starr.
DIX, B.M. Merrylips. Macmillan. 1.50
The adventures of a little Cavalier maiden during the civil wars that led to the establishment of Cromwell. Merrylips, who had always wished to be a lad, is obliged to wander in the disguise of boy's clothing, and through her experiences learns to prefer to be herself, Mistress Sybil Venner. In all her vicissitudes she proves herself a steadfast servant of the King. While the book pictures the rude times of war, the charm of womanliness is emphasized throughout.
DIX, B.M. (p. 192) Soldier Rigdale. Macmillan. 1.50
An account of Mayflower days and the founding of the Plymouth colony. Miles Rigdale and little Dolly lose both mother and father. Dolly is brought up by Mistress Brewster, while Miles finally goes to live with Captain Standish. This faithful relation of the privations our ancestors endured ends with the arrival of the ship Fortune with reinforcements for the colony.
EWING, J.H. Jackanapes. Daddy Darwin's Dovecot. The Story of a Short Life. With a sketch of her life by her sister, H.K.F. Gatty. Little. .50
@JACKANAPES.
We love the golden-haired army baby who lived to fight and die with glory for Old England. The atmosphere of the tale is most charming.
DADDY DARWIN'S DOVECOT.
In the beautiful English country dwell old Daddy Darwin and Jack March, the little workhouse boy. A delightful anecdote is told about the pigeons, of whom Jack says, "I love them tumblers as if they was my own."
@THE STORY OF A SHORT LIFE.
The inspiring story of the life of a boy—a short life filled with glorious bravery. This English army sketch is so sad that it should be read by the parent before deciding to give it to a child.
FRENCH, ALLEN. (p. 193) Heroes of Iceland. Little. 1.50
Iceland in the tenth century is pictured for us in this adaptation from Sir George Webbe Dasent's translation of The Story of Burnt Njal—the Njal's Saga. It was this century that saw the change of faith of a brave heathen people.
But at the same time, during their long winters, the Icelanders wrote the tales of their own early times, which are still too little known. This book contains the greatest of them, a saga or story which is to be compared, in interest and beauty, with the great epics of the earlier races.—Preface.
FRENCH, ALLEN. Pelham and His Friend Tim. Little. 1.50
The affectionate fellowship of two boys, the son of the owner of a mill and the son of one of the workmen. A mill strike is the principal incident of this wholesome story.
GOSS, W.L. Jed. Crowell. .75
The incidents of the book are real ones, drawn in part from the writer's personal experiences and observations, as a soldier of the Union, during that war. He is also indebted, to many comrades for reminiscences of battle and prison life.—Preface.
The simple bravery of this boy-soldier will stimulate the latent courage and patriotism of the boys of our day. They will like the scene where Dick and Jed join the army as drummer-boys, taking (p. 194) with them Mink, Jed's "awful nice dog," who could do all sorts of cunning tricks.
GREENE, HOMER. The Blind Brother. Crowell. .50
A narrative of the experiences of two little boys in the Pennsylvania coal mines. The sketch, which treats of an unusual subject and is full of stirring interest, took the first prize, offered by The Youth's Companion.
HALE, E.E. @The Man Without a Country. Little. .75
The story of Philip Nolan was written in the darkest period of the Civil War, to show what love of country is.—Introduction.
Nolan cursed his native land and wished that he might never hear of her again, and for fifty years his wish was fulfilled.
HAMP, S.F. Dale and Fraser, Sheepmen. Wilde. 1.50
An account of Colorado sheep-raising which will interest boys greatly, especially as there is a tale of hidden gold interwoven with that of Western life.
HARRIS, J.C. On the Plantation. Illustrated by E.W. Kemble. Appleton. 1.50
This description of a Georgia boy's adventures during the Civil (p. 195) War gives an unexaggerated picture of plantation life.
NASH, H.A. Polly's Secret. Little. 1.50
Polly was a staunch little Maine girl of the long-ago days. She held an important trust sacred for many years, proving herself of sterling worth.
PYLE, HOWARD. The Story of Jack Ballister's Fortunes. Century. 2.00
This exciting narrative of Colonial days tells of the notorious pirate Blackbeard and also of the kidnapping and transporting from England to the Southern colonies which was so common during the first half of the eighteenth century. A thread of romance runs through the story.
STEVENSON, R.L. Treasure Island. Illustrated by Wal Paget. Scribner. 1.25
Stevenson's fascinating tale of adventure is already a classic. Nothing of the sort, perhaps, since Robinson Crusoe, has so appealed to both old boys and young ones.
THANET, OCTAVE (Pseudonym of Alice French). We All. Appleton. 1.50
A good picture of boy and girl life on an Arkansas plantation. An absurd Ku-klux incident and an exciting experience with counterfeiters add to the volume's interest.
THOMPSON, A.R. (p. 196) Shipwrecked in Greenland. Little. 1.50
With photographic illustrations of great interest. There is just enough story to hold together the very entertaining chapters of adventure—"based in part upon the experiences of that unfortunate expedition which, on board the steamer Miranda, came to grief off the coast of Greenland in the Summer of 1894." Manners and customs, flora and fauna, Eskimos and cameras, icebergs and polar bears, make this a capital book for boys and boys' sisters.—The Nation.
TWAIN, MARK (Pseudonym of S.L. CLEMENS). The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Harper. 1.75
Most of the adventures recorded in this book really occurred; one or two were experiences of my own, the rest those of boys who were schoolmates of mine. Huck Finn is drawn from life; Tom Sawyer also, but not from an individual—he is a combination of the characteristics of three boys whom I knew, and therefore belongs to the composite order of architecture. The odd superstitions touched upon were all prevalent among children and slaves in the West at the period of this story.—Preface.
Boys love it, and broad-minded parents will put the volume in their children's hands before they borrow it.
VAILE, C.M. The Orcutt Girls. Wilde. 1.50
Two sisters—ambitious in the best sense—by means of exertion manage, by boarding themselves, to attend Merton Academy for one term. A (p. 197) good picture of this phase of New England life of long ago. The tale is said to have a foundation of fact.
WIGGIN, K.D. (S.). Polly Oliver's Problem. Houghton. 1.00
Polly bravely takes care of her invalid mother, and later when left alone helps to support herself by her beautiful gift for story-telling. The book has a bright and helpful influence.
WIGGIN, K.D. (S.). Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm. Houghton. 1.25
Rebecca is a quaint and lovable girl whose nature, full of enthusiasm, originality, and imagination, charms all who encounter her. Mrs. Wiggin's delightful sense of humor pervades the sketch.
WILKINS, M.E. (MRS. M.E. (W.) FREEMAN). In Colonial Times. Lothrop. .50
Little five-year-old Ann is made the bound girl of Samuel Wales, of Braintree. After some hard experiences Ann tries to run away, but in time she learns to love the really kind-hearted people to whose care she has fallen, and in the end becomes the adopted daughter of Mrs. Polly Wales. The Squire's Sixpence is a simple school story of long-ago days.
FOURTEEN YEARS OF AGE (p. 198)
"God gives thee youth but once. Keep thou The Childlike heart that will His kingdom be; The soul pure-eyed that, wisdom-led, e'en now His blessed face shall see."
AMUSEMENTS AND HANDICRAFT
Let them freely feast, sing and dance, have their puppet-plays, hobby-horses, tabors, crowds, bagpipes, etc., play at ball, and barley-breaks, and what sports and recreations they like best. BURTON'S Anatomy of Melancholy.
ADAMS, J.H. Harper's Indoor Book for Boys. Harper. 1.75
This volume contains directions for work much of which is beyond the capacity of a boy of fourteen, but it is well for him to have something to which he can look forward. Instructions are given in wood-carving, metal-work, clay-modelling, bookbinding, and other occupations. The making of simple household articles and the use of paints are taught. There are many working diagrams.
