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HERALDS OF AMERICAN 



LITERATURE 



By ANNIE RISSELL MARBLE 



The aim of this book is to recount, in detailed 

 study and largely from original sources, the hves 

 and services of a group of typical writers of the 

 Revolutionary and National periods. Following an 

 introductory chapter, there are biographical and 

 critical studies ot Francis Hopkinson, Philip 

 Freneau, John Trumbull and his friends among 



the'* Hartford wits/'JosephDennie.WilliamDunlap, 

 and early playwrights, and Charles Brockden Brown 

 and his contemporaries in fiction. The author has 

 been a-sisted in her researches by libraries in many 

 places and also by descendants of several of these 

 early writers, who have loaned manuscripts, letters, 

 etc. Although their own writine:s were often imma- 

 ture and crude, yet these pioneer versifiers, journal- 

 ists, and romancers revealed the customs and 

 aspirations of their age, and announced the dawn 

 of a national literature. 



The book is illustrated by several half-tones of 

 rare portraits, broadsides, and title-pages. 



^ 316 pages; small 8vo; cloth; net $1.50; postpaid, 

 51.64. 



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JOSEPH DIXON CRUCIBLE 



JERSEY CITY 



HEW JERSEY 



Adam Smith and 

 riodern Sociology 



A STUDY IN THE nETHODOLOQV 

 OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES 



ALBION W. SMALL 



HE volume is the first of a series which the 

 author will edit on the preparations for soci- 

 ology in the fragmentary work of the nineteenth- 

 century social sciences. The main argument of 

 the book is that modern sociology is virtually an 

 attempt to take up the larger program of social 

 analysis and interpretation which was im- 

 plicit in Adam Smith's moral philosophy, but 

 which was suppressed for a century by prevailing 

 interest in the technique of the production of 

 wealth. It is both a plea for revision of the 

 methods of the social sciences, and a symptom of 

 the reconstruction that is already in progress. 

 260 pages, i2mo;cIoth;«^/Ji. 25, postpaid $1-3^' 



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