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@@ -1,36 +1,4 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Life of Walt Whitman, by Henry Bryan Binns
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: A Life of Walt Whitman
-
-
-Author: Henry Bryan Binns
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 10, 2018 [eBook #56536]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LIFE OF WALT WHITMAN***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Emmanuel Ackerman and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 56536 ***
@@ -419,7 +387,7 @@ _The following abbreviations are used in the Notes._
Donaldson = T. Donaldson's _W. W.: The Man_, 1897.
- _En. Brit. Suppt._ = _Encyclopdia Britannica: Supplement, United
+ _En. Brit. Suppt._ = _Encyclopædia Britannica: Supplement, United
States._
_Good-bye and Hail_ = _Good-bye and Hail, W. W._, 1892.
@@ -525,7 +493,7 @@ who still retain most of the temper of that generous morning! The
American of to-day with his thirst for knowledge, his versatility,
his quick sense of the practicable, his delight in the doing of
things, his directness and frankness of purpose, his comradeship
-and hospitality, his lack of self-consciousness--with all the nave
+and hospitality, his lack of self-consciousness--with all the naïve
inconsistencies, the amiable braggings, the mouthings of phrases, and
the love of praise which belong to such unconsciousness of self--with
his glowing optimism, his belief in human nature, his faith and
@@ -539,7 +507,7 @@ told for the first time into our own ears. And like some consummate
story whose chapters, appearing month by month, hold us continually
in expectant suspense, its plot is still evolving and its characters
revealing themselves, so that as yet we can only guess at its
-_dnouement_.
+_dénouement_.
I call it a Romance, for it is indeed a tale of wonder; but unlike
the old romances its bold realism is not always beautiful. The style
@@ -664,7 +632,7 @@ deepened loose phrases and popular enthusiasms into a national hymn.
Himself something of a poet--how much we need not attempt to
estimate--he did continual homage to that greater Poet, whose works
were at once his education and his library--the genius of America. None
-other, ancient or medival, discoursed to his ear or penned in immortal
+other, ancient or mediæval, discoursed to his ear or penned in immortal
characters for him to read, rhythms so large and pregnant. It was the
prayer and purpose of his life that he might contribute his verse to
that great poem; and his life is like a verse which it is impossible
@@ -803,7 +771,7 @@ Church, and with its timbers erected a fortress in the public
burying-ground, his soldiers employing the gravestones for fire-places
and ovens.[6] They seem to have occupied another meeting-house as a
stable. Such are the everyday incidents of a military occupation;
-arising out of them, claims to the amount of 7,000 were preferred
+arising out of them, claims to the amount of £7,000 were preferred
against the colonel by the township; but he withdrew to England, where,
as Count Rumford, he afterwards became famous upon more peaceful fields.
@@ -812,7 +780,7 @@ country town of one long straggling street. It counted about 5,000
inhabitants, many of them substantial folk, and in this was not far
behind Brooklyn. In those days the whole island could not boast 60,000
people. But if they were few, they were stalwart. The old sea-going
-Paumnackers were a rough and hardy folk, and travellers remarked the
+Paumànackers were a rough and hardy folk, and travellers remarked the
frank friendliness of the island youth.[7]
Inter-racial relations seem upon the whole to have been good; the
@@ -2018,7 +1986,7 @@ reprinted several of the new poems of Tennyson from English sources
and contained long notices of such works as Carlyle's _Heroes and
Hero-worship_. In November, 1842, it issued as an extra number
Dickens's _American Notes_, the sensation of the hour--the author
-having been _fted_ at the Park Theatre in February--and announced
+having been _fêted_ at the Park Theatre in February--and announced
Lytton Bulwer's _Last of the Barons_ to follow. On the 23rd of
the month, in the same fashion, appeared _Franklin Evans, or The
Inebriate_, a tale of the times, by Walter Whitman. It was advertised
@@ -2882,7 +2850,7 @@ Shakespeare's plays before seeing them, until he could recite extended
passages; and he had come to very definite conclusions about their
feudal and aristocratic atmosphere and influence.
-He read schylus and Sophocles in translations, and felt himself
+He read Æschylus and Sophocles in translations, and felt himself
nearer to the Greeks than to Shakespeare or the Middle Ages. It is
interesting to note that he barely mentions Euripides, most modern of
the Hellenes, the poet of women, and was evidently little acquainted
@@ -3058,7 +3026,7 @@ wondered if he was alone in that.
* * * * *
The papers were, indeed, crowded with news of enterprise and adventure.
-In California, the new territory which Frmont and Stockton had taken
+In California, the new territory which Frémont and Stockton had taken
from Mexico, gold was discovered in 1848, and in eighteen months a
torrent of 50,000 argonauts had poured across the isthmus and over the
plains, leaving their trail of dead through the awful grey solitude
@@ -3934,7 +3902,7 @@ perhaps the whole, of the type jealously with his own hands.[157] About
the beginning of July, and a few days only before his father's death,
it was completed. In the _New York Tribune_ for the sixth of the month,
it was advertised as being on sale at Fowler & Wells's Phrenological
-Dept and Bookstore on Broadway, and at Swayne's in Fulton Street,
+Depôt and Bookstore on Broadway, and at Swayne's in Fulton Street,
Brooklyn. The price was at first two dollars, which seems a little
exorbitant for so slender and unpretending a volume, in shape and
thickness a mere single copy of one of the smaller periodicals, bound
@@ -4014,7 +3982,7 @@ immodesty, and who will and do avert their eyes from all passion,
crying shame. But some at least of the others, who are well aware of
the weakness of words, and know how few can use them perfectly, will
reverently approach such a confession as Whitman's; not, indeed, as if
-it were that of a young girl, but as that of a man, nave, yet virile,
+it were that of a young girl, but as that of a man, naïve, yet virile,
and of heroic sanity. And if they feel any shame they will frankly
acknowledge it to be their own.