ADAMS, J.H., and Others. Harper's Outdoor Book for Boys. Harper. 1.75
An excellent handybook which provides the necessary information for making many worthwhile articles in which boys delight, such as (p. 199) windmills, water-wheels, aeroplanes, boats, rafts, toboggans, and snow-shoes; illustrated with working diagrams. There are also directions for camping out. The compiler of this List hopes that the article on trapping small animals may be passed over, as the little creatures so often suffer in boyish attempts to catch them.
BLACK, ALEXANDER. Photography Indoors and Out. Houghton. .75
This book is addressed particularly to those amateurs who, while they acquire their chief pleasure from the pictures as pictures, have sufficient respect for the study and a strong enough purpose toward good work to seek real knowledge of the elements of photography.—Preface.
Mr. Black gives a brief history of the development of the art, and much thorough information for those ambitious to learn. The text is perhaps somewhat advanced for young people of fourteen.
BIOGRAPHY, HISTORY, AND GOVERNMENT
Land of our Birth, we pledge to thee Our love and toil in the years to be, When we are grown and take our place, As men and women with our race.
Father in Heaven who lovest all, Oh help Thy children when they call; That they may build from age to age, An undefiled heritage! . . . . . . . Teach us the strength that cannot seek, (p. 200) By deed or thought, to hurt the weak; That, under Thee, we may possess Man's strength to comfort man's distress.
Teach us Delight in simple things, And Mirth that has no bitter springs; Forgiveness free of evil done, And Love to all men 'neath the sun!
Land of our Birth, our Faith our Pride, For whose dear sake our fathers died; O Motherland, we pledge to thee, Head, heart, and hand through the years to be! KIPLING.
BARING-GOULD, SABINE, and ARTHUR GILMAN. The Story of Germany. Putnam. 1.50
The present volume traces the life of this powerful nation from the time when imperial Rome was baffled by her valiant Hermann down to the hour when France fell before her, and the idea of Empire ... became, under William the First, a power making for peace and strength.... The story of such a people as the Germans could not fail to possess intense interest for anyone; but for us of another branch of the Teutonic family, it has the additional charm that it is the history of our blood-relations. ARTHUR GILMAN.
While not intended primarily for children, this book will be both enjoyed and appreciated by many boys and girls of fourteen. The illustrations are taken, to a great extent, from old sources.
BOLTON, S.E. (K.). Famous American Authors. Crowell. .75
The careers of eighteen well-known men of letters are described. (p. 201) Among the number are Emerson, Prescott, Hawthorne, Higginson, Gilder, and Clemens.
CHAMPLIN, J.D. Young Folks' History of the War for the Union. Holt. 2.50
It is, in short, a well-written and entertaining history of the War of the Rebellion, very fair and impartial in tone.—The Nation.
A mature boy or girl of fourteen will find this reliable work useful. The larger part of the illustrations are taken from contemporary drawings, and there are many maps.
CHAPIN, A.A. Masters of Music; Their Lives and Works. Dodd 1.50
Twenty famous musicians are very interestingly characterized; among them Palestrina, Mozart, Rossini, Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, and Wagner.
FAMOUS ADVENTURES AND PRISON ESCAPES OF THE CIVIL WAR. Century. 1.50
The War Diary of a Union Woman in the South, edited by G.W. Cable, relates experiences of the Siege of Vicksburg. Among other accounts there is a description of Mosby's guerillas, and the tunnel escape from Libby Prison is told by one of the Union officers who got away and was retaken.
FRANKLIN, BENJAMIN. (p. 202) Autobiography. Houghton. .60
Notwithstanding its brevity, this autobiography has doubtless been a greater incentive to ambitious boys than any other. It is perhaps worth noting that a prominent Japanese merchant of Boston, when a boy in his native land, after reading the book, determined to seek his fortune in Franklin's country, and testifies to it as one of the chief factors in his successful career. This useful edition contains a sketch of the great man's life from the point where his own writing ends, drawn chiefly from his letters. There are notes and a chronological historical table.
HART, A.B., and ELIZABETH STEVENS (Editors). The Romance of the Civil War. Macmillan. .60
This fourth volume of Source Readers attempts to put before teachers and children the actualities of the Civil War period. It contains something of the spirit of North and South at the beginning of the war, and much about the life of the soldier and the citizen while it was going on, with some of the battle smoke and dust.... In this book the fathers are speaking to their children.—Preface.
LARCOM, LUCY. A New England Girlhood. Houghton. .60
An account of Miss Larcom's youth up to the age of twenty-nine, which includes her experiences as a Lowell mill-hand. It is not only a record of the efforts of an aspiring young woman, but a picture of (p. 203) one phase of New England life.
LOSSING, B.J. The Story of the United States Navy, for Boys. Harper. 1.75
This little work was prepared at the suggestion of Captain S.B. Luce, U.S.N., the commander of the training-ship Minnesota. Desirous of having it correct in every particular, I submitted the manuscript to the Navy Department. It was returned to me with a letter from Commodore Earl English, U.S.N., Chief of the Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting, to whom it was referred, in which he wrote: I am much pleased with your beautiful and instructive Story of the Navy, and I congratulate you on having performed a labor which will contribute so much to the pleasure and instruction of the youth of our country. Such a bright-spirited work will refresh the memory of the noble deeds of our departed naval heroes in the minds of the people.—Preface.
The illustrations are satisfactory.
MYERS, P.V.N. General History. Ginn. 1.50
One of the best world histories for young people.
In the present issue the book contains several fresh chapters, an entirely new series of colored maps, many new illustrations, and carefully selected lists of books for further reading at the end of each chapter, together with suggested topics for special study. The new text brings the narration of events down to the Peace of Portsmouth and the elections to the first Russian Parliament, and aims to include all the latest important results of discovery and scholarly research in the different historical fields and periods.—Preface.
NICOLAY, HELEN. (p. 204) The Boys' Life of Abraham Lincoln. Century. 1.50
This biography, condensed from Nicolay and Hay's Short Life of Lincoln, in part rewritten, is the best of the many prepared for young readers.
VAN BERGEN, ROBERT. The Story of Russia. American Book. .65
The compiler knows of no altogether satisfactory history of this country for young people. The present volume, prepared for school use, is very informing and will serve. It ends with the humiliation of a great people, and the Treaty of Peace made at Portsmouth in 1905. There are maps and illustrations.
WASHINGTON, GEORGE. Rules of Conduct, Diary of Adventure, Letters, and Farewell Addresses. Houghton. .25
Comprises the best of what Washington has left to us in written form.
DRAMA
Then to the well-trod stage anon, If Jonsons learned Sock be on, Or sweetest Shakespear fancies childe, Warble his native Wood-notes wilde. MILTON
SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM. Julius Caesar. Edited by W.J. Rolfe. American Book. .56
The Tragedie of Julius Caesar was first published in the (p. 205) Folio of 1623.... The date at which the drama was written has been variously fixed by the critics.... Halliwell has shown that it was written "in or before the year 1601." ... The only source from which Shakespeare appears to have derived his materials was Sir Thomas North's version of Plutarch's Lives.... Shakespeare has in this play and elsewhere shown the same penetration into political character and the springs of public events as into those of every-day life.—Introduction.
The merit I see in Mr. Rolfe's school editions of Shakspere's Plays over those most widely used in England is that Mr. Rolfe edits the plays as works of a poet, and not only as productions in Tudor English. F.J. FURNIVALL.
SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM. Macbeth. Edited by W.J. Rolfe. American Book. .56
Macbeth was first printed in the folio of 1623.... It was written between 1604 and 1610.... Dr. Simon Forman ... saw the play performed "at the Globe, 1610, the 20th of April, Saturday." It may then have been a new play, but it is more probable, as nearly all the critics agree, that it was written in 1605 or 1606. The accession of James made Scottish subjects popular in England, and the tale of Macbeth and Banquo would be one of the first to be brought forward, as Banquo was held to be an ancestor of the new king. Shakespeare drew the materials for the plot of Macbeth from Holinshed's Chronicles of Englande, Scotlande, and Ireland.... The story of the drama is almost wholly apocryphal. The more authentic history is thus summarized by Sir Walter Scott: ... As a king, the tyrant so much exclaimed against was, in reality, a firm, just, and equitable prince.—Introduction.
