Glimpses of Unfamiliar JapanLafcadio HearnOut of the East"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "Kokoro"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "Kwaidan"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "A Japanese Miscellany"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "Two Years in the French West Indies"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "Japanese Life in Town and CountryG.W. KnoxOur Neighbors the JapaneseJ.K. GoodrichWhen I Was YoungYoshio MarkinoMiss John Bull"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "When I Was a Boy in JapanSakae ShioyaJapanese Girls and WomenAlice M. BaconA Japanese Interior"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "JaponicaSir Edwin ArnoldJapanW.E. GriffisHuman BulletsTadayoshy SukuraiThe Story of JapanR. Van BergenA Boy in Old Japan"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "Letters from JapanMrs. Hugh FrazerUnbeaten Tracks in JapanIsabella Bird (Bishop)The Lady of the DecorationFrances LittleLittle Sister Snow"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "Japan in PicturesDouglas SladenOld and New Japan (good illustrations in color)Clive HollandNogiStanley WashburnJapan, the Eastern WonderlandD.C. AngusPeeps at Many Lands: JapanJohn FinnemoreJapan Described by Great WritersEsther SingletonThe Flower of Old Japan [verse]Alfred NoyesDancing and Dancers of To-dayCaroline and Chas. H. CoffinThe Healthful Art of DancingL.H. GulickThe Festival BookJ.E.C. LincolnFolk DancesCaroline CrawfordLafcadio HearnNina H. KennardLafcadio Hearn (Portrait)Edward ThomasThe Life and Letters of Lafcadio HearnElizabeth BislandThe Japanese Letters of Lafcadio Hearn"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "Lafcadio Hearn in JapanYone NoguchiLafcadio Hearn (Portraits)Current Literature 42:50
Ponkapog, Mass., Dec. 13, 1875.
Ponkapog, Mass., Dec. 13, 1875.
Dear Howells,—We had so charming a visit at your house that I have about made up my mind to reside with you permanently. I am tired of writing. I would like to settle down in just such a comfortable home as yours, with a man who can work regularly four or five hours a day, thereby relieving one of all painful apprehensions in respect to clothes and pocket-money. I am easy to get along with. I have few unreasonable wants and never complain when they are constantly supplied. I think I could depend on you.
Ever yours,T.B.A.
Ever yours,T.B.A.
P.S.—I should want to bring my two mothers, my two boys (I seem to have everything in twos), my wife, and her sister.
Dear Mr. Morse:
It was very pleasant to me to get a letter from you the other day. Perhaps I should have found it pleasanter if I had been able to decipher it. I don't think that I mastered anything beyond the date (which I knew) and the signature (at which I guessed).
There's a singular and perpetual charm in a letter of yours—it never grows old; it never loses its novelty. One can say to one's self every morning: "There's that letter of Morse's. I haven't read it yet. I think I'll take another shy at it to-day, and maybe I shall be able in the course of a few days to make out what he means by thoset's that look likew's, and thosei's that haven't any eyebrows."
Other letters are read, and thrown away, and forgotten; but yours are kept forever—unread. One of them will last a reasonable man a lifetime.
Admiringly yours,T.B. Aldrich.
Admiringly yours,T.B. Aldrich.
The Quadrangle Club,Chicago, September 30, '99.
The Quadrangle Club,Chicago, September 30, '99.
Your generous praise makes me rather shamefaced: you ought to keep it for something that counts. At least other people ought: you would find a bright ringing word, and the proportion of things would be kept. As for me, I am doing my best to keep the proportion of things, in the midst of no-standards and a dreary dingy fog-expanse of darkened counsel. Bah! here I am whining in my third sentence, and the purpose of this note was not to whine, but to thank you for heart new-taken. I take the friendly words (for I need them cruelly) and forget the inadequate occasion of them. I am looking forward with almost feverish pleasure to the new year, when I shall be among friendships which time and absence and half-estrangements have only made to shine with a more inward light; and when,so accompanied, I can make shift to think and live a little. Do not wait till then to say Welcome.
W.V.M.
W.V.M.
Lawrence, Kansas,October 24, 1873.
Lawrence, Kansas,October 24, 1873.
