DIE KÖNIGIN VON SABA NEBST ANDEREN ERZÄHLUNGEN von Thomas Bailey Aldrich. MS. Deutsche übertragen von Moritz Busch. Leipzig: Fr. Wilh. Grunow.
12mo. Half-title and title, 2 unnumbered leaves. Pp. 233 (verso blank). Contents, I unnumbered leaf.
PRUDENCE PALFREY UND ANDERE ERZÄHLUNGEN Von Thomas Bailey Aldrich. Deutsch von Wilhelm Lange. Leipzig: Druck und Verlag von Philipp Reclam Jun. 16m0, pp. 191 (verso blank).
EN SLEM DRENGS HISTORIE af Thomas Bailey Aldrich. Med 12 Tegninger af Tom Petersen. Kjobenhavn. Otto B. Woblewskys Förlag. Trykt Hos S. Jorgensen & Co.
Half-title, title, and table of contents, 3 unnumbered leaves. Pp. 224.
EN STYGG POJKES HISTORIA af Th. Bailey Aldrich. Ofversattning af Karl Hemgren. Med 4 illustrationer. Stockholm: Albert Bouniers Förlag.
12mo, pp. 210. Contents, I unnumbered leaf.
TOMMASO BAILEY ALDRICH. MARJORIE DAW. Ed altri scritti. Prima Traduzione Italiana di Giorgio Barini. Autorizzata dall' autore. Illustrazioni di S. Guastalla. Roma: Libreria Pontificia di F. Pustet.
12m0, pp. 176. Contents, 2 unnumbered pages.
LA REINA DE SABA. T. Bayley Aldrich. Valencia: Libreria de Pascual Aguilar.
12m0, pp. 172. Contents, 2 unnumbered pages.
ALDEN, HENRY M., editor of Harper's
Magazine, 232, 234.
Aldine Club, The, gives a dinner to Aldrich, 172.
Aldrich, Charles, son of T. B. A., born, 89; named for Charles Frost, 90; married, 216; fatal illness, 216-221; death, 227; letters to, 118, 180, 182, 184, 186.
Aldrich, Elias Taft, father of T. B. A., 4, 15; twice married, 7; a wanderer, 9, 10; death, 11.
Aldrich, George, first American ances-
Aldrich, Henry, canon of Christ Church,
Aldrich, Sarah Abba Bailey, mother of
T. B. A., 4, 19; marriage of, 7; wid- owed, 11; letter to, 56.
Aldrich, Talbot, son of T. B. A., born, 89; married, 232; letters to, 118, 180, 182, 184, 186.
Aldrich, Thomas Bailey, personal ap- pearance, 1, 67, 80; birth, 4, 7; an- cestry, 4-7; early home in Ports- mouth, 8, 9, 13, 14; in New Orleans, 10; at school in Portsmouth, 11, 12, 14; earliest verses, 15; gives up going to Harvard, 15; loyalty to Ports- mouth, 16; life in New York, 18-53; a counting-room clerk, 20; contri- butes to Sunday Atlas, 23, 34; pub- lishes The Bells, 24, 25; Ballad of Babie Bell, 26-28; becomes junior literary critic of Evening Mirror, 28; affection for Longfellow, 29, 30; sub- editor of Home Journal, 31, 33; liter- ary adviser to Derby & Jackson, 31; prints Nest of Sonnets privately, 34;
publishes Daisy's Necklace, 34; youthful love affairs, 35, 45, 55, 61; publishes The Course of True Love never did Run Smooth, 36; congratu- lated by Longfellow, 37; early friends, 37-43, 72; never very Bohemian, 41; associate editor of the Saturday Press, 42, 45; reads poems at college commencements, 45; begins Glass Houses and publishes The Ballad of Babie Bell, 46; first poem in the Atlantic, 48; publishes Pampinea, and Other Poems, 52; praised by Longfellow, 53; seeks a military ap- pointment, 54, 55; and a berth on a war vessel, 55, 56; becomes war cor- respondent for New York Tribune, 56-58; fruitage of his war experience. 58-60; returns to Portsmouth, 58; publishes Out of His Head, and Other Stories, 60; privately issues Père An- toine's Date-Palm, 61, 84; managing editor of Illustrated News, 63; first collected edition of his poems issued, 63-66; becomes engaged to Miss Lil- ian Woodman, 67; correspondence with her, 68-70; leaves Illustrated News, 69; prints Judith in the Round Table, 70; and Friar Jerome in the Atlantic, 71; Blue and Gold edition of his poems issued, 75; editor of Every Saturday, 76, 79; marriage, 77; boards in Hancock Street, Boston, 78; early Boston friendships, 79; first meeting with Howells, 80, 81; his enjoyment of Boston, 81, 82, 101, 102; buys house in Pinckney Street, 86; Longfellow's Hanging of the Crane conceived there, 87; twin sons born,
« iepriekšējāTurpināt » |