UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Bower of Books: Reading Children in Nineteenth-Century British Literature Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/89q0q765 Author Browning, Catherine Cronquist Publication Date 2013 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California Bower of Books: Reading Children in Nineteenth-Century British Literature By Catherine Cronquist Browning A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Ian Duncan, Chair Professor Catherine Gallagher Professor Paula Fass Fall 2013 Bower of Books: Reading Children in Nineteenth-Century British Literature © 2013 by Catherine Cronquist Browning Abstract Bower of Books: Reading Children in Nineteenth-Century British Literature by Catherine Cronquist Browning Doctor of Philosophy in English University of California, Berkeley Professor Ian Duncan, Chair Bower of Books: Reading Children in Nineteenth-Century British Literature analyzes the history of the child as a textual subject, particularly in the British Victorian period. Nineteenth-century literature develops an association between the reader and the child, linking the humanistic self- fashioning catalyzed by textual study to the educational development of children. I explore the function of the reading and readable child subject in four key Victorian genres, the educational treatise, the Bildungsroman, the child fantasy novel, and the autobiography. I argue that the literate children of nineteenth century prose narrative assert control over their self-definition by creatively misreading and assertively rewriting the narratives generated by adults. The early induction of Victorian children into the symbolic register of language provides an opportunity for them to constitute themselves, not as ingenuous neophytes, but as the inheritors of literary history and tradition. The reading child’s mind becomes an anthology, an inherited library of influences, quotations, and textual traditions that he or she reshapes with uniquely imaginative critical force. The first chapter examines the nineteenth-century British reception of John Locke’s Some Thoughts Concerning Education and Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s Émile. I demonstrate that Locke’s interest in cultivating skillful child readers, mediated through Rousseau’s fictional pupil, informs Maria Edgeworth’s Belinda and Walter Scott’s Waverley. Lockean educational discourse, combined with Rousseauean fictional strategies, serves as foundational for the early nineteenth century development of the novel. Chapter Two addresses childhood reading in the English Bildungsroman, interrogating the relationship between child protagonists who develop their identities through creative misreading and the ways that novels of growth and development shape their readers. Jane Eyre, David Copperfield, and Maggie Tulliver balance their absorption in the reading experience with their imaginative reshaping of their childhood reading, rewriting the books they encounter as they gradually learn to form themselves as subjects. Chapter Three traces the influence of children’s books of natural history on the fantasy novels of Lewis Carroll and Charles Kingsley, with particular attention to the development of curiosity as a desirable trait for child readers. The child protagonists of natural history books, who serve as pedagogical models for child readers, inform the child protagonists of the fantasy novel, who model both successful reception of didactic instruction and comic failure to learn from their books. At the same time, the thematization of optical technology works together with the child’s perspective to 1 embed readerly experience in childhood perception. The final chapter turns to the autobiographical reflections of John Stuart Mill, John Ruskin, and Edmund Gosse, investigating the metaphorical substitution of the acquisition of basic literacy for early childhood development and of canonical literacy for the development of identity over time. Each of these autobiographers defines himself through his ability to cultivate sublime readerly experience through re-reading. For Mill, the mature admiration that his father encourages in childhood reading must give way to a childish delight as an adult reader; for Gosse, his father’s strict religious philosophy is displaced by his enchantment with the sound of poetic language; and for Ruskin, the ability to forget his childhood reading enables him to take the same pleasure in books over and over again. 