My dear Anna,—
I left Topeka—which sounds like a name Franky might have invented—early yesterday morning, but did not reach Atchison, only sixty miles distant, until seven o'clock at night—an hour before the lecture. The engine as usual had broken down, and left me at four o'clock fifteen miles from Atchison, on the edge of a bleak prairie with only one house in sight. But I got a saddle-horse—there was no vehicle to be had—and strapping my lecture and blanket to my back I gave my valise to a little yellow boy—who looked like a dirty terra-cotta figure—with orders to follow me on another horse, and so tore off towards Atchison. I got there in time; the boy reached there two hours after.
I make no comment; you can imagine the half-sick, utterly disgusted man who glared at that audience over his desk that night.... And yet it was a good audience, thoroughly refined and appreciative, and very glad to see me. I was very anxious about this lecture, for it was a venture of my own, and I had been told that Atchison was a rough place—energetic but coarse. I think I wrote you from St. Louis that I had found there were only three actual engagements in Kansas, and that my list which gave Kansas City twice was a mistake. So I decided to take Atchison. I made ahundred dollars by the lecture, and it is yours, for yourself, Nan, to buy "Minxes" with, if you want, for it is over and above the amount Eliza and I footed up on my lecture list. I shall send it to you as soon as the bulk of the pressing claims are settled.
Everything thus far has gone well; besides my lecture of to-night I have one more to close Kansas, and then I go on to St. Joseph. I've been greatly touched with the very honest and sincere liking which these Western people seem to have for me. They seem to have read everything I have written—and appear to appreciate the best. Think of a rough fellow in a bearskin coat and blue shirt repeating to meConcepcion de Arguello! Their strange good taste and refinement under that rough exterior—even their tact—are wonderful to me. They are "Kentucks" and "Dick Bullens" with twice the refinement and tenderness of their California brethren....
I've seen but one [woman] that interested me—an old negro wench. She was talking and laughing outside my door the other evening, but her laugh was so sweet and unctuous and musical—so full of breadth and goodness that I went outside and talked to her while she was scrubbing the stones. She laughed as a canary bird sings—because she couldn't help it. It did me a world of good, for it was before the lecture, at twilight, when I am very blue and low-toned. She had been a slave.
I expected to have heard from you here. I've nothing from you or Eliza since last Friday, when I got yours of the 12th. I shall direct this to Eliza's care, as I do not even know where you are.
Your affectionateFrank.
Your affectionateFrank.
[Kumamoto, Japan]January 17, 1893.
[Kumamoto, Japan]January 17, 1893.
Dear Chamberlain,—
I'm writing just because I feel lonesome; isn't that selfish? However, if I can amuse you at all, you will forgive me. You have been away a whole year,—so perhaps you would like to hear some impressions of mine during that time. Here goes.
The illusions are forever over; but the memory of many pleasant things remains. I know much more about the Japanese than I did a year ago; and still I am far from understanding them well. Even my own little wife is somewhat mysterious still to me, though always in a lovable way. Of course a man and woman know each other's hearts; but outside of personal knowledge, there are race tendencies difficult to understand. Let me tell one. In Oki we fell in love with a little Samurai boy, who was having a hard time of it, and we took him with us. He is now like an adopted son,—goes to school and all that. Well, I wished at first to pet him a little, but I found that was not in accordance with custom, and that even the boy did not understand it. At home, I therefore scarcely spoke to him at all; he remained under the control of the women of the house. They treated him kindly,—though I thought coldly. The relationship I could not quite understand. He was never praised and rarely scolded. A perfect code of etiquette was established between him and all the other persons in the house, according to degree and rank. He seemed extremely cold-mannered, and perhaps not even grateful, that was, so faras I could see. Nothing seemed to move his young placidity,—whether happy or unhappy his mien was exactly that of a stone Jizo. One day he let fall a little cup and broke it. According to custom, no one noticed the mistake, for fear of giving him pain. Suddenly I saw tears streaming down his face. The muscles of the face remained quite smilingly placid as usual, but even the will could not control tears. They came freely. Then everybody laughed, and said kind things to him, till he began to laugh too. Yet that delicate sensitiveness no one like me could have guessed the existence of.
But what followed surprised me more. As I said, he had been (in my idea) distantly treated. One day he did not return from school for three hours after the usual time. Then to my great surprise, the women began to cry,—to cry passionately. I had never been able to imagine alarm for the boy could have affected them so. And the servants ran over town in real, not pretended, anxiety to find him. He had been taken to a teacher's house for something relating to school matters. As soon as his voice was heard at the door, everything was quiet, cold, and amiably polite again. And I marvelled exceedingly.