@@ -4133,7 +4101,7 @@ his lecture-essays had been published more than ten years, and the
first volume of his poems in 1847; he was already famous in England as
well as in America. But though he was in certain quarters the cynosure
of admiration, in others he was the butt of ridicule. This same year
-the London _Athenum_ praised Irving because, as it said, his fancies
+the London _Athenæum_ praised Irving because, as it said, his fancies
were ideal, and not like Emerson's merely typographical--because they
did not consist, like the latter's, in the use of verbs for nouns, in
erratic punctuation, tumid epithets, which were startling rather than
@@ -4212,7 +4180,7 @@ FOOTNOTES:
[152] _Mem. Hist. N.Y._, iv., 179; _cf._ _Saturday Rev._, 30th June,
1894.
-[153] G. Bousquet, _Nouvelle Biog. Gnrale_.
+[153] G. Bousquet, _Nouvelle Biog. Générale_.
[154] MSS. Wallace.
@@ -4418,7 +4386,7 @@ savage, full of magnetism, health and power--
and stay with them.
Behaviour lawless as snow-flakes, words simple as grass, uncombed
- head, and laughter, and navet,
+ head, and laughter, and naïveté,
Slow-stepping feet, and the common features, and the common modes
and emanations....
@@ -4566,10 +4534,10 @@ a streak of craft and astuteness running through him. And as they
became a part of me, he says, so now they shall become a part of you
that read this page.
-Or at his navest, we see him standing open-mouthed and amazed, like
+Or at his naïvest, we see him standing open-mouthed and amazed, like
a very child, before the sheer naked facts of his own story from the
date of his birth to the present hour;[187] and endeavouring to evoke
-a similar nave attitude in the reader, not indeed towards the date of
+a similar naïve attitude in the reader, not indeed towards the date of
Whitman's birth, but towards that of his own.
Upon a kindred note we turn the last page also[188]--for it is a
@@ -5045,7 +5013,7 @@ interest in the Oriental writers with whom Whitman was but vaguely
acquainted, the scholar advising upon translations. Thoreau and Emerson
had both noted the resemblance between _Leaves of Grass_ and some of
the sacred writings of India; and the latter once humorously described
-the _Leaves_ as a mixture of the _Bhagavad-Git_[209] and the _New York
+the _Leaves_ as a mixture of the _Bhagavad-Gitá_[209] and the _New York
Herald_.[210] Thoreau died in 1862, and this was probably their only
meeting.
@@ -5240,7 +5208,7 @@ deep waters flow.
Belonging to no school, Whitman had relations with several of the
mystical groups; he had least, I suppose, with that which seeks the
occult by traditional crystal-gazing and the media of hypnotic trances
-or the dreams produced by ansthetic drugs. He was a mystic because
+or the dreams produced by anæsthetic drugs. He was a mystic because
wonders beset him all about on the open road of his soul. In him
mysticism was never associated with pathological symptoms; it was, as
he himself suggests, the flower and proof of his sanity, soundness and
@@ -5294,7 +5262,7 @@ and more sinister uses and products of the axe. Seen by Whitman, the
Broad-axe itself is a poem that tells of strenuous America, with her
free heroic life and the comradeship of her Western cities, great
with the greatness of their common folk. It tells him of the woman of
-America, self-possessed and strong; and of large, natural, nave types
+America, self-possessed and strong; and of large, natural, naïve types
of manhood. It even prophecies to him of Walt Whitman, and sings the
"Song of Myself," the message of the noble fierce undying Self. As a
Cuvier can reconstruct an undiscovered creature from a single fossil
@@ -5345,7 +5313,7 @@ the spirit of the land.
The poet is that equable sane man, in whose vision alone all things
find and are seen in their proper place, for he sees each _sub specie
-ternitatis_--in its eternal aspect.
+æternitatis_--in its eternal aspect.
But while thus boldly declaring himself as the man that should come,
he has of course no desire to stand alone, and attempts to outline
@@ -5503,11 +5471,11 @@ It is the least pleasing of the editions of _Leaves of Grass_,
insignificant in appearance, and yet aggressive, by reason of that
Emersonian testimonial. The open letter at the end, of which I have
already spoken, is far from agreeable to read. It is careless,
-egotistical, nave to a degree, and crowded with exaggerations.
+egotistical, naïve to a degree, and crowded with exaggerations.