2 For my father and for my son. i Table of Contents Acknowledgements iii Chapter One Imaginary Pupils: Educational Philosophy in Romantic Fiction 1 Chapter Two “Reading as if for life”: Bookish Children in the Bildungsroman 33 Chapter Three Reading Curiosity: Natural History in the Victorian Child Fantasy Novel 62 Chapter Four Autobiography as Anthology: Re-Reading Victorian Childhoods 90 Bibliography 113 ii Acknowledgements I am deeply grateful to my advisor, Ian Duncan, whose seemingly limitless knowledge is matched only by his unbounded patience. His meticulous reading and detailed feedback helped me clarify and refine my ideas more thoroughly than I ever hoped to do. In addition, his unfailing generosity and constant availability supported me throughout the writing process. I am extremely fortunate to have had Catherine Gallagher as my second reader for this project. Her thoughtful commentary has contributed greatly to the quality of this dissertation. I am truly thankful for her time and involvement. I must also thank my outside reader, Paula Fass, whose pioneering work in the history of childhood has made this project possible. I am grateful for her encouragement, organization, and willingness to entertain a very different disciplinary perspective from her own. Many faculty members beyond my official dissertation committee have been supportive of me and influential for this project; I am particularly grateful to Susan Schweik, who directed an independent study on children’s literature that first sparked my interest in The Water-Babies, and who served as an examiner on my qualifying exam committee and as my second reader at an earlier stage of the project. I must also acknowledge Dan Blanton, Steve Goldsmith, and Kent Puckett for many enlightening conversations on nineteenth-century literature, Elizabeth Abel for facilitating an excellent prospectus workshop and encouraging me at critical moments in my graduate career, Oliver Arnold for helping me learn how to talk about my project, and Victoria Frede for serving on my prospectus committee. Kathleen Donegan, Nadia Ellis, and Eric Falci provided me with excellent mentorship in my final year of graduate school and were willing to share the intimate details of their own writing processes. Elisa Tamarkin encouraged me in what seemed my darkest hour and smoothed my path to completion. I am thankful for the support and feedback of my graduate colleagues Ruth Baldwin, Ben Cannon, Dan Clinton, Marisa Knox, Gina Patnaik, and Monica Soare, who have helped me slowly tease out my ideas over many years of conversation and writing. Several discussion groups contributed to my thinking, including the Nineteenth Century and Beyond British Cultural Studies Working Group, the Children’s Literature Working Group, and the “Victorian Supper Club.” Among the many people who made these discussions stimulating and enlightening, I must especially thank Mark Allison and Rae Greiner, who encouraged me during the early years of my graduate career; Natalia Cecire, Arcadia Falcone, and Andrea Lankin, whose interest in critical approaches to children’s literature strongly influenced my reading of the child fantasy novel; and Charity Ketz and Ian Thomas-Bignami, who read and commented on an early draft of my first chapter. In the final months of writing, I received invaluable support both intellectual and practical from Rebecca Munson and Claude Willan. I would also like to acknowledge the generous financial support of the Berkeley English Department, the Center for British Studies, and the Berkeley Graduate Division. Finally, I must thank my husband, Jonathan Browning, whose faith and love sustained me through eight years of graduate school. iii Chapter 1 Imaginary Pupils: Educational Philosophy in Romantic Fiction Je ne sais comment j’appris à lire; je ne me souviens que de mes premières lectures et de leur effet sur moi: c’est le temps d’où je date sans interruption la conscience de moi-même. – Rousseau, Confessions Introduction Studies of children in literature tend to identify a moment of origin at which childhood begins to interest authors, and children begin to interest publishers – a moment before which children’s voices are rarely represented, and after which child readers and characters appear everywhere. This obsession with the genesis of literary childhood derives largely from Phillipe Ariès’s groundbreaking L’enfant et la vie familiale sous l’Ancien Régime (1960),1 which argues that modern childhood came into existence in the late seventeenth century and that Western artistic and cultural representations of childhood as we now define it hardly existed before that time. In recent decades, scholars have responded to Ariès’s controversial thesis by identifying manifestations of modern childhood in earlier periods, particularly in the Middle Ages and
Recommended publications
  • The Armstrong Browning Library Newsletter God Is the Perfect Poet
    The Armstrong Browning Library Newsletter God is the perfect poet. – Paracelsus by Robert Browning NUMBER 51 SPRING/SUMMER 2007 WACO, TEXAS Ann Miller to be Honored at ABL For more than half a century, the find inspiration. She wrote to her sister late Professor Ann Vardaman Miller of spending most of the summer there was connected to Baylor’s English in the “monastery like an eagle’s nest Department—first as a student (she . in the midst of mountains, rocks, earned a B.A. in 1949, serving as an precipices, waterfalls, drifts of snow, assistant to Dr. A. J. Armstrong, and a and magnificent chestnut forests.” master’s in 1951) and eventually as a Master Teacher of English herself. So Getting to Vallombrosa was not it is fitting that a former student has easy. First, the Brownings had to stepped forward to provide a tribute obtain permission for the visit from to the legendary Miller in Armstrong the Archbishop of Florence and the Browning Library, the location of her Abbot-General. Then, the trip itself first campus office. was arduous—it involved sitting in a wine basket while being dragged up the An anonymous donor has begun the cliffs by oxen. At the top, the scenery process of dedicating a stained glass was all the Brownings had dreamed window in the Cox Reception Hall, on of, but disappointment awaited Barrett the ground floor of the library, to Miller. Browning. The monks of the monastery The Vallombrosa Window in ABL’s Cox Reception The hall is already home to five windows, could not be persuaded to allow a woman Hall will be dedicated to the late Ann Miller, a Baylor professor and former student of Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Tom Brown's Schooldays and the Development of "Muscular Christianity" Author(S): William E