Sensitiveness exists in the Japanese to an extent never supposed by the foreigners who treat them harshly at the open ports.... The Japanese master is never brutal or cruel. How Japanese can serve a certain class of foreigners at all, I can't understand....
This Orient knows not our deeper pains, nor can it even rise to our larger joys; but it has its pains. Its life is not so sunny as might be fancied from its happy aspect. Under the smile of its toiling millions thereis suffering bravely hidden and unselfishly borne; and a lower intellectual range is counterbalanced by a childish sensitiveness to make the suffering balance evenly in the eternal order of things.
Therefore I love the people very much, more and more, the more I know them....
And with this, I say good-night.
Ever most truly,Lafcadio Hearn.
Ever most truly,Lafcadio Hearn.
Shady Hill, 2 May, 1902.
Shady Hill, 2 May, 1902.
"The Kentons" have been a great comfort to me. I have been in my chamber, with a slight attack of illness, for two or three weeks, and I received them one morning. I could not have had kinder or more entertaining visitors, and I was sorry when, after two or three days, I had to say Good-bye to them. They are very "natural" people, "just Western." I am grateful to you for making me acquainted with them.
"Just Western" is the acme of praise. I think I once told you what pleasure it gave me as a compliment. Several years ago at the end of one of our Christmas Eve receptions, a young fellow from the West, taking my hand and bidding me Good-night, said with great cordiality, "Mr. Norton, I've had a delightful time; it's beenjust Western"!
"The Kentons" is really, my dear Howells, an admirable study of life, and as it was read to me my chief pleasure in listening was in your sympathetic, creative imagination, your insight, your humour, andall your other gifts, which make your stories, I believe, the most faithful representations of actual life that were ever written. Other stories seem unreal after them, and so when we had finished "The Kentons," nothing would do for entertainment but another of your books: so now we are almost at the end of "Silas Lapham," which I find as good as I found it fifteen or sixteen years ago. As Gray's idea of pleasure was to lie on a sofa and have an endless succession of stories by Crébillon,—mine is to have no end of Howells!...
Letter from William Vaughn Moody:—
darkened counsel:—See Job, 38:2. Moody seems to be referring here to the uncertainty of his plans for the future.
Letter from Bret Harte:—
Franky:—Francis King Harte, Bret Harte's second son, who was eight years old at this time.
Concepcion de Arguello:—One of Bret Harte's longer poems.
Kentuck:—A rough but kindly character in Harte'sThe Luck of Roaring Camp.
Dick Bullen:—The chief character inHow Santa Claus Came to Simpson's Bar.
Frank:—Bret Harte's name was Francis Brett Hart(e), and his family usually called him Frank.
Letter from Lafcadio Hearn:·—
Chamberlain:—Professor Chamberlain had lived for some years in Japan, when Hearn, in 1890, wrote to him, asking assistance in securing a position as teacher in the Japanese Government Schools. The friendship between the two men continued until Hearn's death.
Samurai:—Pronouncedsä' mÅÅ rÄ«; a member of the lesser nobility of Japan.
Jizo:—A Japanese god, said to be the playmate of the ghosts of children. Stone images of Jizo are common in Japan. (See page 19 ofThe Japanese Letters of Lafcadio Hearn.)
You are planning a camping trip with several of your friends; write to a friend who lives in another town, asking him or her to join the camping party.
Write to a friend asking him, or her, to come to your house for dinner and to go with you afterward to see the moving pictures.
Write a letter to accompany a borrowed book, which you are returning. Speak of the contents of the book, and the parts that you have particularly enjoyed. Express your thanks for the use of the volume.
Write a letter to an intimate friend, telling of the occurrences of the last week. Do not hesitate to recount trifling events; but make your letter as varied and lively and interesting as possible.
Write to a friend about the new house or apartment that your family has lately moved into.
Write to a friend or a relative who is visiting in a large city, asking him or her to purchase some especial article that you cannot get in your home town. Explain exactly what you want and tell how much you are willing to pay. Speak of enclosing the money, and do not fail to express the gratitude that you will feel if your friend will make the purchase for you.
You have been invited to spend the week-end in a town not far from your home. Write explaining why you cannot accept the invitation. Make your letter personal and pleasant.
Write to some member of your family explaining how you have altered your room to make it more to your taste than it has been. If you have not really changed the room, imagine that you have done so, and that it is now exactly as you want it to be.