Addressing Emerson as master, it proceeds to denounce the churches as
one vast lie, and the actual president as a rascal and a thief. It is
so egregiously self-conscious that it makes the reader question for a
-moment whether all the egoism and navet of the preceding pages may
+moment whether all the egoism and naïveté of the preceding pages may
not have been worn as a pose; but a moment's further consideration
gives the question a final negative. Few men are without their hours of
weakness; and that Whitman was not among those few, the letter is proof
@@ -5798,7 +5766,7 @@ the formation of a new party, and Lincoln and Whitman both became
"black republicans". "Barnburners," Abolitionists and "Anti-Nebraska"
men--those that is to say who opposed the application of the doctrine
of "squatter sovereignty" to Nebraska and Kansas--had united to form
-a new Free-soil party. They nominated J. C. Frmont, the gallant
+a new Free-soil party. They nominated J. C. Frémont, the gallant
Californian "Path-finder" for the Presidency; but, owing to the
presence of a third candidate put forward by the Know-nothing
Whigs--whose only policy seems to have been a "patriotic" hatred of all
@@ -5806,7 +5774,7 @@ Catholics and foreigners--the Democratic nominee was elected for the
last time in a generation. After his four years were out, a succession
of Republican Presidents occupied the White House for twenty-four years.
-James Buchanan, who defeated Frmont--becoming like Lincoln, his
+James Buchanan, who defeated Frémont--becoming like Lincoln, his
successor, a minority President--seems to have been an honourable and
well-intentioned Pennsylvanian, but he was a man whose character was
quite insufficient for his new office. As an injudicious, short-sighted
@@ -6166,7 +6134,7 @@ Now these poems of yours upon sex complicate and confuse the real
message, not because they are necessarily wrong in themselves--I
do not say they are--but because they do and must give rise to
misunderstanding, and in consequence, obscure or even cancel the rest.
-They give the book an evil notoriety, and will create for it a _succs
+They give the book an evil notoriety, and will create for it a _succès
de scandale_. It will be bought and read by the prurient, to whom its
worth will be wholly sealed.
@@ -6363,7 +6331,7 @@ Bohemian type than were many of his literary friends in New York, and
the more cosmopolitan atmosphere of the national capital, together
with the close intimacy with death which the war-hospitals afforded,
somewhat quieted the tone of later editions. Here there is more of the
-nave colloquialism and mannerism, the slang and the ejaculations of
+naïve colloquialism and mannerism, the slang and the ejaculations of
"the arrogant Mannhattanese" which he loves to proclaim himself.[269]
It is the edition which is most dear to many an enthusiast, and most
exasperating to many a critic.
@@ -6537,7 +6505,7 @@ As the struggle proceeds, Walt seems to be seized by a strange new
feeling. He is fascinated by the tiny wind-rows left by the tide upon
the sand, and the sense of a likeness between himself and them arises
in him, taking the form not so much of a thought as of a consciousness
-of kinship. The ocean scum and dbris reminds him how near to him is
+of kinship. The ocean scum and débris reminds him how near to him is
the infinite ocean of life and death, and how he himself is but a
little washed-up drift, soon to be swallowed in the approaching waters.
Doubt overwhelms him; he seems to know nothing of all that he thought
@@ -6943,7 +6911,7 @@ described inadequately as Whitman's symbolism. Seeking to plumb the
depths of passion, he found God. Sex became for him, in its essence,
the potency of that Life wherein we are One. And comradeship, a passion
as intense as that of sex, he beheld as the same relation between
-spiritual or therial bodies.[313] He was aware that the noblest of
+spiritual or ætherial bodies.[313] He was aware that the noblest of
passions is the most liable to base misunderstandings. But in it alone
the soul finds full freedom. Sex passion finds its proper expression in
physical rites, it is the passion of the life in Time; on the contrary,
@@ -8145,7 +8113,7 @@ oranges,[395] or lemons and sugar for the making of lemonade.
It was for such gifts as these, and many others of a similar kind,
that he needed money; and through the influence of Emerson, James
Redpath and other friends in New York and Boston, he was able to
-distribute perhaps 1,200 among the soldiers in these infinitesimal
+distribute perhaps £1,200 among the soldiers in these infinitesimal
quantities.[396] Thus he became the almoner of many in the North.
Much of the service, however, was entirely his own--if one can ever
@@ -9162,7 +9130,7 @@ This was widely copied by the American press. It preserves a judicial
tone, which while fully appreciating the literary value of the new
work, is far from indiscriminate praise. Mr. Rossetti frankly protested
against what he regarded as the gross treatment of gross things, not
-so much on ethical as on sthetic grounds; against jarring words and
+so much on ethical as on æsthetic grounds; against jarring words and
faulty constructions. He noted the obscurity and fragmentary character
of many passages, commented on the agglomerative or cataloguial habit,
and upon the author's justifiable, but at first sight exasperating,
@@ -9422,7 +9390,7 @@ they were "tip-top," he would declare; and you could only gather from
his manner and the tone of his voice that he meant more than a shabby
commonplace.
-The doctor, who was doubtless an encyclopdia of accurate knowledge,
+The doctor, who was doubtless an encyclopædia of accurate knowledge,
found his companion sadly ignorant of the common names of the trees
and birds they noticed on their rambles. A few years later, however,
Whitman displayed so considerable a knowledge in these directions that
@@ -9506,7 +9474,7 @@ Many of the letters to Pete, during the vacations in Brooklyn from
man's welfare. Pete was impulsive and emotional; he was not one to
whom study or thrift was naturally easy. Walt aided him all he could
in both directions. He was always encouraging his "boys" to read
-good books, combining still, as in earlier years, the rles of teacher
+good books, combining still, as in earlier years, the rôles of teacher
and comrade; but he never checked in any degree his friend's boyish,
generous and pleasure-loving nature. And his love was returned with the
whole-hearted loyal devotion of the true Celt.
