Page:The Cambridge History of American Literature, v2.djvu/628

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6i2 Bibliographies pin, Paris, 191 1 ; and No. 61 as Frfere Renard et Prfere Lapin, Paris, igi I. A part of The Wonderful Tar-Baby Story is given in German in Leon Kellners' Geschichte der nordamerikanischen Literatur (Sammlung Goschen), vol. 11, Berlin and Leipzig, 1913.] The Tar-Baby and Other Rhymes of Uncle Remus. 1880. ["With the exception of the Tar-Baby Story and one other, all the folk-lore stories herein em- bodied are new, having come into my hands from various sources' during the past ten years. The Tar-Baby Story has been thrown into a rhymed form for the purpose of presenting and preserving what seems to be the genuine version. " (Author's note.)] Nights with Uncle Remus: Myths and Legends of the Old Plantation, 1883. [Some of these stories appeared first in The Century Magazine for July, August, and September, 1883. For French translations, see under Uncle Remus.] Mingo and Other Sketches in Black and White. 1884. The Story of Aaron (so-named), the Son of Ben Ali. 1885. Free Joe and Other Georgian Sketches. 1887. [Appeared first in The Century Magazine.] London, 1887. Daddy Jake the Runaway, and Short Stories Told after Dark. 1889. The Life of Henry W. Grady, Including his Writings and Speeches: A Memorial Volume Compiled by Mr. Grady's Co-Workers on the Atlanta Constitution. Edited by Joel Chandler Harris. Atlanta, Ga., 1890. Balaam and his Master, and Other Sketches and Stories. 1891. [Appeared first in The Century Magazine.] On the Plantation: a Story of a GeorgiaBoy's Adventures during the War. 1892. [An autobiography.] Uncle Remus and his Friends: Old Plantation Stories, Songs, and Ballads, with Sketches of Negro Character. 1892. [The edition of 1914, the Visitors' Edition, contains a biographical sketch of Harris by Mrs. Myrta Lockett Avary.] Evening Tales, Translated from the French of Frederick Ortoli. 1893. [The joint work of Harris and his wife, formerly Miss Essie La Rose, of French ancestry and Canadian birth.] Little Mr. Thimblefinger and his Queer Country, and What~the Children Saw and Heard There. 1894. Mr. Rabbit at Home: a Sequel to Little Mr. Thimblefinger and his Queer Country. 1895- Georgia from the Invasion of De Soto to Recent Times. 1896. Published also in 1896 as Stories from Georgia; later as The History of Georgia. Sister Jane, her Friends and Acquaintances: a Narrative of Certain Events and Episodes Transcribed from the Papers of the late William Womum. 1896. Aaron in the Wildwoods. 1897. Tales of the Home Folks in Peace and War. 1898. Plantation Pageants. 1899. The Chronicles of Aunt Minervy Ann. 1899. London, 1899. On the Wing of Occasions, being the Authorized Version of Certain Curious Epi- sodes of the late Civil War, Including the hitherto Suppressed Narrative of the Kidnapping of President Lincoln. 1900. [Appeared first in The Saturday Evening Post, 2-23 June, 1900. As The Kidnapping of President Lincoln. 1909.] The Book of Fim and Frolic. Edited by Joel Chandler Harris. 1901. As The Merry Maker, 1902, in The Young Folks' Library.