You have heard of a family that is in great need. Write to one of your friends, telling the circumstances and asking her to help you in providing food and clothing for the children in the family.
You have just heard some startling news about an old friend whom you have not seen for some time. Write to another friend who you know will be interested, and relate the news that you have heard.
Write to one of your teachers explaining why you are late in handing in a piece of work.
Your uncle has made you a present of a sum of money. Thank him for the money and tell him what you think you will do with it.
A schoolmate is kept at home by illness. Write, offering your sympathy and services, and telling the school news.
You have had an argument with a friend on a subject of interest to you both. Since seeing this friend, you have run across an article in a magazine, which supports your view of the question. Write to your friend and tell him about the substance of the article.
Your mother has hurt her hand and cannot write; she has asked you to write to a friend of hers about some business connected with the Woman's Club.
You have arrived at home after a week's visit with a friend. Write your friend's mother, expressing the pleasure that the visit has given you. Speak particularly of the incidents of the visit, and show a lively appreciation of the kindness of your friends.
A friend whom you have invited to visit you has written saying that she (or he) is unable to accept your invitation. Write expressing your regret. You might speak of the plans you had made in anticipation of the visit; you might also make a more or less definite suggestion regarding a later date for the arrival of your friend.
You are trying to secure a position. Write to some one for whom you have worked, or some one who knows you well, asking for a recommendation that you can use in applying for a position.
Write to your brother (or some other near relative), telling about a trip that you have recently taken.
Write to one of your friends who is away at school, telling of the athletic situation in the high school you are attending. Assume that your friend is acquainted with many of the students in the high school.
You are sending some kodak films to be developed by a professional photographer. Explain to him what you are sendingand what you want done. Speak of the price that he asks for his work, and the money that you are enclosing.
Write a letter applying for a position. If possible, tell how you have heard of the vacancy. State your qualifications, especially the education and training that you have had; if you have had any experience, tell definitely what it has been. Mention the recommendations that you are enclosing, or give references to several persons who will write concerning your character and ability. Do not urge your qualifications, or make any promises, but tell about yourself as simply and impersonally as possible. Close your letter without any elaborate expressions of "hoping" or "trusting" or "thanking." "Very truly yours," or "Very respectfully yours," will be sufficient.
You have secured the position for which you applied. Write expressing your pleasure in obtaining the situation. Ask for information as to the date on which you are to begin work.
Write to a friend or a relative, telling about your new position: how you secured it; what your work will be; what you hope will come of it.
Write a brief respectful letter asking for money that is owed you.
Write to a friend considerably older than yourself, asking for advice as to the appropriate college or training school for you to enter when you have finished the high school course.
Letters and Letter-writingCharity DyeSuccess in Letter-writingSherwin CodyHow to do Business by Letter"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "Charm and Courtesy in Letter-writingFrances B. CallawayStudies for Letters"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "The Gentlest ArtE.V. LucasThe Second Post"Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â "The Friendly CraftF.D. HanscomLife and Letters of Miss AlcottE.D. Cheney (Ed.)Vailima LettersR.L. StevensonLetters of William Vaughn MoodyDaniel Mason (Ed.)Letters from Colonial ChildrenEva March TappanWoman as Letter-writersA.M. Ingpen.The Etiquette of CorrespondenceHelen E. Gavit
I. Write a conversation suggested by one of the following situations. Wherever it seems desirable to do so, give, in parentheses, directions for the action, and indicate the gestures and the facial expressions of the speakers.
