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Books in John Harvard library series

  • Essays on Education in the Early Republic

    Frederick Rudolph

    Hardcover (Belknap Press, Jan. 1, 1965)
    Raymond, who can't pronounce his E, S, and Z sounds must call his sister Lithabeth, while Elizabeth, who can't say her R's, must call him Waymond.
  • Essays on Education in the Early Republic

    Frederick ed. RUDOLPH

    Hardcover (Harvard University Press, March 15, 1965)
    None
  • The Works of Anne Bradstreet

    Anne Bradstreet, Jeannine Hensley, Adrienne Rich

    Hardcover (Belknap Press, Jan. 1, 1967)
    Anne Bradstreet, the first true poet in the American colonies, wrote at a time and in a place where any literary creation was rare and difficult and that of a woman more unusual still. Born in England and brought up in the household of the Earl of Lincoln where her father, Thomas Dudley, was steward, Anne Bradstreet sailed to Massachusetts Bay in 1630, shortly after her marriage at sixteen to Simon Bradstreet. For the next forty years she lived in the New England wilderness, raising a family of eight, combating sickness and hardship, and writing the verse that made her, as the poet Adrienne Rich says in her Foreword to this edition, "the first non-didactic American poet, the first to give an embodiment to American nature, the first in whom personal intention appears to precede Puritan dogma as an impulse to verse." All Anne Bradstreet's extant poetry and prose is published here with modernized spelling and punctuation. This volume reproduces the second edition of Several Poems, brought out in Boston in 1678, as well as the contents of a manuscript first printed in 1857. Adrienne Rich's Foreword offers a sensitive and illuminating critique of Anne Bradstreet both as a person and as a writer, and the Introduction, scholarly notes, and appendices by Jeannine Hensley make this an authoritative edition. Adrienne Rich observes, "Intellectual intensity among women gave cause for uneasiness" at this period--a fact borne out by the lines in the Prologue to the early poems: "I am obnoxious to each carping tongue/ Who says my hand a needle better fits." The broad scope of Anne Bradstreet's own learning and reading is most evident in the literary and historical allusions of The Tenth Muse, the first edition of her poems, published in London in 1650. Her later verse and her prose meditations strike a more personal note, however, and reveal both a passionate religious sense and a depth of feeling for her husband, her children, the fears and disappointments she constantly faced, and the consoling power of nature. Imbued with a Puritan striving to turn all events to the glory of God, these writings bear the mark of a woman of strong spirit, charm, delicacy, and wit: in their intimate and meditative quality Anne Bradstreet is established as a poet of sensibility and permanent stature.
  • A Woman Rice Planter

    Patience. PENNINGTON

    Hardcover (Harvard University Press, Cambridge, March 15, 1961)
    None
  • The Gospel of Wealth, And Other Timely Essays

    Andrew Carnegie, Edward Chase Kirkland

    Hardcover (Belknap Press, Jan. 1, 1962)
    Book by Carnegie, Andrew
  • A Fool's Errand

    Albion W. Tourgee, John Hope Franklin

    Paperback (Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Jan. 1, 1961)
    What was a carpetbagger? Albion W. Tourgee was called one, and he wrote, "To the southern mind it meant a scion of the North, a son of an "abolitionist" a creature of the conqueror, a witness to their defeat, a mark of their degradation: to them he was hateful, because he recalled all of evil or of shame they had ever known . . . To the Northern mind, however, the word had no vicarious significance. To their apprehension, the hatred was purely personal, and without regard to race or nativity. They thought (foolish creatures!) that it was meant to apply solely to those, who, without any visible means of support, lingering in the wake of a victorious army, preyed upon the conquered people. "Tourgee's novel, originally published in 1879 anonymously as A Fool's Errand, By One of the Fools, is not strictly autobiographical, though it draws on Tourgee's own experiences in the South. In the story Comfort Servosse, a Northerner of French ancestry, moves to a Southern state for his health and in the hope of making his fortune. These were also Tourgee's motives for moving South. Servosse is caught up in a variety of experiences that make apparent the deep misunderstanding between North and South, and expresses opinions on the South's intolerance, the treatment of the Negro, Reconstruction, and other issues that probably are the opinions of Tourgee himself. "Reconstruction was a failure" he said, "so far as it attempted to unify the nation, to make one people in fact of what had been one only in name before the convulsion of Civil War. It was a failure, too, so far as it attempted to fix and secure the position and rights of the colored race" Though the discussion of sectional and racial problems is an important element in the book, A Fool's Errand has merit as a dramatic narrative-with its love affair, and its moments of pathos, suffering, and tragedy. This combination of tract and melodrama made it a bestseller in its day.
  • The Physical Geography of the Sea, and Its Meteorology

