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In old Narragansett; romances and realities

Chapter 24: PREVIOUS VOLUMES:
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About This Book

A collection of regional sketches and historical anecdotes that evoke coastal Rhode Island life from colonial through early American times. It blends family chronicles, folklore, and local traditions—elopements, weavers, slave quarters, sea commerce, church customs, superstitions, and landscape descriptions—paired with architectural and material culture details such as houses, furnishings, and domestic crafts. The essays trace social patterns, seasonal customs, and personal memories to portray a vanished rural community and its mixture of wealth, labor, and belief.

A series which has given us nothing but good.

THE IVORY SERIES.

Each volume bound in green and white, 16mo, 75 cents.

Just Published:

Seven Months a Prisoner. By J. V. Hadley, Judge of the Circuit Court of Indiana.

This account of the adventures passed through by the author and his companions, while escaping from a Southern prison in 1865, is as full of thrilling incident as any fiction could be. The privations and dangers of the journey through Georgia and the Carolinas are graphically portrayed.

In Old Narragansett. Romances and Realities. By Alice Morse Earle.

A collection of eleven stories and sketches illustrating the more romantic phases of life in Old Narragansett, and filled with fresh pictures of manners and customs of long ago. The book is written in the author’s most engaging style.

PREVIOUS VOLUMES:

Literary Love Letters, and Other Stories. By Robert Herrick, author of “The Man Who Wins.”

“It shows literary elegance and skill, to say nothing of the daintiest of touches. Robert Herrick shows himself to be a past master in subtleties of diction of the heart, and of a vivid and brilliant imaginative turn.”—Chicago Times-Herald.

A Romance in Transit. By Francis Lynde.

“One of the most readable stories we have seen for a long time. A comedy romance of the happiest kind.”—Bost. Times.

The Old Gentleman of the Black Stock. By Thomas Nelson Page.

“The story has the delicacy, tenderness, and sweetness which invariably characterize Mr. Page’s short stories; and the flavor of the South and olden days is like the scent of rose leaves from a jar.”—Boston Times.

The Man Who Wins. By Robert Herrick.

“It is written with admirable restraint, and without affectations of style, in the clearest English. It is a pleasure to welcome Mr. Herrick into the small company of serious literary workers.”—Chap Book.

Amos Judd. By J. A. Mitchell, Editor of Life. Seventh Edition.

“It is just the book to take home to read before the fire—a book that fulfills the simplest yet often the best function of light literature, that of amusing.”—The Critic.

A Bride from the Bush. By E. W. Hornung.

“The pages of Mr. Hornung’s novel glow with a lively humor, a playful fancy in which there is no hint of an undesirable ending.”—Rochester Post Express.

Irralie’s Bushranger. A Story of Australian Adventure. By E. W. Hornung.

“It is a delightfully tormenting tale, compacted of all the good qualities of romantic adventurous fiction.”—N.Y. Tribune.

Ia. A Love Story. By “Q” (A. T. Quiller-Couch).

“No one else writes of Cornwall and its people with the knowledge and skill of Mr. Quiller-Couch.”—Phila. Times.

One of the Visconti. By Eva Wilder Brodhead.

“Pathos, dramatic movement, lightness, and fine touches of character are deftly blended.”

Madame Delphine. By George W. Cable.

“There are few living American writers who can reproduce for us more perfectly than Mr. Cable does, the speech, the manners, the whole social atmosphere of a remote time and a peculiar people.”—New York Tribune.

The Suicide Club. By Robert Louis Stevenson.

“Readers of the ‘New Arabian Nights’ will remember ‘The Suicide Club’ as one of the most thoroughly fascinating of the stories in that volume. It is now published for the first time in America in a separate volume and is certain to be one of the most popular in the dainty Ivory Series.”—Bost. Advertiser.

An Inheritance. By Harriet Prescott Spofford.

“A splendid example of the genuine worth that can be crowded into a few pages.”—Boston Herald.

A Master Spirit. By Harriet Prescott Spofford.

“‘A Master Spirit’ is quite in Mrs. Spofford’s old vein—the vein in which she made herself beloved thirty years ago in the pages of the Atlantic Monthly. It is full of music, color, young life and passion.”—St. Paul Pioneer Press.

A Book of Martyrs. By Cornelia Atwood Pratt.

“One of the best collections of bright, short stories given to the world of fiction this year.”—Union and Advertiser.