1. Tom has had trouble at school; he is questioned at home about the matter.2. Two girls discuss a party that has taken place the night before.3. A child and his mother are talking about Christmas.4. Clayton Wells is running for the presidency of the Senior class in the high school; he talks with some of his schoolmates, and is talked about.5. There has been a fire at the factory; some of the men talk about its origin.6. A girl borrows her sister's pearl pin and loses it.7. Unexpected guests have arrived; while they are removing their wraps in the hall, a conversation takes place in the kitchen.8. Anna wishes to go on a boating expedition, but her father and mother object.9. The crops in a certain district have failed; two young farmers talk over the situation.10. Two girls are getting dinner; their mother is away, and they are obliged to plan and do everything themselves.11. A boy has won a prize, and two or three other boys are talking with him.12. The prize-winning student has gone, and the other boys are talking about him.13. The furnace fire has gone out; various members of the family express their annoyance, and the person who is to blame defends himself.14. Grandfather has lost his spectacles.15. Laura has seen a beautiful hat in a shop window, and talks with her mother about it.16. Two men talk of the coming election of city officers.17. A boy has been removed from the football team on account of his low standings; members of the team discuss the situation.18. Sylvia asks her younger brother to go on an errand for her; he does not wish to go; the conversation becomes spirited.19. Grandmother entertains another old lady at afternoon tea.20. A working man is accused of stealing a dollar bill from the cook in the house where he is temporarily employed.21. Mary Sturgis talks with her mother about going away to college.22. A young man talks with his sister about woman's suffrage; they become somewhat excited.23. A middle-aged couple talk about adopting a child.24. There is a strike at the mills; some of the employees discuss it; the employers discuss it among themselves.25. An aunt in the city has written asking Louise to visit her; Louise talks with several members of her family about going.26. Two boys talk about the ways in which they earn money, and what they do with it.27. Albert Gleason has had a run-away; his neighbors talk about it.28. Two brothers quarrel over a horse.29. Ruth's new dress does not satisfy her.30. The storekeeper discusses neighborhood news with some of his customers.31. Will has had a present of a five-dollar gold-piece; his sisters tell him what he ought to do with it; his ideas on the subject are not the same as theirs.32. An old house, in which a well-to-do family have lived for many years, is to be torn down; a group of neighbors talk about the house and the family.33. A young man talks with a business man about a position.34. Harold buys a canoe; he converses with the boy who sells it to him, and also with some of the members of his own family.35. Two old men talk about the pranks they played when they were boys.36. Several young men talk about a recent baseball game.37. Several young men talk about a coming League game.38. Breakfast is late.39. A mysterious stranger has appeared in the village; a group of people talk about him.40. Herbert Elliott takes out his father's automobile without permission, and damages it seriously; he tries to explain.41. Jerome Connor has just "made" the high school football team.42. Two boys plan a camping trip.43. Several boys are camping, and one of the number does not seem willing to do his share of the work.44. Several young people consider what they are going to do when they have finished school.45. Two women talk about the spring fashions.
1. Tom has had trouble at school; he is questioned at home about the matter.
2. Two girls discuss a party that has taken place the night before.
3. A child and his mother are talking about Christmas.
4. Clayton Wells is running for the presidency of the Senior class in the high school; he talks with some of his schoolmates, and is talked about.
5. There has been a fire at the factory; some of the men talk about its origin.
6. A girl borrows her sister's pearl pin and loses it.
7. Unexpected guests have arrived; while they are removing their wraps in the hall, a conversation takes place in the kitchen.
8. Anna wishes to go on a boating expedition, but her father and mother object.
9. The crops in a certain district have failed; two young farmers talk over the situation.
10. Two girls are getting dinner; their mother is away, and they are obliged to plan and do everything themselves.
11. A boy has won a prize, and two or three other boys are talking with him.
12. The prize-winning student has gone, and the other boys are talking about him.
13. The furnace fire has gone out; various members of the family express their annoyance, and the person who is to blame defends himself.
14. Grandfather has lost his spectacles.
15. Laura has seen a beautiful hat in a shop window, and talks with her mother about it.
16. Two men talk of the coming election of city officers.
17. A boy has been removed from the football team on account of his low standings; members of the team discuss the situation.
18. Sylvia asks her younger brother to go on an errand for her; he does not wish to go; the conversation becomes spirited.
19. Grandmother entertains another old lady at afternoon tea.
20. A working man is accused of stealing a dollar bill from the cook in the house where he is temporarily employed.
21. Mary Sturgis talks with her mother about going away to college.
22. A young man talks with his sister about woman's suffrage; they become somewhat excited.
23. A middle-aged couple talk about adopting a child.
24. There is a strike at the mills; some of the employees discuss it; the employers discuss it among themselves.
25. An aunt in the city has written asking Louise to visit her; Louise talks with several members of her family about going.
26. Two boys talk about the ways in which they earn money, and what they do with it.
27. Albert Gleason has had a run-away; his neighbors talk about it.
28. Two brothers quarrel over a horse.
29. Ruth's new dress does not satisfy her.
30. The storekeeper discusses neighborhood news with some of his customers.
31. Will has had a present of a five-dollar gold-piece; his sisters tell him what he ought to do with it; his ideas on the subject are not the same as theirs.
