A MOTHER'S LIST OF BOOKS
FOR CHILDREN
Non minima pars eruditionis est bonos nosse libros
_Inscription over the doorway of Bishop Cosin's Library, Durham, England_
A MOTHER'S LIST
OF
BOOKS FOR CHILDREN
COMPILED BY
GERTRUDE WELD ARNOLD
CHICAGO A.C. McCLURG & CO. 1909
Copyright A.C. McCLURG & CO. 1909
Entered at Stationer's Hall, London, England
All rights reserved
Published October 9, 1909
The University Press, Cambridge, U.S.A.
TO
MY LITTLE COUSINS
RUTH AND ESTHER
_PREFACE_ (p. ix)
This little book, a revision of one privately printed a few years ago, has been prepared for home use, and for this reason the classification has been made according to the age, and not the school grade, of the child. But as children differ so greatly in capacity, it should be understood that in this respect the arrangement is only approximate. The endeavor has been made to choose those fairy tales which are most free from horrible happenings, and to omit all writings which tolerate unkindness to animals. Humorous books are designated by a star and the few sad ones by a circle.
The prices given are the same as those in the publishers' catalogues; booksellers' prices are often less.
My thanks are extended to those publishers who have time and again courteously provided the facilities for the examination of their publications.
Miss Annie Carroll Moore, of the New York Public Library, was kind enough to read for me the notes and comments. I wish most gratefully to acknowledge the generous assistance given me by Miss Hewins, of (p. x) the Hartford Public Library, Miss Hunt, of the Brooklyn Public Library, and Miss Jordan, of the Boston Public Library, who examined the List, and suggested some changes and a few additions. Their approbation is elsewhere expressed. GERTRUDE WELD ARNOLD. NUTLEY, NEW JERSEY.
_A MOTHER'S LIST_ (p. xi)
It is said, in that earliest collection of English proverbs which was made by John Heywood, more than three hundred years ago, that "Children must learn to creep before they can go." This little book for which I am asked to write a brief preface is, so far as I can find out, the first consistent effort yet made towards teaching children to read on John Heywood's principle. It is safe to say that it is destined to carry light and joy into multitudes of households. It is based upon methods such as I vaguely sighed after, nearly fifty years ago, when I was writing in the _North American Review_ for January, 1866, a paper entitled Children's Books of the Year. The essay was written by request of Professor Charles Eliot Norton, then the editor of that periodical, and I can now see how immensely I should have been relieved by a book just like this Mother's List, a device such as nobody in that day had the wisdom and faithful industry to put together.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Mother's List of Books for Children by Arnold
- 2: Xii which once headed the list
- 3: Xviii an uncommonly good list
- 4: The drawings for Mother Hubbard are among Mr
- 5: Caldecott was a fine literary artist
- 6: This collection of English rhymes contains The Mulberry Bush
- 7: Illustrated by Jessie Willcox Smith
- 8: The Arabella and Araminta Stories
- 9: Clean Peter and the Children of Grubbylea
- 10: And will be fascinated by the Golliwogg
- 11: A companion volume to The Tale of Peter Rabbit
- 12: Walter Crane is the serious apostle of art for the nursery
- 13: Collections of poetry and prose
- 14: From Rollo at Work and Rollo at Play
- 15: 25The text of this famous tale
- 16: AND FAIRY TALES This is fairy gold
- 17: Stories from the Old Testament for Children
- 18: Children's Series of the Modern Reader's Bible
- 19: AEsop and Reynard the Fox
- 20: But none have succeeded in displacing those of John Tenniel
- 21: The Adventures of a Marionette
- 22: The Japanese pictures are reproduced in color
- 23: From Aiken and Barbauld's Evenings at Home
- 24: With a preface by Thomas Wentworth Higginson
- 25: Many well known mythical and historic tales are included
- 26: AND FAIRY TALES Where the bee sucks
- 27: Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm
- 28: The Wonderful Adventures of Nils
- 29: And these four and twenty fairy tales
- 30: 00 Ye who love a nation's legends
- 31: Children find the story very interesting
- 32: OUIDA Pseudonym of Louise de la Rame
- 33: The Young Folks' Cyclopaedia of Persons and Places
- 34: 25The author relates in his informal way
- 35: The musical motifs accompany the text
- 36: Fairy Tales from the Arabian Nights
- 37: Pyle has related these great legends right worthily
- 38: Collections of poetry and prose
- 39: While they do not like spiders
- 40: For my Vikings love song and saga
- 41: This mysterious tale of Ji shib the Chippewa
- 42: In mighty numbers mighty things
- 43: The Century Book of Famous Americans
- 44: Biographical Stories are tales of West
- 45: A Primary History of the United States
- 46: The volume contains twelve colored plates
- 47: Baldwin has reshaped this ancient tale
- 48: The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood
- 49: Collections of poetry and prose
- 50: Burroughs states that this book
- 51: There's nothing like your Attic wasp
- 52: 135 Robinson Crusoe
- 53: 50As children we parents learned to love old Masterman
- 54: The colored illustrations are delightful
- 55: In which General Custer lost his life
- 56: 25 Flavius Josephus was born at Jerusalem A
- 57: The subsequent adventures of Marco Polo
- 58: 00Du Chaillu visited the Northern lands in winter
- 59: It is done out of the Odyssey
- 60: Furnivall contributes an illuminating introduction
- 61: Fully illustrated from photographs of famous paintings
- 62: Reproducing more than a thousand North American butterflies
- 63: Dubbing him Master Skylark because of his wonderful voice
- 64: According to present day standards
- 65: Colonel Inman served under Generals Custer
- 66: The sons of the Countess of Viteau
- 67: Of Cambyses and the Persian conquest
- 68: The Recollections of a Drummer Boy
- 69: Children's Stories of the Great Scientists
- 70: Short descriptions of great books
- 71: Illustrated by Frederic Remington
- 72: Collections of poetry and prose
- 73: There are sixteen pages of color plates
- 74: Real Electric Toy Making for Boys
- 75: Its standards make for self control
- 76: 192 Soldier Rigdale
- 77: 195 War gives an unexaggerated picture of plantation life
- 78: After some hard experiences Ann tries to run away
- 79: Illustrated with working diagrams
- 80: Famous adventures and prison escapes of the civil war
- 81: Condensed from Nicolay and Hay's Short Life of Lincoln
- 82: It was written between 1604 and 1610
- 83: On some characteristics of Greek sculpture
- 84: Lummis describes the wonders of the Southwest
- 85: The illustrations are from classical sources
- 86: But is called a Tale of Flodden Field
- 87: Illustrated by Louis Agassiz Fuertes
- 88: Curator of Reptiles in the New York Zooelogical Park
- 89: With keys for ready identification
- 90: 00 Theoretical and practical information
- 91: Played preference at Miss Betty Barker's
- 92: Illustrated by Randolph Caldecott
- 93: Ebenezer Balfour of Shaws
- 94: Harper's Electricity Book for Boys
- 95: 62 Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
- 96: 231 Birds That Hunt and are Hunted
- 97: 35 More Goops and How Not To Be Them
- 98: 24 Hey Diddle Diddle
- 99: 55 Children's Stories in American History
- 100: The Diverting History of John Gilpin
- 101: 27 Fairy Tales from Hans Christian Andersen
- 102: See also Baring Gould and Gilman
- 103: 194 Handbook of Birds of Eastern North America
- 104: 122 Hollow Tree and Deep Woods Book
- 105: 120 In the Days of Queen Victoria
- 106: 229 Kinsfolk and Friends of Jesus
- 107: The Wonderful Adventures of Nils
- 108: 206 Merry Adventures of Robin Hood
- 109: 187 Monkey That Would Not Kill
- 110: 84 Old Songs for Young America
- 111: 197 Recollections of a Drummer Boy
- 112: 146 Twelve Naval Captains
- 113: 57 Select Fables from La Fontaine
- 114: 103 Stories from the Faerie Queene
- 115: 175 Tales of the Canterbury Pilgrims
- 116: 169 True Story of Benjamin Franklin
- 117: 64 Wild Life Under the Equator
- 118: AMERICAN THRESHERMAN American Thresherman
