LITERATURE AND LITERARY PROGRESS IN 1871. 



453 



of Money a Great Truth. By No- 



iou. Without farther classification, we add 

 these : 



The Congressman's Christmas Dream, and the 

 Lobby-Member's Happy New-Year. By A. Oakey 

 Hall. 



The Library ; or, some Hints about what Books to 

 read and how to buy them. By an Old Bookseller. 



The Laws of Fermentation and the Wines of the 

 Ancients. By William Patton, D. D. 



The Churchman's Year-Book, with Calendar for 

 1871. Compiled by William Stevens Perry, D. D. 



Papers relating to the History of the Church in 

 Virginia, A. D. 1650-1776. Edited by William Ste- 

 vens Perry, D. D. 



American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac for 

 1873. Published by authority of the Secretary of 

 the Navy. 



Wonderful Escapes. Revised from the French of 

 F. Bernard, and Original Chapters added, by Rich- 

 ard Whiteing. 



The New Constitution of the State of Illinois. 

 With a complete Analytical Index. 



How Women can make Money, married or single. 

 By Miss Virginia Penny. 



The Science of Mone: 

 mistake. 



Mark Twain's Autobiography and First Romance. 



Adventures of one Terence McGrant, a Brevet 

 Irish Cousin of President Ulysses S. Grant, etc., etc. 



Topics of the Time. By James Parton. 



Oral Training Lessons in Natural Science and 

 General Knowledge. By H. Barnard. 



Object and Outline Teaching. For Sunday-Schools. 

 By Rev. H. C. McCook. 



Local Taxation [Report to the Legislature of New 

 York]. By David A. Wells. 



The American Celebration of the Unity of Italy, at 

 the Academy of Music, New York, January 12, 1871, 

 with the Addresses, Letters, etc. 



Nai-rative of my Captivity among the Sioux In- 

 dians. By Mrs. Fanny Kelley. 



The Moral Duty of Total Abstinence. By Rev 

 Theodore L. Cuyler. 



Fifty Years in the Magic Circle. By Signer Blitz. 



Hand-Book for Immigrants to the United States. 

 Prepared by the American Social Science Association. 



Knots untied ; or, Ways and By-Ways in the 

 Hidden Life of an American Detective. By George 

 S. McWatters. 



Sketches of Men of Progress. By James Parton. 

 Amos Kendall and others. 



Zell's Descriptive Atlas of the World. In Parts. 



Satan in Society. By a Physician. 



Versatilities. By Orpheus C. Kerr (R. H. Newell). 



Oration on the Life and Character of General 

 George H. Thomas. By General James A. Garfleld. 



Castles in the Air, and Other Phantasies. By 

 Barry Gray (Robert Gray Coffin). 



The Correct Order of Fundamental Harmonics : a 

 Treatise on Fundamental Bases. From the German 

 of S. Sechter. Compiled and adapted for Popular 

 Use, by C. C. Miller. 



Triumphs of Enterprise, Ingenuity, and Public 

 Spirit. By James Parton. 



Four Years at Yale. By a Graduate of '69. 



Mount Washington in Winter ; or, the Experiences 

 of a Scientific Expedition, etc. 



Self-denial for the Promotion of Temperance By 

 J. P. Newman. 



New England Legends. By Harriet P. Spofforcl. 



Eirene; or, a Woman's Right. By Mary Clem- 

 mer Am*s. 



School Houses. By James Johonnot. Architec- 

 tural Designs by S. E. Hewes. 



The People of Africa; a Series of Papers on their 

 Character, Condition, and Future Prospects. By 

 E. W. Blyden, D.D., Tayler Lewis, LL.D., Theo- 

 dore D wight, LL. D., and others. 



The Teacher's Manual. By Hiram Orcutt. 



Garnered Sheaves from the Writings of Albert D. 

 Richardson. 



Stories from Old English Poetry. By Abby Sage 

 Richardson. 



History of the Boston Peace Jubilee. By P. S. 

 Gilmore. 



American Wonderland. By Richard Meade Bache. 



Restorative Medicine ; an Harveian Oration. By 

 Thomas King Chambers, M. D. 



Orange Blossoms, fresh and faded. By T. S. 

 Arthur. 



The Memorial Volume of the Edwards Family 

 Meeting at Stockbridge, Mass. 



The Chronicles of Gotham. By the author of 

 " The New Gospel of Peace." 



Student Life at Amherst College. By George Rugg 

 Cutting. - 



Shooting, Boating, and Fishing, for Young Sports- 

 men. By T. Warren Robinson. 



Living Female Writers of the South. 



The American Tour of Messrs. Brown, Jones, and 

 Robinson. 



On the Organization of Labor. From the French 

 of M. F. Le Play. By G. Emerson, M. D. 



The Church Chorister ; being a Manual for training 

 Singing Boys. By Walter B. Gilbert, Mus. B., Oxon. 



Our Boys*' and Girls' Favorite. By Oliver Optic. 



" Awful ," and other Jingles. By P. R. S. 



The Walking Doll ; or, The Asters and Disasters 

 of Society. By Orpheus C. Kerr (R. H. Newell). 



The Debatable Land between this World and the 

 next. With Illustrative Narrations. By Robert 

 Dale Owen. 



The Words of Washington. Selected by James 

 Parton. 



What the World made them. By the author of 

 " Travels of an American Owl." 



The American Home-Book of In-door Games. By 

 Mrs. Caroline L. Smith. 



The West Point Scrap-Book : a Collection of Sto- 

 ries, Songs, and Legends of the United States Mili- 

 tary Academy. With 69 Original Illustrations, etc. 

 By Lieutenant O. E. Wood. 



Life of Jefferson S. Baskins, Member from Cran- 

 berry Centre. Written by Himself; assisted by the 

 author of the " Silver Spoon." 



Languages and Popular Education. By Magnus 

 Gross. 



REPTJBLICATIOXS. The preceding pages have 

 been intentionally limited to works of Ameri- 

 can authorship or translation, and the account 

 of them is by no means complete, especially 

 in the departments of school-books and books 

 for school-libraries, or generally for the young, 

 of religious and of technical works. Of re- 

 publications the number is large, especially if 

 we include works that are not reprinted, but 

 are merely issued with an American imprint. 

 London publishing-houses are represented here 

 by their agents, and enter the American mar- 

 ket as freely as the discriminations of the tariff 

 laws will permit. It follows that an English au- 

 thor has no sooner made a reputation, or given 

 promise of gaining it, than his writings appear 

 on this side of the ocean. Some, indeed, have 

 gained here a reputation that has prepared the 

 way for popularity at home. Mr. Carlyle is 

 one who has felt in his own case the value of 

 a transatlantic appreciation, without, however, 

 stimulating any excess of gratitude. 



Mr. Dickens's works are circulated in several 

 popular forms, of which the most current are 

 the " Handy Volume " edition (Appletons') of 

 New York and the "Library" and "House- 



