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UVA-LIB-Text (949)
University of Virginia Library, Text collection (949)
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341Author:  Glaspell, Susan, 1882-1948Add
 Title:  The Awakening of the Lieutenant-Governor  
 Published:  1998 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
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342Author:  Glaspell, Susan, 1882-1948Add
 Title:  The Man of Flesh and Blood.  
 Published:  1995 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: THE elements without were not in harmony with the spirit which it was desired should be engendered within. By music, by gay decorations, by speeches from prominent men, the board in charge of the boys' reformatory was striving to throw about this dedication of the new building an atmosphere of cheerfulness and good-will — an atmosphere vibrant with the kindness and generosity which emanated from the State, and the thankfulness, appreciation, and loyalty which it was felt should emanate from the boys.
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343Author:  Glasgow, EllenAdd
 Title:  The Freeman  
 Published:  1999 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
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344Author:  McGlasson, Eva WilderAdd
 Title:  Minnehaha  
 Published:  1995 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: SHE came out on the porch of the small, trim-looking house, and stood restlessly fumbling with the broad gold band on her fore-finger. Her middle-aged face exhibited a sort of stolid distress. The lips were purple and puckered. The wide, pale cheeks were streaked with dull red. In her cold blue eyes, as they took acrimonious stock of the medium's poor, weather-beaten house over the way, a perturbed spark flickered.
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345Author:  Glasgow, EllenAdd
 Title:  "A Point in Morals"  
 Published:  1995 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: "THE question seems to be—" began the Englishman. He looked up and bowed to a girl in a yachting-cap who had just come in from deck and was taking the seat beside him. "The question seems to be—" The girl was having some difficulty in removing her coat, and he turned to assist her.
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346Author:  Glaspell, Susan, 1882-1948Add
 Title:  Trifles: A Play in One Act  
 Published:  1996 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
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347Author:  Brock: Glen, JamesAdd
 Title:  South Carolina: Governor James Glen to the Board of Trade, July 13, 1751 (excerpt) / by James Glen  
 Published:  2000 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: I shall endeavour to give your Lordships entire satisfaction as to that part of your Letter with regard to the present state of our Paper Currency and Publick Orders. You are pleased to say that the Report which I formerly transmitted differs from an Account which you have had prepared for your use, and you desire that I may explain the reason of their differing. I have compared the two States and I cannot perceive the least difference, except that the Account sent from hence descends lower in point of time, and consequently comprehends more of the Publick Orders that have been cancelled than the account that has been prepared for Your Lordships in London neither does that account seem to take any notice of the Publick Orders issued in consequence of an Act passed on the 20th of August 1731 the Committee I presume thought it necessary to be particular as to the different Periods at which the several Sums of the legal Currency were issued, some part having been cancelled, that have only said in general that the Sum of £106,500 amounting to £15,214: 5: 8 1/2 Sterling in the Year 1731, and being of the same value at present, is still outstanding, and your Lordships take notice that your state of these Bills of Credit agrees exactly with that sent from hence, and that in the year 1739 there remained then outstanding without any funds for calling it is precisely the same Sum of £106,500 Currency. And the reason I presume that took notice of the Publick Orders issued in 1731 and the £63000 orders issued in 1742, in the body of the Account, was because that some small part of them was still uncancelled But your Lordships may perceive by the printed account then sent over, and which I now again transmit, that on the 5th of March 1736 there was issued the sum of £35,010, which agrees with the 1st Article in Your Lordships State of the Publick Orders, that on the 5th of April 1740 there was issued £25,000 which agrees with the second Article and by an Additional Act on the 19th of Sept the same year there was issued £11,508 agreeable to your third Article, the Sum of £63,000 issued in 1742, which makes the 4th Article of Your Lordships State, is contained above in the body of the Account, as some part of it is still uncancelled, and in May 1740 £20,000 was issued, which is the 5th Article taken notice of by Your Lordships. Those several Sums in the Committees State (Exclusive of the Orders of 1731) make together the Sum of £150, 518, and Your Lordships may be assured that as much was then sunk as is set forth in that Report, and that since that Report was made there have also been cancelled above £1000 of the Publick Orders of 1731 and £12,600 of the £63,000 Orders for the Year 1749 and 1750, So that all the Publick Orders that have ever been issued from the beginning of the Government to this time, there remains uncancelled no more than £12,600 Currency, which is not £2000 Sterling, Except about £50 Sterling of the Orders of 1731, and a few of the Orders in 1740, which I presume have been lost or accidently destroyed, for I see none circulating, and for Exchanging of which should they appear, there is equal Sums of legal Currency lock'd up in the Publick Treasury, and except also £12,600 of the £63,000 Orders which will be sunk by the two succeeding Taxes.