@@ -9652,7 +9620,7 @@ material development unless it be accompanied by a corresponding
development of soul?
There is something like an inconsistency of attitude in this book;
-for here, on the one hand, we have Whitman assuming the rle of the
+for here, on the one hand, we have Whitman assuming the rôle of the
moralist, denouncing, menacing, upbraiding, and generally allowing
himself to employ the moralist's exaggerated, because partial, manner
of speech. On the other hand, we find, interspersed among these
@@ -9832,7 +9800,7 @@ which the idea of death as a voyage upon an unknown sea is dominant.
[Illustration: FAC-SIMILE OF MS. BY WHITMAN, BELONGING PROBABLY TO 1875]
The little book was called _Passage to India_, after the opening poem;
-and it has a completeness of its own, closing with a "Now Final
+and it has a completeness of its own, closing with a "Now Finalé
to the Shore". In its preface, he alludes to a plan which he had
entertained--his active imagination entertained so many plans which
he never realised![517]--the scheme of a new volume to companion and
@@ -10387,7 +10355,7 @@ notably the "Prayer of Columbus," the "Song of the Universal," and the
There are those who have suggested that Whitman's illness was brought
on by a life of dissipation; one supposes that such persons find in
-these poems the death-bed repentance of a maudlin old _rou_. But to
+these poems the death-bed repentance of a maudlin old _roué_. But to
the unprejudiced reader such a view must appear worse than absurd.
Whitman never claimed to have lived a blameless life, but he did claim
to have lived a sane and loving one; the evidence of all his writings,
@@ -10646,7 +10614,7 @@ That he was never deserted by his faithful American friends a series
of articles upon his condition, published in the Springfield (Mass.)
_Republican_, bears witness.[560] But Buchanan's letter evoked new and
widespread sympathy, which was the means of saving Whitman from his
-melancholy plight. A fortnight later the _Athenum_ printed his short
+melancholy plight. A fortnight later the _Athenæum_ printed his short
sonnet-like poem, "The Man-o'-War Bird".
In the meantime, Mr. Rossetti, always faithful to his friend, had
@@ -10830,7 +10798,7 @@ The letters which she exchanged with the Rossettis during a long period
are evidence both of her common-sense and her capacity for passionate
sympathy. They are often as frank as they are noble; revealing a nature
too profound to be continually considerate of criticism. This gives to
-some of her utterances a half nave and wholly charming quality, which
+some of her utterances a half naïve and wholly charming quality, which
cannot have been absent from her personality, and must have endeared
her to the comrades whom she honoured with her confidence.
@@ -10880,7 +10848,7 @@ frequent visitor--and the Centennial edition of his works. He had also
celebrated the occasion by sitting for his bust to a young sculptor, in
an improvised studio on Chestnut Street. The weather was too hot for a
coat; and in his white shirt sleeves he would, at the artist's request,
-read his poems aloud with nave delight, which rose to a climax when
+read his poems aloud with naïve delight, which rose to a climax when
the sound of applause from a group of young fellows on the stairs
without, crowned his efforts. "So you like it, do you?" he cried to
them; "well, I rather enjoyed that myself."[578]
@@ -10895,7 +10863,7 @@ Gilchrist's. He was cheerfully busy with the orders for his pair of
handsome books, which were selling briskly at a guinea a volume.
_Leaves of Grass_ had been reprinted from the plates of the fifth
-edition. Its companion, _Two Rivulets_, was a "mlange" compounded of
+edition. Its companion, _Two Rivulets_, was a "mélange" compounded of
additional poems, including "Passage to India," and the prose writings
of which we have already spoken, printed at various times during the
last five years. "Specimen Days" was not among them, and did not appear
@@ -11656,7 +11624,7 @@ midsummer, he transferred the latter to a Philadelphia firm--afterwards
Mr. David McKay--who immediately brought out an edition which sold in a
single day.[632] Persecution had, as usual, assisted the cause, and for
some months the sale continued brisk, bringing Whitman at the year's
-end royalties to the amount of nearly 300.[633]
+end royalties to the amount of nearly £300.[633]
* * * * *
@@ -12373,7 +12341,7 @@ long-cherished plan into execution.
On March the 26th, 1884,[656] he left his brother's house, and
removed to a little two-story cottage on Mickle Street, near by.
Here he installed himself, at first with an elderly workman and his
-wife, and afterwards under the more efficient _rgime_ of Mrs. Mary
+wife, and afterwards under the more efficient _régime_ of Mrs. Mary
Davis, a buxom New Jersey widow of comfortable presence, who brought
into the house that homely atmosphere which Whitman had so long been
seeking.[657]
@@ -12730,7 +12698,7 @@ AT MICKLE STREET
The presidential election of the autumn of 1884 brought the long
-Republican _rgime_ to an end. During the twenty-four years of its
+Republican _régime_ to an end. During the twenty-four years of its
continuance the old party cries had become almost meaningless, and
the parties themselves ineffective, while political life had grown
increasingly corrupt from top to bottom.[676] The only practical demand
@@ -12808,11 +12776,11 @@ York Herald_--were not large.[684]
Word went round among his friends, both in America and in England, that
the old man was hard up again, and a second time there was a hearty
response. A fund, promoted by the _Pall Mall Gazette_ at the end of
-1886, brought him a New Year's present of 80,[685] and individual
+1886, brought him a New Year's present of £80,[685] and individual
friends on both sides of the sea frequently sent thank-offerings to him.