No one can examine these volumes and fail to be impressed (p. 206) with the conscientious accuracy and scholarly completeness with which they are edited. H.H. FURNESS.
SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM. The Merchant of Venice. Edited by W.J. Rolfe. American Book. .56
The plot of The Merchant of Venice is composed of two distinct stories: that of the bond, and that of the caskets. Both these fables are found in the Gesta Romanorum, a Latin compilation of allegorical tales, which had been translated into English as early as the time of Henry VI.... The Merchant of Venice is one of Shakespeare's most perfect works: popular to an extraordinary degree.... Shylock the Jew is one of the inimitable masterpieces of characterization which are to be found only in Shakespeare.—Introduction.
SHAKESPEARE. WILLIAM. A Midsummer-Night's Dream. Doubleday. 5.00
The Midsummer-Night's Dream is the first play which exhibits the imagination of Shakespeare in all its fervid and creative power; for though ... it may be pronounced the offspring of youth and inexperience, it will ever in point of fancy be considered as equal to any subsequent drama of the poet. DRAKE.
To the King's Theatre, where we saw Midsummer's Night's dream, which I had never seen before, nor shall ever again, for it is the most insipid ridiculous play that ever I saw in my life. PEPYS' Diary.
Some people feel sure that it is a mistake to interfere with the play of a child's imagination by giving him illustrated editions of (p. 207) great works. This opinion would be shaken by seeing these wonderful pictures, by means of which we are indeed wafted to dreamland. There are forty plates in color, and other illustrations.
FINE ARTS
Then marble, soften'd into life, grew warm. POPE.
HURLL, E.M. Greek Sculpture. Houghton. .75
The Riverside Art Series contains twelve small volumes on Ancient and Modern Art, of which four only are included in this limited list. The very satisfactory illustrations are taken from photographs, and the major part of each book is devoted to interpretations of the pictures. This volume contains sixteen examples of Greek marbles, with an introduction, which includes other information, on some characteristics of Greek sculpture.
Greek sculpture can be sympathetically understood only by catching something of the spirit which produced it. One must shake off the centuries and regard life with the childlike simplicity of the young world: one must give imagination free rein.—Introduction.
HURLL, E.M. Michelangelo. Houghton. .75
We are given fifteen pictures by this great man, and his portrait. (p. 208) There is an introduction on Michelangelo's character as an artist, an outline table of the principal events in his life, and a list of some of his famous Italian contemporaries, with other information.
This is the rugged face Of him who won a place Above all kings and lords; Whose various skill and power Left Italy a dower No numbers can compute, no tongue translate in words. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . So stood this Angelo Four hundred years ago; So grandly still he stands, Mid lesser worlds of art, Colossal and apart, Like Memnon breathing songs across the desert sands. CHRISTOPHER P. CRANCH.
HURLL, E.M. Raphael. Houghton. .75
This volume contains a collection of fifteen pictures and a portrait of himself by the master, an introduction on Raphael's character as an artist, an outline table of the principal events in his life, and a list of some of his famous contemporaries, as well as other information.
All confessed the influence of his sweet and gracious nature, which was so replete with excellence and so perfect in all the charities, that not only was he honored by men, but even by the very animals, who would constantly follow his steps, and always loved him. VASARI.
HURLL, E.M. (p. 209) Tuscan Sculpture. Houghton. .75
This book comprises sixteen examples of fifteenth-century work, with an introduction, also containing other information, on some characteristics of Tuscan sculpture of this period.
The Italian sculptors of the earlier half of the fifteenth century are more than mere forerunners of the great masters of its close, and often reach perfection within the narrow limits which they chose to impose on their work. Their sculpture shares with the paintings of Botticelli and the churches of Brunelleschi that profound expressiveness, that intimate impress of an indwelling soul, which is the peculiar fascination of the art of Italy in that century. WALTER PATER.
GEOGRAPHY, TRAVEL, AND DESCRIPTION
As the Spanish proverb says: "He who would bring home the wealth of the Indies must carry the wealth of the Indies with him." So it is in travelling: A man must carry knowledge with him if he would bring home knowledge. Dr. JOHNSON.
BRASSEY, A. (A.). A Voyage in the Sunbeam. Longmans. .75
This abridgment of the original book tells in pleasant narrative style of the Sunbeam's voyage around the world, which lasted from July first, 1876, to May twenty-sixth, 1877.
FINNEMORE, JOHN. (p. 210) Italy. Illustrated by Alberto Pisa and Others. Macmillan. .75
We travel over the Alps, and through the country to Naples and Sicily. The wonderful cities of this historic land are described, and a brief account given of its many poor but happy people. There are twelve illustrations in color.
HIGGINSON, T.W. (Editor). Young Folks' Book of American Explorers. Longmans. 1.20
It has always seemed to me that the narratives of the early discoverers and explorers of the American coast were as interesting as Robinson Crusoe, and were, indeed, very much like it. This has led me to make a series of extracts from these narratives, selecting what appeared to me the most interesting parts, and altering only the spelling.... One great thing which I have wished my readers to learn is the charm of an original narrative.... The explorers of various nations are represented in this book. There are Northmen, Italians, Englishmen, Frenchmen, Spaniards, and Dutchmen.—Preface.
These original accounts cover the field of American exploration from the discovery of the country by the Northmen in 985 to the settlement of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1629.
KING, C.F. Roundabout Rambles in Northern Europe. Lothrop. 1.25
This very fully illustrated volume gives a conversational account of a trip through Great Britain, Ireland, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and (p. 211) Russia. It is an excellent book for children to use while travelling. Mr. King has also prepared several about our own country.
LUMMIS, C.F. Some Strange Corners of Our Country. Century. 1.50
Mr. Lummis describes the wonders of the Southwest,—the Grand Canon, the Petrified Forest of Arizona, and the Desert. He tells of the Moquis in their seven seldom visited Pueblo cities, of the Navajos and other Indian tribes, with their strange customs, dances, and magic.
HYGIENE
Life is not mere living, but the enjoyment of health. MARTIAL.
WOOD-ALLEN, M. (S.). The Man Wonderful, or The Marvels of Our Bodily Dwelling. Educational. 1.00
The author in this volume has united metaphor with scientific facts.... She has laid under contribution the latest scientific authorities, and believes that this book will be found abreast of the science of to-day, holding ever to truth as it now presents itself, and never sacrificing facts to the allegory.—Preface.
Dr. Wood-Allen uses the simile of a house in explaining in a clear and interesting manner much about our body and its functions. Part Second is devoted to the articles we make use of: those which are (p. 212) beneficial, and especially those which are more or less harmful; as tea, coffee, tobacco, and alcohol.
MYTHOLOGY, FOLK-LORE, LEGENDS, AND FAIRY TALES
"I, Phoebus, sang those songs that gained so much renown, I, Phoebus, sang them; Homer only wrote them down."
BULFINCH, THOMAS. The Age of Fable. Edited by E.E. Hale. Lothrop. 1.25
This book is an enlarged and revised edition of a book published, with the same title, by the late Thomas Bulfinch, of Boston, in the year 1855.... What Mr. Bulfinch wanted to do, and succeeded in doing, was to connect the old stories with modern literature. His book, therefore, not only interests young people in the classical authors, but it turns their attention to many of the best authors of their own language and of our time.—Preface.
In the revision the list of poets cited has been increased from forty to sixty-three, and the portion treating of Northern, Oriental, and Egyptian mythologies, rewritten. The illustrations are from classical sources.
POETRY, COLLECTIONS OF POETRY AND PROSE, AND STORIES ADAPTED FROM (p. 213) GREAT AUTHORS
And, as imagination bodies forth The forms of things unknown, the poet's pen Turns them to shapes, and gives to airy nothing A local habitation and a name. SHAKSPERE.