32. An old house, in which a well-to-do family have lived for many years, is to be torn down; a group of neighbors talk about the house and the family.
33. A young man talks with a business man about a position.
34. Harold buys a canoe; he converses with the boy who sells it to him, and also with some of the members of his own family.
35. Two old men talk about the pranks they played when they were boys.
36. Several young men talk about a recent baseball game.
37. Several young men talk about a coming League game.
38. Breakfast is late.
39. A mysterious stranger has appeared in the village; a group of people talk about him.
40. Herbert Elliott takes out his father's automobile without permission, and damages it seriously; he tries to explain.
41. Jerome Connor has just "made" the high school football team.
42. Two boys plan a camping trip.
43. Several boys are camping, and one of the number does not seem willing to do his share of the work.
44. Several young people consider what they are going to do when they have finished school.
45. Two women talk about the spring fashions.
II. Choose some familiar fairy-tale or well known children's story, and put it into the form of a little play for children. Find a story that is rather short, and that has a good deal of dialogue in it. In writing the play, try to make the conversation simple and lively.
III. In a story book for children, find a short story and put it into dialogue form. It will be wise to select a story that already contains a large proportion of conversation.
IV. From a magazine or a book of short stories (not for children), select a very brief piece of narration, and put it into dramatic form. After you have finished, write out directions for the setting of the stage, if you have not already done so, and give your idea of what the costuming ought to be.
Two Gentlemen of KentuckyJames Lane AllenStandish of StandishJane G. AustinD'ri and IIrving BachellerEben Holden"        "The HalfbackR.H. BarbourFor King or CountryJames BarnesA Loyal Traitor"        "A Bow of Orange RibbonAmelia E. BarrJan Vedder's Wife"        "Remember the Alamo"        "The Little MinisterJ.M. BarrieThe Little White Bird"        "Sentimental Tommy"        "Wee MacGregorJ.J. Bell.Looking BackwardEdward BellamyMaster SkylarkJohn BennettA Princess of ThuleWilliam BlackLorne DooneR.D. BlackmoreMary CaryK.L. BosherMiss Gibbie Gault"        "Jane EyreCharlotte BrontëVillette"        "Meadow GrassAlice BrownTiverton Tales"        "The Story of a PloughboyJames BryceMy RobinF.H. BurnettThe Secret Garden"        "T. Tembarom"        "The Jackknife ManEllis Parker ButlerThe Begum's DaughterE.L. BynnerBonaventureG.W. CableDr. Sevier"        "The Golden Rule DolliversMargaret CameronThe Lady of Fort St. JohnMary Hartwell CatherwoodLazarre"        "Old Kaskaskia"        "The Romance of Dollard"        "The Story of Tonty"        "The White Islander"        "Richard CarvelWinston ChurchillA Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's CourtSamuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain)Pudd'nhead Wilson"        "The Prince and the Pauper"        "Tom Sawyer"        "John Halifax, GentlemanD.M. Craik (Miss Mulock)The Red Badge of CourageStephen CraneWhilomville Stories"        "A Roman SingerF.M. CrawfordSaracinesca"        "Zoroaster"        "The Lilac SunbonnetS.R. CrockettThe Stickit Minister"        "Smith College StoriesJ.D. Daskam [Bacon]GallegherR.H. DavisThe Princess Aline"        "Soldiers of Fortune"        "Old Chester TalesMargaret DelandThe Story of a Child"        "Hugh GwyethB.M. DixSoldier Rigdale"        "Rebecca MaryAnnie Hamilton DonnellThe Very Small Person"        "The Adventures of Sherlock HolmesA. Conan DoyleMicah Clarke"        "The Refugees"        "Uncle Bernac"        "The Black TulipAlexander DumasThe Three Musketeers"        "Doctor Luke of the LabradorNorman DuncanThe Story of Sonny SahibSara J. DuncanThe Hoosier SchoolboyEdward EgglestonThe