    American Society of Church History Tom Brown's Schooldays and the Development of "Muscular Christianity" Author(s): William E. Winn Source: Church History, Vol. 29, No. 1 (Mar., 1960), pp. 64-73 Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Society of Church History Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3161617 . Accessed: 24/07/2011 20:08 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at . http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=cup. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Cambridge University Press and American Society of Church History are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Church History.
    [Show full text]
  • The Absentee
    The Absentee Maria Edgeworth The Absentee Table of Contents The Absentee..............................................................................................................................................................1 Maria Edgeworth............................................................................................................................................1 i The Absentee Maria Edgeworth NOTES ON 'THE ABSENTEE' In August 1811, we are told, she wrote a little play about landlords and tenants for the children of her sister, Mrs. Beddoes. Mr. Edgeworth tried to get the play produced on the London boards. Writing to her aunt, Mrs. Ruxton, Maria says, 'Sheridan has answered as I foresaw he must, that in the present state of this country the Lord Chamberlain would not license THE ABSENTEE; besides there would be a difficulty in finding actors for so many Irish characters.' The little drama was then turned into a story, by Mr. Edgeworth's advice. Patronage was laid aside for the moment, and THE ABSENTEE appeared in its place in the second part of TALES OF FASHIONABLE LIFE. We all know Lord Macaulay's verdict upon this favourite story of his, the last scene of which he specially admired and compared to the ODYSSEY. [Lord Macaulay was not the only notable admirer of THE ABSENTEE. The present writer remembers hearing Professor Ruskin on one occasion break out in praise and admiration of the book. 'You can learn more by reading it of Irish politics,' he said, 'than from a thousand columns out of blue−books.'] Mrs. Edgeworth tells us that much of it was written while Maria was suffering a misery of toothache. Miss Edgeworth's own letters all about this time are much more concerned with sociabilities than with literature. We read of a pleasant dance at Mrs.
    [Show full text]
  • "Problem" MWF 2 Cross Listed with AADS4410 Satisfies Cultural Diversity Core Requirement in the Souls of Black Folk, W.E.B
    SPOTLIGHT ON ENGLISH ELECTIVES SPRING 2018 ENGL2482 African American Literature and the "Problem" MWF 2 Cross listed with AADS4410 Satisfies Cultural Diversity Core Requirement In The Souls of Black Folk, W.E.B. Du Bois famously observes that to be black is to serially confront a question: "How does it feel to be a problem?" This course undertakes a survey of African American Literature as an ongoing mediation on the "problem" of being black, from the advent of racial slavery through to its contemporary afterlives. Reading broadly across a black literary tradition spanning four centuries and multiple genres, we will consider how black writers represent the "problem" of being black not merely as an unwelcome condition to be overcome, but an ethical orientation to be embraced over against an anti-black world that is itself a problem. Jonathan Howard ENGL3331 Victorian Inequality MWF 11 Fulfills the pre-1900 requirement. From “Dickensian” workhouses to shady financiers, Victorian literature has provided touchstones for discussions of inequality today. This course will investigate how writers responded to the experience of inequality in Victorian Britain during an era of revolution and reaction, industrialization and urbanization, and empire building. Considering multiple axes of inequality, we will explore topics such as poverty and class conflict, social mobility, urbanization, gender, education, Empire, and labor. We will read novels, poetry, and nonfiction prose; authors include Alfred, Lord Tennyson; Elizabeth Gaskell; Charles Dickens; Elizabeth Barrett Browning; Mary Prince; Arthur Morrison; and Thomas Hardy. Aeron Hunt ENGL4003 Shakespeare and Performance T TH 12 Fulfills pre-1700 requirement Although Shakespeare became “literature,” people originally encountered Shakespeare’s plays as popular entertainment.