NORTON, C.E. (Editor). Heart of Oak Books. Volume VII. Masterpieces of Literature. Heath. .60
The youth who shall become acquainted with the contents of these volumes will share in the common stock of the intellectual life of the race to which he belongs; and will have the door opened to him of all the vast and noble resources of that life.—Preface.
SCOTT, WALTER. The Lady of the Lake. Edited by W.J. Rolfe. Houghton. .75
The ancient manners, the habits and customs of the aboriginal race by whom the Highlands of Scotland were inhabited, had always appeared to me peculiarly adapted to poetry. The change in their manners, too, had taken place almost within my own time, or at least I had learned many particulars concerning the ancient state of the Highlands from the old men of the last generation. I had always thought the old Scottish Gael highly adapted for poetical composition.... I had also read a great deal, seen much, and heard more, of that romantic country where I was in the habit of spending some time every Autumn; and the scenery of Loch (p. 214) Katrine was connected with the recollection of many a dear friend and merry expedition of former days. This poem, the action of which lay among scenes so beautiful and so deeply imprinted on my recollections, was a labor of love, and it was no less so to recall the manners and incidents introduced. The frequent custom of James IV, and particularly of James V, to walk through their kingdom in disguise, afforded me the hint of an incident which never fails to be interesting if managed with the slightest address or dexterity.—Introduction to the Edition of 1830.
The Lady of the Lake was first published in 1810. This edition has many notes by Mr. Rolfe.
SCOTT, WALTER. The Lay of the Last Minstrel. Edited by W.J. Rolfe. Houghton. .75
The Poem, now offered to the Public, is intended to illustrate the customs and manners which anciently prevailed on the Borders of England and Scotland.... The date of the Tale itself is about the middle of the sixteenth century, when most of the personages actually flourished. The time occupied by the action is Three Nights and Three Days.—Original Preface.
The Lay of the Last Minstrel was first published in 1805. This edition has many notes by Mr. Rolfe.
SCOTT, WALTER. Marmion. Edited by W.J. Rolfe. Houghton. .75
The present story turns upon the private adventures of a fictitious character, but is called a Tale of Flodden Field, because the hero's fate is connected with that memorable (p. 215) defeat and the causes which led to it.... The poem opens about the commencement of August, and concludes with the defeat of Flodden, 9th September, 1513.—Original Preface.
Marmion was first published in 1818. This edition has many notes by Mr. Rolfe.
SCUDDER, H.E. (Editor). American Poems. Houghton. 1.00
Longfellow, Whittier, Bryant, Holmes, Lowell, and Emerson, are represented in this collection by poems with which every American boy and girl should be familiar. The volume, which has biographical sketches and notes by Mr. Scudder, was prepared in the interests of young people, to encourage in them a taste for the best literature. Evangeline, Snow-Bound, Sella, Grandmother's Story, The Vision of Sir Launfal, and The Adirondacks, are included in the contents.
RELIGION AND ETHICS
Hearing thy Master, or likewise the Preacher, wriggle not thyself, as seeming unable to contain thyself within thy skin.—Youth's Behaviour. 1643.
HALE, E.E. How to Do It. Little. 1.00
Brimful of well-balanced advice on making life helpful and pleasant to those around us and to ourselves by the avoidance of common errors and the encouraging of agreeable virtues. The familiar friendly (p. 216) style renders this book, which could so easily be made dull, really delightful to young people. How to Talk, How to Go into Society, How to Travel, Life in Vacation, and Habits of Reading, are some of the chapter headings.
SCIENCE, OUT-OF-DOOR BOOKS, AND STORIES OF ANIMALS
To know that which before us lies in daily life is the prime of wisdom. MILTON.
ADAMS, J.H. Harper's Electricity Book for Boys. Harper. 1.75
A large part of this volume is somewhat beyond the grasp of the average boy of fourteen, and parents should look it over carefully before letting their children carry out the instructions, though we are told that "there need be no concern whatever as to possible danger if the book is read with reasonable intelligence. Mr. Adams has taken pains to place danger-signals wherever special precautions are advisable, and, as a father of boys who are constantly working with electricity in his laboratory, he may be relied upon as a safe and sure counsellor and guide."
Directions are given for making, among other things, push-buttons, switches, annunciators, dynamos, simple telephones, and line and wireless telegraphs. There is a chapter on electroplating. At the (p. 217) end of the volume is an article explaining electric light, heat, power, and traction, by J.B. Baker, technical editor, United States Geological Survey; also a dictionary of electrical terms. Many working diagrams are included.
BAILEY, F.M. Handbook of Birds of the Western United States. Illustrated by Louis Agassiz Fuertes. Houghton. 3.50
Systematically arranged. Descriptions technical but simplified, and illustrated with cuts in the text, which explain the technical terms and make it available for students. It has no color key, but field keys, fully illustrated in the text. Biographies popularly treated. Intended for students of the life and habits of the birds of our Western States. The only book of its character for that region. AUDUBON SOCIETY.
There are thirty-three full-page plates by Mr. Fuertes, and over six hundred small illustrations. For the use of beginners a brief field color key to genera of some of the common Passerine birds is given in an appendix.
BURROUGHS, JOHN. Wake-Robin. Houghton. 1.25
This is mainly a book about the birds, or more properly an invitation to the study of Ornithology.... I have reaped my harvest more in the woods than in the study; what I offer, in fact, is a careful and conscientious record of actual observations and experiences, and is true as it stands (p. 218) written, every word of it.... A more specific title for the volume would have suited me better, but not being able to satisfy myself in this direction, I cast about for a word thoroughly in the atmosphere and spirit of the book, which I hope I have found in "Wake-Robin"—the common name of the white Trillium, which blooms in all our woods, and which marks the arrival of all the birds.—Preface.
The titles of some of the different articles are: In the Hemlocks, The Adirondacks, Spring at the Capital, and The Bluebird.
CHAPMAN, E.M. Handbook of Birds of Eastern North America. Appleton. 3.00
Illustrated with full-page plates from photographs, and many cuts in the text. Systematically arranged; non-technical descriptions; both field and color keys. A very complete book for general use, treating all the birds of the section named, with some account of habits, etc. It has introductory chapters on Ornithology, Methods of Study, List of Dates of Spring and Fall migration, and a color chart to help in identification. AUDUBON SOCIETY.
DITMARS, R.L. The Reptile Book. Doubleday. 4.00
Mr. Ditmars, Curator of Reptiles in the New York Zooelogical Park, gives us a comprehensive treatise on the structure and habits of the turtles, tortoises, crocodilians, lizards, and snakes, of the United States and Northern Mexico. There are eight pages of plates in color and one hundred and twenty-eight in black and white, from (p. 219) photographs from life, taken (with six exceptions) by the Author.
In the present work the writer has sought to compile a popular review of a great fauna—the Reptiles of North America. He has excluded technical phraseology and tried to produce two results: 1. A popular book, that may be comprehended by the beginner and, 2. A book valuable in its details to the technical worker.—Preface.
GIBSON, W.H. Sharp Eyes. Harper. 2.50
This rambler's calendar of fifty-two weeks among insects, birds, and flowers, is made attractive to young children by the unusual quality of the many illustrations.
GREENE, HOMER. Coal and the Coal Mines. Houghton. .75
It has been the aim of the author to give reliable information free from minute details and technicalities. That information has been, for the most part, gathered through personal experience in the mines.—Preface.
The composition and formation of coal, its discovery and introduction, are dealt with, and a description of the mine and its dangers, and the life of the workers therein, is given in this thoroughly satisfactory little volume.
HARRINGTON, M.W. About the Weather. Appleton. .65
Treated from a broad scientific standpoint, much interesting (p. 220) information is conveyed about the laws which, discovered comparatively recently, have proved of vital importance and utility to mankind. The humidity and pressure of the air, the velocity of the wind, rain and snow, sleet and hail-storms, tornadoes and cyclones, are among the many topics discussed.
HOLLAND, W.J. The Moth Book. Doubleday. 4.00
An intelligent boy or girl of fourteen, with a real interest in the subject, will enjoy this fine work on the moths of North America north of Mexico, though it is written more from the standpoint of the student than are most of the series to which it belongs. There are fifteen hundred figures in the forty-eight colored plates, and three hundred black and white text figures, illustrating a majority of the larger species.