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348Author:  Brock: Board of TradeAdd
 Title:  Whitehall: The Board of Trade to Governor James Glen, November 15, 1750 (excerpt) / by the Board of Trade  
 Published:  2000 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: We come now to that Letter of yours which relates to the internal State of Your Government. And before we make any observations on the Reasons given in your Letter to evince the Necessity of a Paper Currency in your Province and what else you have said upon the Subject, it will be proper to tell you that the Report of the Committee of Conference which you have sent us on the present State of Paper Currency in your Province, and the Bills now outstanding differs from an Account which we have had prepared here for our Use from the several Acts of Assembly which have been passed in your Government for emitting such Currency. We will state to you what We understand to be the Amount of the Paper Currency at present outstanding in your Province and the operations which every Act has had, that you may compare our State with that of the Committee and explain the Reason of their differing.
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349Author:  Brock: Glen, JamesAdd
 Title:  South Carolina: Governor James Glen to the Board of Trade, December 23, 1749 (excerpt) / by James Glen  
 Published:  2000 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: I have also inclosed a State of the Paper Currency in this Province prepared by the Council and Assembly, by which your Lordships will see that our Paper money of all denominations amounts to no more than thirteen thousand and six pounds seven shillings and ten pence Sterling, including both what is legal Tender, and all other kinds, a sum so small that it is surprising that any person acquainted with the circumstances of this Country would have complained of more especially when it is Considered how punctually we have for many years kept the Public faith by sinking it at the proper periods fixed by Law: We are a new and improving Province, and are yearly adding to our wealth, but it is impossible and it were improper that our Increase or Profit, our Surplus or Ballance from abroad should be immediately turned and converted into Cash and Bullion, since it may be more profitably returned in other things that bear a better price. I make no doubt but that our exported Produce is sufficient to pay for all our Importations from Great Britain, and to leave an Annual Ballance due to us of several thousand Pounds Sterling, but instead of purchasing Gold and Silver with this Ballance, the Planters immediately lay it out in more slaves, these slaves raise more Rice and Indigo to pay for more Cloaths and to purchase more Slaves, and this is certainly a more profitable way of employing the Ballance, for when the Interest of money was at ten per Cent it was near Eight years before they could double their Capital or principal sum, whereas a Planter expects that Slaves will pay for themselves in four or five years, and whatever is most profitable for the Planter, will in the end prove so for the British Merchant, and it is to be wished that they were of that Opinion, but some of them seem to think that nothing is to be regarded but Gold or Silver. They may at length repent the pains they have taken to teach the Planters to love these tempting metals, for should they ever prefer Gold or Silver to British Manufactures the Cloaths and Household furniture that they are at present fond of and be forced to make such things as they have not money to purchase Britain will reap far less benefit from her Provinces. A Considerable quantity of Cordage has hitherto been Annually imported into this Province from England, but a Rope walk has been lately Established here and there can be no doubt of Success. The amount of sugars sent us Annually from Britain is hardly to be credited, but we have a Sugar house lately finished and the Sugars are equal to the London Sugars and are much cheaper, the Merchants here clearly see the consequences of these things, and I think it were easier to Silence the Merchants at home, who make a noise about paper Money, by arguments unanswerable, but I consider that I write to your Lordships whose superior knowledge makes any observations from me unnecessary, for tho' it may be pernicious to permit mall Colonies such as Rhode Island to issue immense Sums without Limitation and without settled Funds to call it back into the Treasury again, yet that is not the case of Carolina and therefore I shall only add that a larger sum in Paper Money upon a good Fund and to be sunk at different Periods, seems to me to be Absolutely necessary, without which it will be difficult for the people to pay the Taxes for the support of his Majestys Government, to pay the King's Quit Rents to carry on their Commerce, or even to drive their little domestic Trade, all intercourse between Man and Man must for some time be at a stand and they must deny themselves the most common and ordinary necessaries of life, not for want of means but for want of a Medium. The Planter must give the Merchant a Slave for a Suit of Cloaths, which the Merchant must sell again to the Spaniards for silver to send home.
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350Author:  Godwin, WilliamAdd
 Title:  Enquiry Concerning Political Justice  
 Published:  2001 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
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351Author:  Gogol, Nikolai VasilievichAdd
 Title:  A May Evening  
 Published:  1994 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: THERE were sounds of merriment in the village, and a chorus of song murmured, stream-like, through its single street. It was the hour when lads and lasses, after their hard day's work, meet in the mellow gloaming to express their feelings in melodies which, though glad, are never without a strain of sadness. The pensive eventide was dreamily embracing the blue heaven, and transforming every visible object into something vague, shadowy, and ghost-like. The brooding gloom settled into night, and still the stream of song flowed on without surcease.