    [Show full text]
  • 19Th Century
    THE NINETEENTH CENTURY Poetry [minimum 10 poets] 1. William Blake a. “The Ecchoing Green” [Songs of Innocence] (1789) b. “The Divine Image” [Songs of Innocence] (1789) c. “Holy Thursday” [Songs of Innocence] (1789) d. “Holy Thursday” [Songs of Experience] (1794) e. “The Human Abstract” [Songs of Experience] (1794) f. “London” [Songs of Experience] (1794) 2. William Wordsworth a. “Simon Lee” (1798) b. The Prelude, Books I-III, VII, IX-XIII (1805) c. “Ode: Intimations of Immortality” (1807) 3. Percy Bysshe Shelley a. “Alastor; or, The Spirit of Solitude” (1815) b. “Mont Blanc” (1817) c. “To a Skylark” (1820) 4. George Gordon, Lord Byron a. “Darkness” (1816) b. Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, Canto III-IV (1816; 1818) 5. John Keats a. “Ode to a Nightingale” (1819) b. “Ode on a Grecian Urn” (1819) c. “Ode on Melancholy” (1819) d. “To Autumn” (1819) 6. Alfred, Lord Tennyson a. “The Lotos-Eaters” (1832; rev. 1842) b. In Memoriam (1850) c. “Tithonus” (1860) 7. Elizabeth Barrett Browning a. “The Cry of the Children” (1843) b. “The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim’s Point” (1850) c. Aurora Leigh (1856) 8. George Meredith a. Modern Love (1862) 9. Christina Rossetti a. “Goblin Market” (1862) b. “The Convent Threshold” (1862) c. “Memory” (1866) d. “The Thread of Life” (1881) 10. Robert Browning a. “Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came” (1855) b. The Ring and the Book (1868-9) 11. Augusta Webster a. “Circe” (1870) b. “The Happiest Girl in the World” (1870) c. “A Castaway” (1870) Fiction [minimum 10 novelists] 1. Ann Radcliffe, The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Tom Brown's Schooldays
    THE EXTENT TO WHICH THE NOVEL TOM BROWN'S SCHOOLDAYS. (1857), BY THOMAS HUGHES, ACCURATELY REFLECTS THE IDEAS, PURPOSES AND POLICIES OF DR. THOMAS ARNOLD IN RUGBY SCHOOL, 1828-1842. by GEORGE DAVID CARTER B.A. with Honours DJ HISTORY, The University of Leeds, England, 1963. B.Ed., The University of Leeds, England, 1964. A MASTERS THESIS submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree MASTER OF ARTS Department of History KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY Manhattan, Kansas 1967 Approved by: 4 c ItoCU»r\L~V TABLE OF CONTENTS FRONTISPIECE iii PREFACE iv CHAPTER I: DR. THOMAS ARNOLD 1 Arnold's Life, 1795 as far as 1827 The English Public School System and Rugby- Arnold's Later Life to 1842 CHAPTER II: THOMAS HUGHES AND HIS NOVEL 15 Hughes's Life, 1822 to 1896 The Novel, Its Publication and Popularity Criticism of the Novel The Novel's Double Vision Plot and Characters The Novel's Influence CHAPTER III: ARNOLD'S EDUCATIONAL IDEALS AND PURPOSES AT RUGBY 31 Arnold's and Hughes's Educational Ideals Contrasted Christian Morality Gentlemanly Conduct Intellectual Ability and Academic Endeavour Athletics CHAPTER IV: ARNOLD'S POLICIES AND REFORMS AT RUGBY 63 Vice and Custom at Rugby The Praepositorial System Fagging and Bullying Flogging and Expulsion CHAPTER V: CONCLUSIONS 92 GLOSSARY 100 BIBLIOGRAPHY 104 . FRONTISPIECE By way of a frontispiece, I can do little better than quote A. 0. Lovejoy in that classic treatise on the study of the history of ideas, the introductory chapter to his monograph, The Great Chain of Being : Another characteristic of the study of the history of ideas, as I should wish to define it, is that it i3...most interested in ideas which gain wide dif- fusion, which become part of the stock of many minds.