Some Boston admirers attempted at this time to secure for him
-a Government pension of 60 a year,[686] in recognition of his
+a Government pension of £60 a year,[686] in recognition of his
hospital work. But Whitman disliked the plan, and though it was
favourably reported upon by the Pensions Committee of the House of
Representatives, he wrote gratefully but peremptorily refusing to
@@ -12917,7 +12885,7 @@ conversations,[694] a document which seems to the English mind somewhat
more injudicious than other Whitmanite publications, which certainly
do not err on the side of reticence. After his first visit, Mr.
Hartmann maintains that Walt shouted after him, "come again," and this
-injunction from time to time he fulfilled, navely recording his own
+injunction from time to time he fulfilled, naïvely recording his own
desperate attempts to cope with the long silences which threatened
to overwhelm his forlorn sallies into all conceivable regions of
conversation.
@@ -13947,7 +13915,7 @@ favourite brook". Such phrases may be funny, but I trust the preceding
pages have shown that they are not true to the facts of Whitman's life.
To reply to Mr. Santayana is obviously beyond my scope; and, even
if I could undertake the task, it would entail upon the reader many
-laborious pages devoted to the study of sthetic values. For I suspect,
+laborious pages devoted to the study of æsthetic values. For I suspect,
that, whichever of us may be right, our difference goes back to the
beginning.
@@ -14198,7 +14166,7 @@ INDEX.
Addison, W. advised to study, 328.
- schylus, W. reads, 57.
+ Æschylus, W. reads, 57.
Affirmations of modern thought, 62.
@@ -14312,7 +14280,7 @@ INDEX.
Ashton, Mrs., 234, 248.
- _Athenum, The_, and W., 259.
+ _Athenæum, The_, and W., 259.
Attila, 336.
@@ -14360,7 +14328,7 @@ INDEX.
Bettini, 85, 320.
- _Bhagavad-Git_, _L. of G._ compared with, 115.
+ _Bhagavad-Gitá_, _L. of G._ compared with, 115.
Bible, W.'s wish to write an American, 55;
W. studies the, 57, 224, 318.
@@ -15036,7 +15004,7 @@ INDEX.
_Freeman, The_, W. founds, 56, 63.
- Frmont, J. C., 63, 134.
+ Frémont, J. C., 63, 134.
Free-soil Democrats, 40, 44-5, 56, 134;
W. and the, 40, 310.
@@ -15827,7 +15795,7 @@ INDEX.
_November Boughs_, 329-30, 339.
- "Now Final to the Shore," 243.
+ "Now Finalé to the Shore," 243.
Nurse, W.'s, 326.
@@ -15930,7 +15898,7 @@ INDEX.
Patriotism, W.'s, aroused, 54-5.
- Paumnackers, 3.
+ Paumànackers, 3.
"Paumanok," nom-de-plume of W., 39.
@@ -17134,9 +17102,9 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
=Adeney (W. F.)=, M.A. See Bennett and Adeney.
- =schylus.= See Classical Translations.
+ =Æschylus.= See Classical Translations.
- =sop.= See Illustrated Pocket Library.
+ =Æsop.= See Illustrated Pocket Library.
=Ainsworth (W. Harrison).= See Illustrated Pocket Library.
@@ -17173,9 +17141,9 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
*=Anderson (J. G.)=, B.A., Examiner to London University, the College
of Preceptors, and the Welsh Intermediate Board. NOUVELLE GRAMMAIRE
- FRANAISE. _Crown 8vo. 2s._
+ FRANÇAISE. _Crown 8vo. 2s._
- *EXERCISES ON NOUVELLE GRAMMAIRE FRANAISE. _Crown 8vo. 1s. 6d._
+ *EXERCISES ON NOUVELLE GRAMMAIRE FRANÇAISE. _Crown 8vo. 1s. 6d._
=Andrewes (Bishop).= PRECES PRIVATAE. Edited, with Notes, by F. E.
BRIGHTMAN, M.A., of Pusey House, Oxford. _Crown 8vo. 6s._
@@ -17259,7 +17227,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
Illustrations in the Text, and 12 Photogravure Plates. _Gilt top.
Large quarto. 36s._
- THE TRAGEDY OF THE CSARS. With numerous Illustrations from Busts,
+ THE TRAGEDY OF THE CÆSARS. With numerous Illustrations from Busts,
Gems, Cameos, etc. _Fifth Edition. Royal 8vo. 10s. 6d. net._
A BOOK OF FAIRY TALES. With numerous Illustrations and Initial
@@ -17402,7 +17370,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
=Binyon (Laurence).= THE DEATH OF ADAM, AND OTHER POEMS. _Crown 8vo.
3s. 6d. net._
- *WILLIAM BLAKE. In 2 volumes. _Quarto. 1, 1s. each._ Vol. I.
+ *WILLIAM BLAKE. In 2 volumes. _Quarto. £1, 1s. each._ Vol. I.
=Birnstingl (Ethel).= See Little Books on Art.
