Page:The Cambridge History of American Literature, v2.djvu/629

 Dialect Writers 613 Gabriel ToUiver: a Story of Reconstruction. 1902. [In part autobiographical.1 The Making of a Statesman, and Other Stories. 1902. Wally Wanderoon and his Story -Telling Machine. 1903. The Little Union Scout : a Tale of Tennessee during the Civil War. 1904. [Ap- peared first in The Saturday Evening Post, 6 Peb.-I9 Mar., 1904.] Told by Uncle Remus: New Stories of the Old Plantation. 1905. The Shadow between his Shoulder Blades. 1907. Uncle Remus and Brer Rabit. 1907. The Bishop, the Boogerman, and the Right of Way. 1909. [Appeared first in the June-Oct. numbers of Uncle Remus's Magazine, 1907, Atlanta, Ga.l Uncle Remus and the Little Boy. Boston, 1910. Uncle Remus Returns. Boston, 1918. II. Contributions to Periodicals {Selected) (a) Prose. In The Saturday Evening Post:]The Poor Man's Chance, 7 July, 1900; Cheap Criticisms of Dear Beliefs, 21 July, 1900; On the Newspaper Habit, 4 Aug., 1900; Hornet with Stimulating Sting, The Tyranny of Tender-Hearted Men, 13 Oct., 1900; Prophets of Rxiin and the People, 15 Dec, 1900; Abolition of the Soul, 29 Dec, 1900; Haeckel's Unguessed Riddle, 18 May, 1901 ; The Negro as the South Sees Him, 2 Jan., 1904; The Negro of Today, 30 Jan., 1904; The Negro Problem, 27 Feb., 1904. In Uncle Remus's Magazine, Atlanta, Ga.: On Knowing Your Neighbors, Mr. Billy Sanders of Shady Dale Makes Some Suggestions, June, 1907; The Old Letter Box. Mr. Billy Sanders Discusses the Canal, July, 1907 ; The Philosophy of Fail- ure, Mr. Billy Sanders on Some Political Reminiscences, Aug., 1907; Little Children on Snap Bean Farm, Mr. Billy Sanders: his Views on Problems and Remedies, Sept., 1907. (b) Poetry. Juliette, Saturday Evening Post, 21 April, 1900; Wishing Song, Century Magazine, Aug., 1902; De Apple Tree, Century Magazine, Dec, 1902; Mr. Rabbit Run, Saturday Evening Post, 19 Sept., 1903; De Gator and Rabbit, Saturday Evening Post, 7 Nov., 1903; De 01' Stand-bys, Century Magazine, Dec, 1903. In The Saturday Evening Post : The Hard-Headed Woman, Why the Frog Has no Tail, 16 Jan., 1904; Brer Rabbit's Giggling Place, 6 Feb., 1904; Why Buz- zard's Head is Bald, 26 Mar., 1904; How Brer Terrapin Learned to Fly, 2 Apr., 1904; It's Good to be Old, 23 July, 1904; You Can Hear Me Callin', 3 Sept., 1904; Brer Rabbit and Tar-Baby, 24 Sept., 1904; Two Tales in One, One Tale in Two, 8 Oct., 1904; Fashion of the Swamp, 7 Jan., 1905; Mr. Sun Takes a Holiday, 22 Apr., 1905; Hog Killin' Time, 6 Jan., 1906. In Uncle Remus's Magazine, Atlanta, Ga. : Uncle Remus Sings a Song, July, 1907; Remembrance, Aug., 1907 [first published in 1871]; How Brer Rabbit Raised the Dust, Sept., 1907. III. Biography and Criticism Avary, Myrta Lockett. Uncle Remus. Introduction to the Visitors' Edition of Uncle Remus and his Friends. 1914. Baskervill, W. M. Joel Chandler Harris. Southern Writers Series. Nashville, Tenn., 1896. Bradley, H. S. Joel Chandler Harris. Library of Southern Literature, vol. v, Atlanta, Ga., 1909. Harris, Julia Collier. The Life of Joel Chandler Harris. Boston and N. Y., 1918. Kellner, L. Joel Chandler Harris. Geschichte der nordamerikanischen Literatur, vol. II. Berlin and Leipzig, 1913.