The room I found myself in most often was the parlor. It had a beautiful wood cabinet with shelves for books, protected by two glass doors, and beneath that, drawers full of family treasures. I'm lucky enough to have a few of the books, to wit:
New Caesar with Vocabulary (Allen & Greenough's edition) re-edited by James B. et al, and published by Ginn & Company in 1886, and again in 1898. Inside, the top of the front free endpaper was inscribed "Mary Au". It had been my grandmother's school book from her Latin class. I remember being surprised and impressed to learn that my grandmother had learned to read and write Latin as a young woman.Another of Mary Au's books was St. Elmo, which Wikipedia describes as "a novel by American author Augusta Jane Evans published in 1866. Featuring the sexual tension between the protagonist St. Elmo, a cynical man, and the heroine Edna Earl, a beautiful and devout girl, the novel became one of the most popular novels of the 19th century. The novel sold a million copies within four months of its publication."
~~~
The Child's Own Book of Standard Fairy Tales, published by the John C. Winston Company of Philadelphia, is a 525-page hardcover book, bound in green decorative cloth, containing many stories, including Aladdin, or the wonderful lamp; Ali Baba, or the Forty Thieves; The Booby; Jack the Giant Killer; The Two Cakes; Puss in Boots; The White Cat; Valentine and Orson; Beauty and the Beast; and Cinderella.
Published in 1898, it was one of the author's early collections of "Uncle Remus" tales.
As a child I had read some of the Uncle Remus stories in Woodland Elementary School.
I had also seen the Walt Disney movie version, Song of the South, which I enjoyed very much.
I especially loved the Uncle Remus character and the animated characters Br'er Rabbit, Br'er Fox, and Br'er Bear.
~~~
Three Daughters of the Confederacy. Published in 1905 by G. W. Dillingham Company, New York.
I know nothing about this book other than it was one of many pumped out by Cyrus Townsend Brady, an Episcopal minister, who found the time to write over 100 books in his lifetime. He also worked as a screenwriter for Vitagraph.
The title page of the book reads: "Three Daughters of the Confederacy The Story of Their Loves and Their Hatreds, Their Joys and Their Sorrows, During Many Surprising Adventures on Land and Sea."
The author dedicated the work to Mrs. James Henry Parker and the New York Chapter of the Daughters of the Confederacy and to "that Fair Daughter of the South", his wife.
~~~
"Strange murmurs fill my tingling ears,
Bristles my hair, my sinews quake,
At this dread tale of reckless deeds."
Now who could resist purchasing a book that promised all that?
As fascinating as the book may be, one can only wonder as to the veracity of the author's account of the "Noted Western Outlaws" lives and the events described in the book.
More interesting perhaps, was the life of the "Hon. J. A. Dacus, Ph. D." himself. In 1868 the Public Ledger of Memphis reported that Dacus was then a "Baptist preacher in Illinois," adding that 'Within the brief space of five years he has been a grocer, cotton factor, farmer, school teacher, journalist, poet, political 'stump orator', book agent, chief engineer of a flatboat and superintendent of a saw mill.'"
- See https://www.newspapers.com/image/215169609/?terms=dacus
No comments:
Post a Comment