JORDAN, D.S., and B.W. EVERMANN. American Food and Game Fishes. Doubleday. 4.00
These two distinguished scientists have given in this treatise on ichthyology a popular account of the species found in America north of the Equator, with keys for ready identification, life-histories, and methods of capture. There are ten lithographed plates in color, and sixty-four in black and white from photographs from life taken by (p. 221) Mr. Dugmore, these being the first really successful photographs of live fish ever secured.
KEELER, H.L. Our Native Trees, and How to Identify Them. Scribner. 2.00
A guide to the identification of the trees of the United States, with three hundred and forty illustrations, more than half of them from photographs. The book is the work of one who is a tree-lover as well as a botanist, and besides being scientifically accurate the book has a distinct literary flavor. Invaluable as an aid to firsthand acquaintance with the trees.—Prentice and Power.
The volume is not too large to be easily carried while walking.
LUCAS, F.A. Animals of the Past. Illustrated by C.R. Knight and Others. Doubleday. 2.00
The object of this book is to tell some of the interesting facts concerning a few of the better known or more remarkable of these extinct inhabitants of the ancient world.—Introduction.
"Mr. Knight ... is the one modern artist who can picture prehistoric animals with artistic charm of presentation as well as with full scientific accuracy."
While Mr. Lucas did not, in this instance, write for children, they greatly enjoy his descriptions, and are captivated by Mr. Knight's pictures of the strange creatures. There is a very interesting chapter on The Ancestry of the Horse.
"Said the little Eohippus (p. 222) I am going to be a horse And on my middle finger-nails To run my earthly course."
NEWCOMB, SIMON. Astronomy for Everybody. Doubleday. 2.00
When a work, by an authority as eminent as Professor Newcomb, is interesting to young people, and is to a sufficient degree within their comprehension, it should certainly be put into their hands, even if, as in the present case, it was not specially prepared for them.
PARSONS, F.T. (S.) (formerly Mrs. W.S. DANA). How to Know the Ferns. Scribner. 1.50
This companion to How to Know the Wild Flowers gives in convenient form a great deal of pleasantly told information as to the names, haunts, and habits, of our common ferns. They are arranged in six groups, the classification being based on the frond differences. In almost all cases the nomenclature of Gray's Manual has been followed, and in parentheses, that used in the Illustrated Flora of Britton and Brown is given. Indices to the Latin and English names and to technical terms are included. The many illustrations are helpful.
ROGERS, J.E. The Shell Book. Doubleday. 4.00
Every person interested in shells has felt the need of a (p. 223) manual of the shell-bearing animals of sea and land, comparable to the comprehensive manuals provided for those who wish to study birds or insects or trees.... The plan and nomenclature of this book follow the accepted standard, The Manual of Conchology, by Tryon and Pilsbry.—Preface.
Miss Rogers has made an extensive study of conchology on the east and west coasts of North America. The result is this popular guide to a knowledge of the families of living mollusks, which is also an aid to the identification of shells native and foreign. There is a chapter on the maintenance of aquariums and snaileries. Eight of the plates are in color, and ninety-six in black and white for the most part from photographs by A.R. Dugmore.
ROGERS, J.E. The Tree Book. Doubleday. 4.00
Most of this volume is devoted to teaching us in an interesting manner how to know the trees of North America. There are, in addition, articles on Forestry, The Uses of Wood, and The Life of the Trees. Sixteen of the plates are in color and one hundred and sixty in black and white from photographs by Mr. Dugmore.
ST. JOHN, T.M. Wireless Telegraphy. St. John. 1.00
Theoretical and practical information, together with complete directions for performing numerous experiments on wireless telegraphy with simple home-made apparatus.—Title-page.
SHARP, D.L. (p. 224) A Watcher in the Woods. Illustrated by Bruce Horsfall. Century. .84
These talks about our small animal neighbors are full of descriptive interest, and the accompanying black and white illustrations are beautiful.
Mr. Burroughs says: Of all the nature books of recent years, I look upon Mr. Sharp's as the best.
VOOGT, GOSEWINUS DE. Our Domestic Animals. Translated by Katharine P. Wormeley. Ginn. 3.50
While this large volume gives much information in regard to the habits, intelligence, and usefulness, of those animals which have helped man's civilization forward, the text is not nearly as interesting as it might have been made. The many illustrations, however, are very satisfactory.
STORIES
Dreams, books, are each a world; and books, we know, Are a substantial world, both pure and good: Round these, with tendrils strong as flesh and blood, Our pastime and our happiness will grow. WORDSWORTH.
BULLEN, F.T. The Cruise of the Cachalot. Appleton. 1.50
I've never read anything that equals it in its deep-sea (p. 225) wonder and mystery; nor do I think that any book before has so completely covered the whole business of whale-fishing, and at the same time given such real and new sea pictures. RUDYARD KIPLING.
In the following pages an attempt has been made—it is believed for the first time—to give an account of the cruise of a South Sea whaler from the seaman's standpoint.—Preface.
A strong nor'wester's blowing, Bill! Hark! don't ye hear it roar now? Lord help 'em, how I pities them Unhappy folks on shore now! WILLIAM PITT.
CHARLES, E. (R.). Chronicles of the Schoenberg-Cotta Family. Burt. .75
This diary of Reformation days is fictitious, but it serves to bring most vividly before us Luther and the men of his time.
GARLAND, HAMLIN. The Long Trail. Harper. 1.25
Develops from a conventional and unpromising opening into a vivid realistic story of an ambitious youth's perilous journey to the Klondike. Author writes from personal experience of the overland route, and principal characters reveal qualities of unselfishness, perseverance, and pluck. NEW YORK STATE LIBRARY.
GASKELL, E.C. (S.). Cranford. Illustrated by Hugh Thomson. Macmillan. 1.50
Mrs. Gaskell's masterpiece, which Lord Houghton described as (p. 226) "the finest piece of humoristic description that has been added to British literature since Charles Lamb."
Calm and composure breathe from every page of this picture of life in a small English town during the first half of the nineteenth century. Have we not all in imagination visited Miss Jenkyns and Miss Matty, played preference at Miss Betty Barker's, and helped the Honorable Mrs. Jamieson into her sedan chair? Many girls of fourteen are quite able to appreciate the book's charm.
IRVING, WASHINGTON. The Alhambra. Illustrated by Joseph Pennell. Macmillan. 1.50
It will be strange indeed if these fascinating and romantic tales fail to stir the imagination of any young person who reads them and to arouse in him the laudable ambition of some day seeing for himself the three palaces, the mosque, the chapel, and the halls, of the marvellous Alhambra.
The work was the amusement of his leisure moments, filling the interval between the completion of one serious, and now all but unknown, history and the beginning of the next.... And thus his name has become so closely associated with the place that, just as Diedrich Knickerbocker will be remembered while New York stands, so Washington Irving cannot be forgotten so long as the Red Palace looks down upon the Vega and the tradition of the Moor lingers in Granada. E.R. PENNELL.
IRVING, WASHINGTON. (p. 227) Bracebridge Hall. Illustrated by Randolph Caldecott. Macmillan. 1.50
"The reader, if he has perused the volume of the Sketch Book, will probably recollect something of the Bracebridge family, with which I once passed a Christmas. I am now on another visit at the Hall, having been invited to a wedding which is shortly to take place.... The family mansion is an old manor-house, standing in a retired and beautiful part of Yorkshire. Its inhabitants have been always regarded through the surrounding country as 'the great ones of the earth,' and the little village near the hall looks up to the squire with almost feudal homage.... While sojourning in this stronghold of old fashions, it is my intention to make occasional sketches of the scenes and characters before me."
The success of Old Christmas has suggested the republication of its sequel Bracebridge Hall, illustrated by the same able pencil, but condensed so as to bring it within reasonable size and price.—Preface.