@@ -17457,7 +17425,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
=Brabant (F. G.)=, M.A. See The Little Guides.
=Brodrick (Mary) and Morton (Anderson).= A CONCISE HANDBOOK OF
- EGYPTIAN ARCHOLOGY. With many Illustrations. _Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d._
+ EGYPTIAN ARCHÆOLOGY. With many Illustrations. _Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d._
=Brooke (A. S.)=, M.A. SLINGSBY AND SLINGSBY CASTLE. With many
Illustrations. _Crown 8vo. 7s. 6d._
@@ -17487,7 +17455,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
=Budge (E. A. Wallis).= THE GODS OF THE EGYPTIANS. With over 100
Coloured Plates and many Illustrations. _Two Volumes. Royal 8vo.
- 3, 3s. net._
+ £3, 3s. net._
=Bull (Paul)=, Army Chaplain. GOD AND OUR SOLDIERS. _Crown 8vo. 6s._
@@ -17843,7 +17811,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
=Fisher (G. W.)=, M.A. ANNALS OF SHREWSBURY SCHOOL. With numerous
Illustrations. _Demy 8vo. 10s. 6d._
- =FitzGerald (Edward).= THE RUBIYT OF OMAR KHAYYM. Printed from the
+ =FitzGerald (Edward).= THE RUBÁIYÁT OF OMAR KHAYYÁM. Printed from the
Fifth and last Edition. With a Commentary by Mrs. STEPHEN BATSON,
and a Biography of Omar by E. D. ROSS. _Crown 8vo. 6s._ See also
Miniature Library.
@@ -18321,7 +18289,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
=Lewes (V. B.)=, M.A. AIR AND WATER. Illustrated. _Crown 8vo. 2s. 6d._
- =Lisle (Fortune de).= See Little Books on Art.
+ =Lisle (Fortunée de).= See Little Books on Art.
=Littlehales (H.).= See Antiquary's Books.
@@ -18556,7 +18524,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
Cornwall.' NAPLES. With 25 Coloured Illustrations by MAURICE
GREIFFENHAGEN. A New Edition. _Crown 8vo. 6s._
- =Novalis.= THE DISCIPLES AT SAS AND OTHER FRAGMENTS. Edited by Miss
+ =Novalis.= THE DISCIPLES AT SAÏS AND OTHER FRAGMENTS. Edited by Miss
UNA BIRCH. _Fcap. 8vo. 3s. 6d._
=Oliphant (Mrs.).= See Leaders of Religion.
@@ -18585,17 +18553,17 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
5s._
=Parkinson (John).= PARADISI IN SOLE PARADISUS TERRISTRIS, OR A
- GARDEN OF ALL SORTS OF PLEASANT FLOWERS. _Folio. 4, 4s. net._
+ GARDEN OF ALL SORTS OF PLEASANT FLOWERS. _Folio. £4, 4s. net._
=Parmenter (John).= HELIO-TROPES, OR NEW POSIES FOR SUNDIALS, 1625.
Edited by PERCIVAL LANDON. _Quarto. 3s. 6d. net._
- =Parmentier (Prof. Lon).= See Byzantine Texts.
+ =Parmentier (Prof. Léon).= See Byzantine Texts.
=Pascal.= See Library of Devotion.
*=Paston (George).= SOCIAL CARICATURES OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
- _Imperial Quarto. 2, 12s. 6d. net._ See also Little Books on Art
+ _Imperial Quarto. £2, 12s. 6d. net._ See also Little Books on Art
and Illustrated Pocket Library.
=Paterson (W. R.)= (Benjamin Swift). LIFE'S QUESTIONINGS. _Crown 8vo.
@@ -18717,7 +18685,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
=Pugin= and =Rowlandson=. THE MICROCOSM OF LONDON, OR LONDON IN
MINIATURE. With 104 Illustrations in colour. _In Three Volumes.
- Small 4to. 3, 3s. net._
+ Small 4to. £3, 3s. net._
='Q' (A. T. Quiller Couch).= See Methuen's Half-Crown Library.
@@ -18745,7 +18713,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
=Redfern (W. B.)=, Author of 'Ancient Wood and Iron Work in
Cambridge,' etc. ROYAL AND HISTORIC GLOVES AND ANCIENT SHOES.
- Profusely Illustrated in colour and half-tone. _Quarto, 2, 2s.
+ Profusely Illustrated in colour and half-tone. _Quarto, £2, 2s.
net._
=Reynolds.= See Little Galleries.
@@ -18781,7 +18749,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
_Fcap. 8vo. 3s. 6d._
=Roe (Fred).= ANCIENT COFFERS AND CUPBOARDS: Their History and
- Description. With many Illustrations. _Quarto. 3, 3s. net._
+ Description. With many Illustrations. _Quarto. £3, 3s. net._
*OLD OAK FURNITURE. With many Illustrations by the Author, including
a frontispiece in colour. _Demy 8vo. 10s. 6d. net._
@@ -18789,7 +18757,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
=Rogers (A. G. L.)=, M.A. See Books on Business.
*=Romney.= A GALLERY OF ROMNEY. By ARTHUR B. CHAMBERLAIN. With 66
- Plates in Photogravure. _Imperial Quarto. 3, 3s. net._ See Little
+ Plates in Photogravure. _Imperial Quarto. £3, 3s. net._ See Little
Galleries.