Hoosier Schoolmaster"        "The Honorable Peter StirlingP.L. FordJanice Meredith"        "In the ValleyHarold FredericA New England NunM.E. Wilkins FreemanThe Portion of Labor"        "Six Trees"        "Friendship VillageZona GaleBoy Life on the PrairieHamlin GarlandPrairie Folks"        "Toby: The Story of a DogElizabeth GoldsmithCollege GirlsAbby Carter GoodloeGlengarry School DaysCharles W. Gordon (Ralph Connor)The Man from Glengarry"        "The Prospector"        "The Sky Pilot"        "The Man Without a CountryE.E. HaleNights with Uncle RemusJ.C. HarrisThe Log of a Sea AnglerC.F. HolderPhrosoAnthony Hope [Hawkins]The Prisoner of Zenda"        "Rupert of Hentzau"        "One SummerB.W. HowardThe Flight of Pony BakerW.D. HowellsTom Brown at OxfordThomas HughesTom Brown's School Days"        "The Lady of the BargeW.W. JacobsOdd Craft"        "RamonaH.H. JacksonLittle CitizensMyra KellyWards of Liberty"        "Horseshoe RobinsonJ.P. KennedyThe Brushwood BoyRudyard KiplingCaptains Courageous"        "The Jungle Book"        "Kim"        "Puck of Pook's Hill"        "Tales of the Fish PatrolJack LondonThe SlowcoachE.V. LucasBeside the Bonnie Brier BushIan Maclaren (John Watson)A Doctor of the Old School"        "Peg o' my HeartJ.H. MannersEmmy LouG.M. MartinTilly: A Mennonite MaidH.R. MartinJim DavisJohn MasefieldFour FeathersA.E.W. MasonThe Adventures of FrançoisS.W. MitchellHugh Wynne"        "Anne of AvonleaL.M. MontgomeryAnne of Green Gables"        "The Chronicles of Avonlea"        "Down the RavineMary N. Murfree (Charles Egbert Craddock)In the Tennessee MountainsMary N. MurfreeThe Mystery of Witch-Face Mountain"        "The Prophet of the Great Smoky Mountains"        "The House of a Thousand CandlesMeredith NicholsonMotherKathleen NorrisPeanutA.B. PaineJudgments of the SeaRalph D. PaineThe Man with the Iron HandJohn C. ParishPierre and his PeopleGilbert ParkerSeats of the Mighty"        "When Valmond Came to Pontiac"        "A Madonna of the TubsE.S. Phelps [Ward]A Singular LifeE.S. Phelps [Ward]FrecklesG.S. PorterEzekielLucy PrattEzekiel Expands"        "November JoeHesketh PrichardMen of IronHoward PyleThe Merry Adventures of Robin Hood"        "The Splendid SpurA.T. Quiller-CouchLovey MaryAlice Hegan RiceMrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch"        "Sandy"        "The Feet of the FurtiveC.G.D. RobertsThe Heart of an Ancient WoodC.G.D. RobertsThe Wreck of the GrosvenorW.C. RussellTwo Girls of Old New JerseyAgnes C. SageLittle JarvisMolly Elliot SeawellA Virginia Cavalier"        "The Quest of the Fish-Dog SkinJ.W. SchultzThe Black ArrowRobert Louis StevensonDavid Balfour"        "The Master of Ballantrae"        "St. Ives"        "The Fugitive BlacksmithC.D. StewartThe Casting Away of Mrs. Lecks and Mrs. AleshineFrank R. StocktonThe Dusantes"        "The Lady or the Tiger"        "The Merry Chanter"        "Rudder Grange"        "Napoleon JacksonRuth McE. StuartSonny"        "Monsieur BeaucaireBooth TarkingtonExpiationOctave Thanet (Alice French)Stories of a Western Town"        "The Golden Book of VeniceF.L. TurnbullW.A.G.'s TaleMargaret TurnbullBen HurLew WallaceA Fair God"        "My Rag PickerMary E. WallerThe Wood Carver of 'Lympus"        "The Story of AbStanley WaterlooDaddy Long-LegsJean WebsterA Gentleman of FranceStanley J. WeymanUnder the Red Robe"        "The Blazed TrailStewart Edward WhiteThe Conjuror's House"        "The Silent Places"        "The Westerners"        "A Certain Rich ManWilliam Allen WhiteThe Court of Boyville"        "Stratagems and Spoils"        "The GayworthysA.D.T. WhitneyMother Carey's ChickensK.D. Wiggin [Riggs]Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm"        "The Chronicles of Rebecca"        "The Story of Waitstill Baxter"        "Princeton StoriesJ.L. WilliamsPhilosophy FourOwen WisterThe Virginian"        "Bootles' BabyJohn Strange Winter (H.E. Stannard)The Widow O'Callaghan's BoysGulielma Zollinger (W.Z. Gladwin)