Part 43 (2/2)
23, 1907.
”Mr. Wister has succeeded in revealing a new Was.h.i.+ngton--a Was.h.i.+ngton who becomes a wholly lovable man without losing any of his dignity.”--_Boston Herald_.
”In Mr. Wister's hands the Father of his Country is no frozen G.o.d. He steps out of the block of ice into which, as the author so well indicates, he was put for safekeeping after death. The book emphasizes the man side of Was.h.i.+ngton's character. The hero is in the background, and the result is a warm and very convincing picture which it is good to have.”--_Philadelphia Public Ledger_.
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY PUBLISHERS, 64-66 Fifth Avenue, NEW YORK
Theodore Roosevelt
The Boy and the Man
By JAMES MORGAN
”It does not pretend to be an a.n.a.lysis of the individual, and it was not written with the intention of advocating or criticising his political policies. It was meant to be a simple, straightforward, yet complete biography of the most interesting personality of our day. Its aim is to present a life of action by portraying the varied dramatic scenes in the career of a man who still has the enthusiasm of a boy, and whose energy and faith have ill.u.s.trated before the world the spirit of Young America.”--_From the Author's Foreword_.
”The book can go into home or school, north or south, without the possibility of offence.... It is especially tonic for high school youth and college young men. I doubt if any book has been written that will do as much for students as will this story of a real life.... Buy it, read it, and tell others to read it.”--_Journal of Education_.
”In point of style the work is a masterpiece of vivid, forceful, sinewy, Anglo-Saxon. The story never halts, one is never irritated by floridity and gush.”--_Boston Traveler_.
”Whether or not a reader believes in Mr. Roosevelt's policies, we doubt if he can fail, after reading Mr.
Morgan's book, to be a better American.”--_Sacred Heart Review_.
”It is a book which boys will delight to read, and which they cannot read without feeling the potent charm of what is wholesomest, manliest, worthiest, in man or boy.”--_Chicago Tribune_.
”The book is as readable as a novel and the story it tells is packed with inspiration for American boys.”--_Hamilton Wright Mabie_.
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
PUBLISHERS, 64-66 Fifth Avenue, NEW YORK
_”Unquestionably the Final Edition” of_
The Life and Letters of Benjamin Franklin
Edited by ALBERT H. SMYTH, late Professor of English Language and Literature in the Central High School, Philadelphia. In ten volumes with twenty portraits.
”The volume closes with a copy of Franklin's will and a series of remarkably complete indexes, rendering the contents of all the volumes easily accessible from several different points of view. The whole work bears evidences of painstaking care and devotion to the task for its own sake.
It is incomparably the best and most complete edition of Franklin's writings in existence, containing all that is worth preserving, while in arrangement, editorial treatment, and mechanical workmans.h.i.+p it leaves nothing to be desired.
The set is certain to have an irresistible attraction for admirers of Franklin and for lovers of well-made books.”--_Record-Herald_, Chicago.
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