    Matthew Fontaine Maury

    Paperback (Belknap Press, March 15, 1963)
    The eighth and last American edition republished here, The Physical Geography of the Sea, and Its Meteorology, was kept in print without revision for the longest time. The revision that produced it was, moreover, more extensive than any earlier one. Seven chapters are changed only slightly from the "entirely new edition, with addenda" of 1859, which contained 389 pages as compared to 474 in the eighth edition. One chapter "The Submarine Telegraph of the Atlantic" is omitted. Three chapters are new, Chapter 4 combines two short chapters in the preceding edition. Chapters 15 and 16 are a result of the division of another long chapter. The remaining chapters were extensively rewritten and new material was added to them. Most of the figures are new. No edition of this book is systematically organized. It began as a collection of papers. Many popularly held conceptions of the motions of the atmosphere and the sea and ideas about weather and climate are presented. These notions and others, few of which were original with Maury but most of which were obsolete or gravely questioned in his day, have lived on in the underworld of science: in popular literature and school textbooks.
  • The Damnation of Theron Ware

    Harold Frederic

    Hardcover (Harvard, Jan. 1, 1960)
    None
  • Gospel of Wealth & Other Timely Essays

    Andrew Carnegie

    Paperback (BELKNAP PRESS OF HARVARD UNIV, March 15, 1962)
    None
  • The Pioneers

    James Fenimore Cooper, Robert Daly

    Paperback (Belknap Press: An Imprint of Harvard University Press, May 31, 2011)
    With The Pioneers (1823), Cooper initiated his series of elegiac romances of frontier life and introduced the world to Natty Bumppo (or Leather-stocking). Set in 1793 in New York State, the novel depicts an aging Leather-stocking negotiating his way in a restlessly expanding society. In his introduction, Robert Daly argues for the novel’s increasing relevance: we live in a similarly complex society as Cooper’s frontier world, faced with the same questions about the limits of individualism, the need for voluntary cooperation, and stewardship of the environment. The John Harvard Library edition reproduces the authoritative text of The Pioneers in the The Writings of James Fenimore Cooper, published by the State University of New York Press.
  • Hospital Sketches

    Louisa May Alcott, Bessie Zaban Jones

    Hardcover (Belknap Press of Harvard University, Jan. 1, 1960)
    Purchase one of 1st World Library's Classic Books and help support our free internet library of downloadable eBooks. 1st World Library-Literary Society is a non-profit educational organization. Visit us online at www.1stWorldLibrary.ORG - So far, very good. Here was the will - now for the way. At first sight not a foot of it appeared, but that didn't matter, for the Periwinkles are a hopeful race; their crest is an anchor, with three cock-a-doodles crowing atop. They all wear rose-colored spectacles, and are lineal descendants of the inventor of aerial architecture. An hour's conversation on the subject set the whole family in a blaze of enthusiasm. A model hospital was erected, and each member had accepted an honorable post therein. The paternal P. was chaplain, the maternal P. was matron, and all the youthful P.s filled the pod of futurity with achievements whose brilliancy eclipsed the glories of the present and the past. Arriving at this satisfactory conclusion, the meeting adjourn
  • A Fool's Errand

    Albion W. Tourgee, John Hope Franklin

    (Harvard University Press, July 6, 1961)
    None