IRVING, WASHINGTON. Old Christmas. Illustrated by Randolph Caldecott. Macmillan. 1.50
No one could be better fitted to depict the old customs of an English Christmas than Mr. Caldecott, and his pictures are a perfect accompaniment to this portion of Washington Irving's Sketch Book.
A man might then behold At Christmas, in each hall Good fires to curb the cold, And meat for great and small.
The neighbors were friendly bidden, (p. 228) And all had welcome true, The poor from the gates were not chidden, When this old cap was new. Old Song.
IRVING, WASHINGTON. Rip Van Winkle, and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. Illustrated by G.H. Boughton. Macmillan. 1.50
Irving's two most popular sketches, in which young people delight.
The spirits of this region must have met Washington Irving more than half way, and the rest was like play to him. How real and living are all the people of his fancy! Of all the author's work—serious and humorous ... Rip Van Winkle took the most immediate and lasting grip of his public. G.H. BOUGHTON.
IRVING, WASHINGTON. Rip Van Winkle. Illustrated by Arthur Rackham. Doubleday. 5.00
Five dollars seems to most of us a large sum to pay for a child's book, but after seeing Mr. Rackham's remarkable work I think we shall all agree that there can be no better way of spending our book-money than in purchasing this fine edition of the famous tale, with its fifty full-page pictures in color.
KING, CHARLES. Cadet Days. Harper. 1.25
Boys, especially those with military tendencies, will enjoy (p. 229) Captain King's description of life at West Point.
KINGSLEY, CHARLES. Westward Ho! Illustrated by C.E. Brock. Macmillan. 1.50
A glorious tale of the voyages and adventures of Sir Amyas Leigh, a Devon knight of Elizabethan days.
Oh, where be these gay Spaniards, Which make so great a boast O? Oh, they shall eat the grey-goose feather, And we shall eat the roast O! Cornish Song.
SCOTT, WALTER. Ivanhoe. Macmillan. 1.25
Scott's masterpiece contains, within the compass of a single volume, sufficient material for five or six books of romance. Incident follows upon incident, and holds the reader, young or old, with entranced attention. The period is that of King Richard I.
SCOTT, WALTER. Kenilworth. Macmillan. 1.25
The tragic Elizabethan story of Leicester and Amy Robsart. It is not beyond the comprehension of most young people of fourteen.
SCOTT, WALTER. (p. 230) The Talisman. Macmillan. 1.25
The scene of The Talisman is in Palestine with Richard Coeur de Lion and his allies of the Third Crusade. From the contest on the desert between the Saracen cavalier and the Knight of the Sleeping Leopard to the final Battle of the Standard it is full of interest. CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH.
STEVENSON, R.L. Kidnapped. Scribner. 1.50
Being Memoirs of the Adventures of David Balfour in the Year 1751: How he was Kidnapped and Cast away; his Sufferings in a Desert Isle; his Journey in the Wild Highlands; his acquaintance with Alan Breck Stewart and other notorious Highland Jacobites; with all that he Suffered at the hands of his Uncle, Ebenezer Balfour of Shaws, falsely so-called.—Title-page.
VAILE, C.M. Sue Orcutt. Wilde. 1.50
In this sequel to The Orcutt Girls Sue continues her education, doing a little literary work meanwhile. Instead of writing, however, as she had planned, her happy marriage opens the way for home occupations. The thread of pleasant romance will, of course, add to the book's attraction for girl readers.
WALLACE, DILLON. Ungava Bob. Revell. 1.50
The thrilling adventures of a young trapper in the Labrador and Ungava regions. Incidentally much information is given in an interesting (p. 231) way. Mr. Wallace is well qualified from personal experience to write of this Northern country.
WIGGIN, K.D. (S.). @The Birds' Christmas Carol. Houghton. .50
It is only partially true to call this story a sad one, for it is filled from cover to cover with the Christ-like spirit of love and helpfulness. It tells of little Carol Bird, a patient crippled child, who brought sunshine to all those about her, and who touches every heart. The account of the Christmas dinner which Carol herself gave for the nine little Ruggles children is very amusing. After the happy day, while Christmas hymns were sounding, the dear little girl slipped away to her "ain countree."
YONGE, C.M. The Dove in the Eagle's Nest. Macmillan. 1.25
Life in the rude days of the Emperor Maximilian I, with scenes in burgh and castle. Under a woman's influence, Schloss Adlerstein is changed from a robber stronghold to an abode of peace.
AUTHOR AND TITLE INDEX (p. 233)
How index-learning turns no student pale, Yet holds the eel of science by the tail. POPE.
A B C of Electricity, The. Meadowcroft............................................. 159 Aanrud. Lisbeth Longfrock........................................ 70 Abbott. A Boy on a Farm.......................................... 47 About the Weather. Harrington.............................................. 219 Adams. Harper's Electricity Book for Boys...................... 216 Harper's Indoor Book for Boys........................... 198 Adams and Others. Harper's Outdoor Book for Boys.......................... 198 Adelborg. Clean Peter and the Children of Grubbylea................ 34 Adventure in Thule, An. Black, William. See The Four MacNicols. Adventures of a Brownie, The. Mulock................................................... 66 Adventures of Odysseus, The. Marvin, Mayor, and Stawell.............................. 126 Adventures of Reynard the Fox, The................................. 60 Adventures of Tom Sawyer, The. Twain................................................... 196 Adventures of Two Dutch Dolls and a Golliwogg, The. Upton.................................................... 38 Adventures of Ulysses, The. Lamb.................................................... 152 AEneid for Boys and Girls, The. Church.................................................. 125 AEsop. The Fables of AEsop...................................... 61 Age of Fable, The. Bulfinch................................................ 212 Aiken and Barbauld. Eyes and No Eyes, and Other Stories...................... 69 Aladdin. Crane.................................................... 42 Alcott. Little Men.............................................. 189 Little Women............................................ 161 Under the Lilacs........................................ 109 Alden. The Moral Pirates....................................... 133 Aldrich. The Story of a Bad Boy.................................. 161 Alhambra, The. Irving.................................................. 226 Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves. Crane.................................................... 42 Alice in Wonderland. Carroll.................................................. 62 Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Carroll.................................................. 62 Allen, M. (S.) Wood-. See Wood-Allen. American Animals. Stone, Witmer, and Cram................................. 160 American Food and Game Fishes. Jordan and Evermann..................................... 220 American Indians. Starr................................................... 181 American Poems. Scudder................................................. 215 Andersen. Fairy Tales from Hans Christian Andersen................. 98 Stories.................................................. 77 Andrews. Each and All............................................. 50 The Seven Little Sisters Who Live on the Round Ball That Floats in the Air................................. 41 The Stories Mother Nature Told Her Children.............. 56 Ten Boys Who Lived on the Road from Long Ago to Now ..... 74 Animal Life of Our Sea-shore, The. Heilprin................................................ 186 Animals at the Fair, The. Blaisdell................................................ 54 Animals of the Past. Lucas, F.A.............................................. 221 Anne's Terrible Good Nature, and Other Stories for Children. Lucas, E.V.............................................. 136 Another Book of Verses for Children. Lucas, E.V............................................... 85 Arabella and Araminta Stories, The. Smith, Gertrude.......................................... 31 Arkansaw Bear, The. Paine.................................................... 83 Arnold. Stories of Ancient Peoples.............................. 142 Asbjoernsen. Fairy Tales from the Far North........................... 77 Astronomy for Everybody. Newcomb................................................. 222 Autobiography. Franklin................................................ 202 Ayrton. Child-Life in Japan...................................... 76 Aztec Treasure House, The. Janvier................................................. 165