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352Author:  Goldsmith, OliverAdd
 Title:  The Deserted Village  
 Published:  1994 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
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353Author:  Goldberg, IsaacAdd
 Title:  New York's Yiddish Writers  
 Published:  1998 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: STRANGELY enough, it has long been a question to many, not alone whether the modern Jews have any literature, but whether Yiddish itself is a language. Many have been the prophecies which predicted the immediate extinction of the tongue, and yet, like the fabled Phoenix of old, it has risen new-born from its own ashes. Let prophets deal in futures — and it must be admitted that from certain signs familiar to students of linguistic evolution Yiddish would seem to be eventually doomed — the fact remains that to-day it is enjoying what amounts practically to a renaissance. And the question whether modern Jews have a literature is settled by a reading of the works themselves.
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354Author:  Goldsmith, OliverAdd
 Title:  The Vicar of Wakefield  
 Published:  1994 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: I WAS ever of opinion, that the honest man who married and brought up a large family, did more service than he who continued single and only talked of population. From this motive I had scarcely taken orders a year, before I began to think seriously of matrimony, and choose my wife, as she did her wedding gown, not for a fine glossy surf ace, but such qualities as would wear well, To do her justice, she was a good-natured, notable woman; and as for breeding, there were few country ladies who could show more. She could read any English book without much spelling; but for pickling, preserving, and cookery none could excel her. She prided herself also upon being an excellent contriver in housekeeping, though I never could find that we grew richer with all her contrivances.
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355Author:  Gorky, MaximAdd
 Title:  The Billionaire  
 Published:  1996 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: THE KINGS of steel, of petroleum, and all the other kings of the United States have always in a high degree excited my power of imagination. It seemed to me certain that these people who possess so much money could not be like other mortals.
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356Author:  Gorky, MaximAdd
 Title:  The Heart of a Beggar: A Story by Gorky  
 Published:  1999 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: Maxim Gorky is always vivid and usually terrible in his portrayal of the underworld of Russia. In this little character-sketch (translated for us by Montressor Paull), he strikes a note of tenderness that is less usual with him.
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357Author:  Gorky, MaximAdd
 Title:  "Confronting Life"  
 Published:  1996 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: CONFRONTING Life, two people stood—both discontent. And to the question, "What do you expect of me?" one made answer with weary voice: "I am distracted by the cruelty of thy contradictions. Feebly my reason strives to understand the meaning of existence, and with perplexing gloom my heart is filled before thee. My consciousness doth tell me man is the highest of creations."
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358Author:  Gorky, MaximAdd
 Title:  Personal Recollections of Anton Pavlovitch Chekhov  
 Published:  1996 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: [As a narrative of the visit of the best known of Russian short story writers to another regarded as still greater, the following article has an especial interest. Maxim Gorky has long been popular in this country, and his imprisonment on the charge of conspiracy to overthrow the Government has recently brought him into greater prominence. Chekhov's stories are now beginning to be translated into English, and since they are much wider in scope and more varied in style than Gorky's they are likely to find more readers among us. According to Tolstoy Chekhov is the founder of a new school of literature, and his influence will be lastingly felt throughout the world. He was born in 1860, the son of a serf who had freed himself by his own ability. He was educated as a physician in the University of Moscow, and began to write for college journals at the age of nineteen. His death last year is deeply regretted, since he was at the hight of his powers of production and his stories were becoming somewhat more optimistic in tone. The illustrations accompanying this article are all taken from caricatures originally published in Russian newspapers and magazines. The translation is by Lizzie B. Gorin.—EDITOR.]
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359Author:  Gorky, MaximAdd
 Title:  Philip Vasilyevich's Story  
 Published:  1996 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: [Either on account of lack of evidence or because of the protests of literary men and societies throughout the world, Maxim Gorky has at last been released from prison, and he will not be prosecuted on the charge of conspiring to overthrow the Russian Government. It is not to be expected that his recent experiences in the hands of the police will modify the appropriateness of the pseudonym under which he writes, Gorky, "the Bitter One."—EDITOR.]
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360Author:  Gorren, AlineAdd
 Title:  Womanliness as a Profession  
 Published:  1995 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text 
 Description: THE question here discussed was one sure to arise, among us, in America, sooner or later; and one, among the thoughtful, and those who watch the signs of the future, also sure to arouse interest of a special and peculiar kind. With the increasing facilities for the higher intellectual development now offered to the American woman, along with her sisters the world over—only in greater degree, and more generally, to the American woman than to any other—the effect which such development would have upon her essential womanliness was bound to become a matter of anxious observation. It is so become, in many quarters, now. People are trying to find out how the "higher education" affects the women of other countries, and seeking to compare the notes and suggestions thus gathered up with what is to be seen here. Whether the higher education shall be given the sex is no longer at all the affair considered. It is conceded that the thing must be done; the experiment is made; the point now is to observe what will come next. For, certainly, unless we were very short-sighted, we were prepared for the fact that something would come next. One subjects nothing organic to a changed environment with any sane impression that it will remain exactly as it was before the change.
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