Page:The Cambridge History of American Literature, v2.djvu/627

 Dialect Writers 6ii Scott, Emmett J., and Stowe, Lyman Beecher. Booker T. Washington: the Man and his School in Making. Outlook, cxiv, 101-4, 13 Sept., 1916. Sparks, Charles R. Black Diamonds in Dixie, or Booker T. Washington at the Table with the President. [Kansas City, 1904.] Sutton, W. S. Contributions of Booker T. Washington to the Education of the Negro. School and Society, iv, 457-63, 23 Sept., 1916. Thrasher, M. B. Personality of Washington. Outlook, Ixix, 629-33, 9 Nov., 1901. White, H. Rufus. A Joshua in the Camp, of the Life of Booker T. Washington of Tuskegee, Alabama. Towson, Ind., 1895. A Wise Leader. Century, Ixvi, 796-7. Sept., 1903. See, also, the autobiographical writings listed in I abbve. Robert Burns Wilson (18S0-IQ16) Catalogue of the Water Color Paintings of Robert Burns Wilson on view at C. Klackner's, 5 East 17th Street, New York, March, 1899. Chant of a Woodland Spirit. 1894. Life and Love. Poems. [1887.] The Shadows of the Trees and Other Poems. 1898. Until the Day Break. A Novel. 1900. Berry, Carolina W. Kentucky honors Robert Burns Wilson. Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society, xv, 57-9, 1917. Harrison, Ida Withers. Robert Bums Wilson. Library of Southern Litera- ture. CHAPTER V DIALECT WRITERS Joel Chandler Harris Wootten, Katherine Hinton. Bibliography of the Works of Joel Chandler Harris. The Monthly Bulletin of the Carnegie Library of Atlanta, Ga., May-June, 1907. /. Separate Works Uncle Remus: his Songs and his Sayings. The Folk-Lore of the Old Plantation. 1880. [In its 52d printing, January, 1915. The English Catalogue mentions at least ten publishing houses in Great Britain that have produced editions of Uncle Remus since 1 881. The stories were successfully dramatized in London in 1914 (see Sunday Times, London, 3 May, 1914). The files of Punch and The Westminster Gazette show also a wide use of the Uncle Remus idea for purposes of political satire. W. T. Stead (London Review of Re- views Office) began in 1896 a series known as Books for the Bairns, of which The Wonderful Adventures of Old Brer Rabbit (July-Sept., 1896) was No. 6, More Stories about Old Brer Rabbit Qan.-Mar., 1898), No. 20, and Brer Fox and Brer Rabbit (Jan.-June, 1901), No. 61. These three numbers in- clude 28 stories, 14 from Uncle Remus and 14 from Nights with Uncle Remus. No. 6 was translated into French as Les Merveilleuses Aventures du Vieux Prfere Lapin, Paris, 1910; No. 20 as NouveUes Aventures du Vieux Frfere La-