Baby Bunting. Caldecott. See his Hey Diddle Diddle. Baby's Opera, The. Crane.................................................... 26 Baby's Own Alphabet, The. Crane.................................................... 28 Bailey. Handbook of Birds of the Western United States.......... 217 Baker. The Boy's Book of Inventions............................ 156 Boy's Second Book of Inventions......................... 185 Baldwin. The Story of Roland..................................... 124 The Story of Siegfried.................................. 124 A Story of the Golden Age................................ 99 Ball. Starland................................................ 129 Bamford. Up and Down the Brooks.................................. 157 Bannerman. The Story of Little Black Sambo.......................... 23 Barbauld. See Aiken and Barbauld. Barbour. For the Honor of the School............................. 189 Four in Camp............................................ 190 Baring-Gould and Gilman. The Story of Germany.................................... 200 Barnes. The Hero of Erie........................................ 142 Baylor. Juan and Juanita........................................ 109 Beale. Stories from the Old Testament for Children.............. 55 Beautiful Joe. Saunders................................................. 88 Beauty and the Beast. Crane.................................................... 43 Bee People, The. Morley................................................... 87 Belger. See Baylor. Ben Comee. Canavan................................................. 162 Bennett. Master Skylark.......................................... 162 Benton. A Little Cook-Book for a Little Girl..................... 92 Saturday Mornings........................................ 92 Betty Leicester. Jewett, S.O............................................. 136 Bible for Young People, The........................................ 47 Bimbi. Ouida.................................................... 91 Biographical Stories. Hawthorne. See his Grandfather's Chair. Bird Book, The. Eckstorm................................................ 158 Bird-Life. Chapman, F.M............................................ 157 Bird Neighbors. Blanchan................................................ 130 Birds' Christmas Carol, The. Wiggin.................................................. 231 Birds That Hunt and are Hunted. Blanchan................................................ 185 Black, Alexander. Photography Indoors and Out............................. 199 Black Beauty. Sewell................................................... 88 Black, William. The Four MacNicols, and An Adventure in Thule........... 133 Blaisdell. The Animals at the Fair.................................. 54 Blanchan. Bird Neighbors.......................................... 130 Birds That Hunt and are Hunted.......................... 185 Nature's Garden......................................... 130 Blind Brother, The. Greene.................................................. 194 Blue Fairy Book, The. Lang, Andrew............................................. 65 Blue Poetry Book, The. Lang, Andrew............................................ 182 Bolton. Famous American Authors................................. 200 Lives of Girls Who Became Famous........................ 172 Bond. The Scientific American Boy............................. 141 Book of Cheerful Cats and Other Animated Animals, A. Francis.................................................. 28 Book of Famous Verse, A. Repplier................................................ 183 Book of Legends, The. Scudder.................................................. 53 Book of Nature Myths, The. Holbrook................................................. 51 Book of Nursery Rhymes, A. Welsh.................................................... 30 Book of Saints and Friendly Beasts, The. Brown.................................................... 61 Book of the Ocean, The. Ingersoll............................................... 159 Book of Verses for Children, A. Lucas, E.V............................................... 67 Boots and Saddles. Custer.................................................. 143 Boston Town. Scudder................................................. 145 Boutet de Monvel. Joan of Arc.............................................. 59 Boy Craftsman, The. Hall..................................................... 93 Boy Emigrants, The. Brooks, Noah............................................ 162 Boy Life of Napoleon, The. Foa..................................................... 144 Boy on a Farm, A. Abbott................................................... 47 Boyesen. The Modern Vikings...................................... 109 Boys' and Girls' Plutarch, The. White, J.S.............................................. 176 Boy's Book of Explorations, The. Jenks, Tudor............................................ 179 Boy's Book of Inventions, The. Baker................................................... 156 Boy's Froissart, The. Lanier.................................................. 174 Boys' Life of Abraham Lincoln, The. Nicolay................................................. 204 Boys of Other Countries. Taylor, Bayard........................................... 98 Boys of '76, The. Coffin.................................................. 117 Boy's Percy, The. Lanier.................................................. 182 Boy's Second Book of Inventions. Baker................................................... 185 Bracebridge Hall. Irving.................................................. 227 Brassey. A Voyage in the Sunbeam................................. 209 Brooke. The Golden Goose Book.................................... 33 Brooks, E.S. The Century Book for Young Americans.................... 114 The Century Book of Famous Americans.................... 115 The True Story of Benjamin Franklin..................... 115 The True Story of Christopher Columbus................... 93 The True Story of George Washington...................... 94 The True Story of Lafayette............................. 116 Brooks, Noah. The Boy Emigrants....................................... 162 The Story of Marco Polo................................. 148 Brown. The Book of Saints and Friendly Beasts................... 61 In the Days of Giants.................................... 61 Browne. Granny's Wonderful Chair and Its Tales of Fairy Times.... 51 Brownies: Their Book, The. Cox...................................................... 45 Buccaneers and Pirates of Our Coasts. Stockton................................................ 147 Building the Nation. Coffin.................................................. 143 Bulfinch. The Age of Fable........................................ 212 Bull. Fridtjof Nansen......................................... 149 Bullen. The Cruise of the Cachalot.............................. 224 Bunyan. The Pilgrim's Progress................................... 68 Burgess. Goops and How To Be Them................................. 35 More Goops and How Not To Be Them........................ 35 Burnett. Little Lord Fauntleroy................................... 89 Burroughs. Squirrels and Other Fur-Bearers......................... 131 Wake-Robin.............................................. 217 Butterfly Book, The. Holland................................................. 158
Cadet Days. King, Charles........................................... 228 Caldecott. The Farmer's Boy......................................... 23 A Frog He Would a-Wooing Go.............................. 24 Hey Diddle Diddle, and Baby Bunting...................... 25 The House that Jack Built................................ 25 The Milkmaid............................................. 25 The Queen of Hearts...................................... 25 Ride a-Cock Horse to Banbury Cross, and A Farmer Went Trotting upon His Grey Mare.............. 26 Sing a Song for Sixpence................................. 26 Camps and Firesides of the Revolution. Hart and Hill, Mabel.................................... 145 Canavan. Ben Comee............................................... 162 Canfield, and Others. What Shall We Do Now?.................................... 73 Captains Courageous. Kipling................................................. 166 Captains of Industry. Parton.................................................. 174 Careers of Danger and Daring. Moffett................................................. 187 Carove. The Story without an End................................. 71 Carpenter. South America........................................... 149 Carroll. Alice in Wonderland...................................... 62 Alice's Adventures in Wonderland......................... 62 Through the Looking-Glass................................ 63 Carruth. Letters to American Boys................................ 184 Castle Blair. Shaw.................................................... 168 Catherwood. The Heroes of the Middle West............................ 94 Cave Boy of the Age of Stone, The. McIntyre................................................. 90 Celtic Fairy Tales. Jacobs................................................... 80 Century Book for Young Americans, The. Brooks, E.S............................................. 114 Century Book of Famous Americans, The. Brooks, E.S............................................. 115 Cervantes. Don Quixote of the Mancha............................... 127 Champlin. The Young Folks' Cyclopaedia of Common Things............ 87 The Young Folks' Cyclopaedia of Literature and Art...... 177 The Young Folks' Cyclopaedia of Persons and Places....... 94 Young Folks' History of the War for the Union........... 201 Chapin. Masters of Music; Their Lives and Works................. 201 The Story of the Rhinegold............................... 99 Wonder Tales from Wagner................................ 100 Chapman, A.B. See Hart and Chapman. Chapman, F.M. Bird-Life............................................... 157 Handbook of Birds of Eastern North America.............. 218 Charles. Chronicles of the Schoenberg-Cotta Family............... 225 Chaucer for Children. Haweis.................................................. 105 Chenoweth. Stories of the Saints................................... 116 Child-Life. Whittier................................................. 54 Child-Life in Japan. Ayrton................................................... 76 Childhood of Ji-shib, the Ojibwa, The. Jenks, A.E.............................................. 111 Childhood of the World, The. Clodd................................................... 157 Children of the Cold, The. Schwatka................................................. 97 Children's Book, The. Scudder.................................................. 48 Children's Farm, The............................................... 21 Children's Series of the Modern Reader's Bible. Moulton. Bible Stories. New Testament............................. 55 Bible Stories. Old Testament............................. 55 Children's Stories in American History. Wright, H.C.............................................. 76 Children's Stories of the Great Scientists. Wright, H.C............................................. 176 Child's Garden of Verses, A. Stevenson. Illustrated by Charles Robinson............... 30 Child's Garden of Verses, A. Stevenson. Illustrated by J.W. Smith..................... 29 Child's History of England, A. Dickens................................................. 143 Child's Rainy Day Book, The. White, Mary.............................................. 50 Chilhowee Boys. Morrison................................................ 137 Chinese Mother Goose Rhymes. Headland................................................. 