=Roscoe (E. S.).= ROBERT HARLEY, EARL OF OXFORD. Illustrated. _Demy
@@ -18868,7 +18836,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
KING LEAR. Edited by W. J. CRAIG.
- JULIUS CSAR. Edited by M. MACMILLAN, M.A.
+ JULIUS CÆSAR. Edited by M. MACMILLAN, M.A.
THE TEMPEST. Edited by MORETON LUCE.
@@ -18931,7 +18899,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
=Sime (J.).= See Little Books on Art.
=Simonson (G. A.).= FRANCESCO GUARDI. With 41 Plates. _Royal folio.
- 2, 2s. net._
+ £2, 2s. net._
=Sketchley (R. E. D.).= See Little Books on Art.
@@ -18999,7 +18967,7 @@ PART I.--GENERAL LITERATURE
FIRST LATIN READER. With Notes adapted to the Shorter Latin Primer
and Vocabulary. _Sixth Edition revised. 18mo. 1s. 6d._
- EASY SELECTIONS FROM CSAR. The Helvetian War. _Second Edition. 18mo.
+ EASY SELECTIONS FROM CÆSAR. The Helvetian War. _Second Edition. 18mo.
1s._
EASY SELECTIONS FROM LIVY. Part I. The Kings of Rome. _18mo. Second
@@ -19445,7 +19413,7 @@ _Demy 8vo. 7s. 6d. net._
CELTIC ART. By J. Romilly Allen, F.S.A. With numerous Illustrations
and Plans.
- ARCHOLOGY AND FALSE ANTIQUITIES. By R. Munro, LL.D. With numerous
+ ARCHÆOLOGY AND FALSE ANTIQUITIES. By R. Munro, LL.D. With numerous
Illustrations.
SHRINES OF BRITISH SAINTS. By J. C. Wall. With numerous Illustrations
@@ -19535,7 +19503,7 @@ foreign scholars.
ZACHARIAH OF MITYLENE. Translated by F. J. Hamilton, D.D., and E. W.
Brooks. _Demy 8vo. 12s. 6d. net._
- EVAGRIUS. Edited by Lon Parmentier and M. Bidez. _Demy 8vo. 10s. 6d.
+ EVAGRIUS. Edited by Léon Parmentier and M. Bidez. _Demy 8vo. 10s. 6d.
net._
THE HISTORY OF PSELLUS. Edited by C. Sathas. _Demy 8vo. 15s. net._
@@ -19625,7 +19593,7 @@ _Crown 8vo._
A series of Translations from the Greek and Latin Classics,
distinguished by literary excellence as well as by scholarly accuracy.
- SCHYLUS--Agamemnon, Choephoroe, Eumenides. Translated by Lewis
+ ÆSCHYLUS--Agamemnon, Choephoroe, Eumenides. Translated by Lewis
Campbell, LL.D. _5s._
CICERO--De Oratore I. Translated by E. N. P. Moor, M.A. _3s. 6d._
@@ -19962,7 +19930,7 @@ PLAIN BOOKS
These famous Illustrations--21 in number--are reproduced in
photogravure.
- SOP'S FABLES. With 380 Woodcuts by Thomas Bewick.
+ ÆSOP'S FABLES. With 380 Woodcuts by Thomas Bewick.
WINDSOR CASTLE. By W. Harrison Ainsworth. With 22 Plates and 87
Woodcuts in the Text by George Cruikshank.
@@ -19994,7 +19962,7 @@ and is intended for the use of teachers and students, to supply
material for the former and practice for the latter. The papers are
carefully graduated, cover the whole of the subject usually taught, and
are intended to form part of the ordinary class work. They may be used
-_viv voce_ or as a written examination.
+_vivâ voce_ or as a written examination.
JUNIOR FRENCH EXAMINATION PAPERS. By F. Jacob, M.A.
@@ -20171,13 +20139,13 @@ frontispiece in photogravure.
TURNER. Frances Tyrell-Gill.
- DRER. Jessie Allen.
+ DÜRER. Jessie Allen.
HOPPNER. H. P. K. Skipton.
HOLBEIN. Mrs. G. Fortescue.
- BURNE-JONES. Fortune de Lisle.
+ BURNE-JONES. Fortunée de Lisle.
REMBRANDT. Mrs. E. A. Sharp.
@@ -20437,7 +20405,7 @@ of humanity, devotion, or literary genius.
From the edition published by W. Pickering in 1852. _Demy 32mo.
Leather, 2s. net._
- THE RUBIYT OF OMAR KHAYYM. By Edward FitzGerald. From the 1st
+ THE RUBÁIYÁT OF OMAR KHAYYÁM. By Edward FitzGerald. From the 1st
edition of 1859, _Third Edition. Leather, 1s. net._
THE LIFE OF EDWARD, LORD HERBERT OF CHERBURY. Written by himself.
@@ -20632,7 +20600,7 @@ These are the early Books, all of which are in the Press--
THE POEMS AND PLAYS OF OLIVER GOLDSMITH.
- ON THE IMITATION OF CHRIST. By Thomas Kempis.
+ ON THE IMITATION OF CHRIST. By Thomas à Kempis.
THE WORKS OF BEN JONSON. In about 12 volumes.