36 Chronicles of the Schoenberg-Cotta Family. Charles................................................. 225 Church. The AEneid for Boys and Girls........................... 125 The Iliad for Boys and Girls............................ 125 Stories of the East from Herodotus...................... 172 Three Greek Children.................................... 134 A Young Macedonian in the Army of Alexander the Great... 190 Cinderella. Crane.................................................... 43 Clean Peter and the Children of Grubbylea. Adelborg................................................. 34 Clemens. See Twain. Clement. Stories of Art and Artists.............................. 143 Clodd. The Childhood of the World.............................. 157 Coal and the Coal Mines. Greene.................................................. 219 Coffin. The Boys of '76......................................... 117 Building the Nation..................................... 143 Old Times in the Colonies............................... 117 Collodi. Pinocchio, The Adventures of a Marionette................ 63 Colonial Children. Hart and Hazard, B.E.................................... 118 Colonization of America, The. Gilman................................................... 95 Coolidge. What Katy Did........................................... 134 What Katy Did at School................................. 163 Cooper. The Deerslayer.......................................... 163 The Last of the Mohicans................................ 163 The Pilot............................................... 190 The Spy................................................. 191 Cotes. The Story of Sonny Sahib................................ 191 Country of the Dwarfs, The. Du Chaillu............................................... 96 Cowper. The Diverting History of John Gilpin..................... 44 Cox. The Brownies: Their Book................................. 45 Cragin. Our Insect Friends and Foes............................. 131 Craik, Mrs. D.M. (M.) See Mulock. Craik, G.M. So-Fat and Mew-Mew....................................... 38 Cram. See Stone, Witmer, and Cram. Crane. Aladdin.................................................. 42 Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves........................... 42 The Baby's Opera......................................... 26 The Baby's Own Alphabet.................................. 28 Beauty and the Beast..................................... 43 Cinderella............................................... 43 The Fairy Ship........................................... 27 The Frog Prince.......................................... 43 Goody Two Shoes.......................................... 48 Jack and the Bean-Stalk.................................. 43 Mother Hubbard........................................... 21 The Sleeping Beauty...................................... 44 This Little Pig.......................................... 22 Cranford. Gaskell................................................. 225 Creighton. A First History of France............................... 117 Crichton. Peep-in-the-World....................................... 110 Cruikshank. The Cruikshank Fairy Book................................ 64 Cruikshank Fairy Book, The. Cruikshank............................................... 64 Cruise of the Cachalot, The. Bullen.................................................. 224 Custer. Boots and Saddles....................................... 143
Daddy Darwin's Dovecot. Ewing. See her Jackanapes. Dale and Fraser, Sheepmen. Hamp. Dana, R.H. Two Years Before the Mast............................... 178 Dana, Mrs. W.S. See Parsons. Darton. Tales of the Canterbury Pilgrims........................ 153 Deerslayer, The. Cooper.................................................. 163 Defoe. Robinson Crusoe......................................... 135 Deming. Indian Child-Life........................................ 32 Diaz. The William Henry Letters............................... 110 Dickens. A Child's History of England............................ 143 Dickerson. The Frog Book........................................... 185 Discovery and Exploration of America, The. Gilman................................................... 74 Ditmars. The Reptile Book........................................ 218 Diverting History of John Gilpin, The. Cowper................................................... 44 Dix. Merrylips............................................... 191 Soldier Rigdale......................................... 192 Dixon. Fairy Tales from the Arabian Nights..................... 100 Docas, the Indian Boy of Santa Clara. Snedden.................................................. 71 Dodge. Hans Brinker............................................ 135 Dodgson. See Carroll. Dole. The Young Citizen....................................... 144 Don Quixote of the Mancha. Cervantes............................................... 127 Doubleday. See Blanchan. Dove in the Eagle's Nest, The. Yonge................................................... 231 Drake. Indian History for Young Folks.......................... 172 On Plymouth Rock......................................... 74 Drummond. The Monkey That Would Not Kill........................... 89 Du Chaillu. The Country of the Dwarfs................................ 96 The Land of the Long Night.............................. 149 Wild Life Under the Equator.............................. 97 Duncan. Mary's Garden and How It Grew........................... 106
Each and All. Andrews.................................................. 50 Early Story of Israel, The. Thomas.................................................. 129 Earth in Past Ages, The. Herrick................................................. 107 Eastman. Indian Boyhood.......................................... 178 Eckstorm. The Bird Book........................................... 158 Eckstorm. The Woodpeckers......................................... 132 Edgeworth. Tales from Maria Edgeworth.............................. 110 Eggleston, Edward. The Hoosier School-Boy.................................. 135 Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans.......... 60 Eggleston, G.C. The Last of the Flatboats............................... 164 Egypt. Kelly................................................... 150 Elizabeth's Charm-String. Forbes.................................................. 164 England. Finnemore............................................... 121 Evermann. See Jordan and Evermann. Every-Day Life in the Colonies. Stone, G.L., and Pickett................................. 76 Ewing. Jackanapes. Daddy Darwin's Dovecot. The Story of a Short Life............................. 192 Eyes and No Eyes, and Other Stories. Aiken and Barbauld....................................... 69
Fables of AEsop, The. AEsop.................................................... 61 Fairy Ship, The. Crane.................................................... 27 Fairy Tales from Hans Christian Andersen. Andersen................................................. 98 Fairy Tales from the Arabian Nights. Dixon................................................... 100 Fairy Tales from the Far North. Asbjoernsen.............................................. 77 Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm. Grimm.................................................... 78 Famous Adventures and Prison Escapes of the Civil War............. 201 Famous American Authors. Bolton.................................................. 200 Fanciful Tales. Stockton................................................ 103 Farmer Went Trotting upon His Grey Mare, A. Caldecott. See his Ride a-Cock Horse to Banbury Cross. Farmer's Boy, The. Caldecott................................................ 23 Feats on the Fiord. Martineau............................................... 166 Fickett. See Stone, G.L., and Fickett. Fighting a Fire. Hill, C.T............................................... 119 Finnemore. England................................................. 121 France.................................................. 149 The Holy Land........................................... 121 India................................................... 178 Italy................................................... 210 Japan................................................... 179 Switzerland.............................................. 97 First Book in Geology, A. Shaler.................................................. 189 First Book of Birds, The. Miller................................................... 87 First History of France, A. Creighton............................................... 117 Flaherty. See Gayley and Flaherty. Flamingo Feather, The. Munroe.................................................. 167 Flower Legends for Children. Murray................................................... 52 Foa. The Boy Life of Napoleon................................ 144 For the Honor of the School. Barbour................................................. 189 Forbes. Elizabeth's Charm-String................................ 164 Four in Camp. Barbour................................................. 190 Four MacNicols, The, and An Adventure in Thule. Black, William.......................................... 133 France. Finnemore............................................... 149 Francillon. Gods and Heroes.......................................... 78 Francis. A Book of Cheerful Cats and Other Animated Animals....... 28 Franklin. Autobiography........................................... 202 Freeman. See Wilkins. French, Alice. See Thanet. French, Allen. Heroes of Iceland....................................... 193 Pelham and His Friend Tim............................... 193 French, H.W. The Lance of Kanana..................................... 164 Frere. Old Deccan Days.......................................... 78 Fridtjof Nansen. Bull.................................................... 149 Frog Book, The. Dickerson............................................... 185 Frog He Would a-Wooing Go, A. Caldecott................................................ 24 Frog Prince, The. Crane.................................................... 43 Frozen North, The. Horton.................................................. 150 |
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