@@ -20744,7 +20712,7 @@ _Fully Illustrated._
BUILDERS' QUANTITIES. By H. C. Grubb. _Crown 8vo. 4s. 6d._
- REPOUSS METAL WORK. By A. C. Horth. _Crown 8vo. 2s. 6d._
+ REPOUSSÉ METAL WORK. By A. C. Horth. _Crown 8vo. 2s. 6d._
Theology, Handbooks of
@@ -20822,7 +20790,7 @@ PART II.--FICTION
THE BROWN EYES OF MARY. _Crown 8vo. 6s._
- =Anstey (F.)=, Author of 'Vice Vers.' A BAYARD FROM BENGAL.
+ =Anstey (F.)=, Author of 'Vice Versâ.' A BAYARD FROM BENGAL.
Illustrated by BERNARD PARTRIDGE. _Third Edition. Crown 8vo. 3s.
6d._
@@ -20851,7 +20819,7 @@ PART II.--FICTION
KITTY ALONE. _Fifth Edition. Cr. 8vo. 6s._
- NOMI. Illustrated. _Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s._
+ NOÉMI. Illustrated. _Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s._
THE BROOM-SQUIRE. Illustrated. _Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s._
@@ -20895,7 +20863,7 @@ PART II.--FICTION
THE COUNTESS TEKLA. _Third Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s._
- 'Of these medival romances, which are now gaining ground, "The
+ 'Of these mediæval romances, which are now gaining ground, "The
Countess Tekla" is the very best we have seen.'--_Pall Mall
Gazette._
@@ -20986,8 +20954,8 @@ PART II.--FICTION
all but the most self-satisfied readers, and that it strikes at
the root of the failure of the Churches--the decay of faith--in a
manner which shows the inevitable disaster heaping up.... The good
- Cardinal Bonpr is a beautiful figure, fit to stand beside the good
- Bishop in "Les Misrables." It is a book with a serious purpose
+ Cardinal Bonpré is a beautiful figure, fit to stand beside the good
+ Bishop in "Les Misérables." It is a book with a serious purpose
expressed with absolute unconventionality and passion.... And this
is to say it is a book worth reading.'--_Examiner._
@@ -21336,7 +21304,7 @@ PART II.--FICTION
THE RED DERELICT. _Second Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s._
- =Montrsor (F. F.)=, Author of 'Into the Highways and Hedges.' THE
+ =Montrésor (F. F.)=, Author of 'Into the Highways and Hedges.' THE
ALIEN. _Third Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s._
=Morrison (Arthur).= TALES OF MEAN STREETS. _Sixth Edition. Crown
@@ -21414,7 +21382,7 @@ PART II.--FICTION
MRS. FALCHION. _Fifth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s._
- 'A splendid study of character.'--_Athenum._
+ 'A splendid study of character.'--_Athenæum._
THE TRANSLATION OF A SAVAGE. _Second Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s._
@@ -21439,7 +21407,7 @@ PART II.--FICTION
6s._
'Mr. Parker has produced a really fine historical
- novel.'--_Athenum._
+ novel.'--_Athenæum._
'A great book.'--_Black and White._
@@ -21812,7 +21780,7 @@ The first volumes are--
=Stringer (Arthur).= THE SILVER POPPY.
- =Stuart (Esm).= CHRISTALLA.
+ =Stuart (Esmé).= CHRISTALLA.
=Sutherland (Duchess of).= ONE HOUR AND THE NEXT.
@@ -21890,13 +21858,13 @@ _Price 6d. Double Volumes, 1s._
CECILE; OR, THE WEDDING GOWN.
- ACT.
+ ACTÉ.
THE BLACK TULIP.
THE VICOMTE DE BRAGELONNE.
- Part I. Louis de la Vallire. Double Volume.
+ Part I. Louis de la Vallière. Double Volume.
Part II. The Man in the Iron Mask. Double Volume.
@@ -21960,7 +21928,7 @@ Illustrated Edition.
THE CASTLE OF EPPSTEIN. Illustrated in Colour by Stewart Orr. _1s.
6d._
- ACT. Illustrated in Colour by Gordon Browne. _1s. 6d._
+ ACTÉ. Illustrated in Colour by Gordon Browne. _1s. 6d._
*CECILE; OR, THE WEDDING GOWN. Illustrated in Colour by D. Murray
Smith. _1s. 6d._
@@ -21995,7 +21963,7 @@ Methuen's Sixpenny Books
IN THE ROAR OF THE SEA.
- NOMI.
+ NOÉMI.
A BOOK OF FAIRY TALES. Illustrated.
@@ -22017,7 +21985,7 @@ Methuen's Sixpenny Books
=Bloundelle-Burton (J.).= ACROSS THE SALT SEAS.
- =Bront (Charlotte).= SHIRLEY.
+ =Brontë (Charlotte).= SHIRLEY.
=Brownell (C. L.).= THE HEART OF JAPAN.
@@ -22133,7 +22101,7 @@ Methuen's Sixpenny Books
=Mitford (Bertram).= THE SIGN OF THE SPIDER.
- =Montrsor (F. F.).= THE ALIEN.
+ =Montrésor (F. F.).= THE ALIEN.
=Moore (Arthur).= THE GAY DECEIVERS.
@@ -22331,365 +22299,4 @@ other notes are listed below.
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LIFE OF WALT WHITMAN***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 56536 ***</div>
<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Life of Walt Whitman, by Henry Bryan Binns</h1>
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