    [Show full text]
  • On the Cumberland Plateau: Thomas Hughes and the East Tennessee Rugby
    University of Tennessee, Knoxville TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 5-2014 Planting a "Community of Gentlemen and Ladies" on the Cumberland Plateau: Thomas Hughes and the East Tennessee Rugby Brenda Louise Alexander University of Tennessee - Knoxville, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Alexander, Brenda Louise, "Planting a "Community of Gentlemen and Ladies" on the Cumberland Plateau: Thomas Hughes and the East Tennessee Rugby. " PhD diss., University of Tennessee, 2014. https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/2674 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized administrator of TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. To the Graduate Council: I am submitting herewith a dissertation written by Brenda Louise Alexander entitled "Planting a "Community of Gentlemen and Ladies" on the Cumberland Plateau: Thomas Hughes and the East Tennessee Rugby." I have examined the final electronic copy of this dissertation for form and content and recommend that it be accepted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, with a major in History. John Bohstedt, Major Professor We have read this dissertation and recommend its acceptance:
    [Show full text]
  • Representations of Schools and Schooling in British Children's Fiction
    DOCTORAL THESIS Storybook Schools: representations of schools and schooling in British children’s fiction 1820-1880 Bainbridge, Judith Award date: 2015 General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. • Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. • You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain • You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal ? Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 02. Oct. 2021 Introduction Aims and rationale According to the Oxford Encyclopaedia of Children’s Literature (on-line edition, 2006), the term ‘school story’ refers to a distinct literary genre in which ‘school is not just a backdrop but rather is the raison d’être of the novel’. It is a genre with a long pedigree. The first text of its kind is generally held to be Sarah Fielding’s The Governess; or, Little Female Academy (1749), a book which was very favourably received and which provided a model for a significant number of the children’s stories produced during the century following its publication. Sue Sims and Hilary Clare (2000) have identified over thirty such books for girls which appeared between 1749 and 1857, while Robert Kirkpatrick (2006) estimates that over a hundred stories set in boys’ schools were written during the same period.
    [Show full text]
  • PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY from the Victorians to the Present Day
    PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY From the Victorians to the present day Information and Activities for Secondary Teachers of Art and Photography John French Lord Snowdon, vintage bromide print, 1957 NPG P809 © SNOWDON / Camera Press Information and Activities for Secondary Teachers of Art and Photography Contents Introduction 3 Discussion questions 4 Wide Angle 1. Technical beginnings and early photography Technical beginnings 5 Early photography 8 Portraits on light sensitive paper 11 The Carte-de-visite and the Album 17 2. Art and photography; the wider context Art and portrait photography 20 Photographic connections 27 Technical developments and publishing 32 Zoom 1. The photographic studio 36 2. Contemporary photographic techniques 53 3. Self image: Six pairs of photographic self-portraits 63 Augustus Edwin John; Constantin Brancusi; Frank Owen Dobson Unknown photographer, bromide press print, 1940s NPG x20684 Teachers’ Resource Portrait Photography National Portrait Gallery 3 /69 Information and Activities for Secondary Teachers of Art and Photography Introduction This resource is for teachers of art and photography A and AS level, and it focuses principally on a selection of the photographic portraits from the Collection of the National Portrait Gallery, London which contains over a quarter of a million images. This resource aims to investigate the wealth of photographic portraiture and to examine closely the effect of painted portraits on the technique of photography invented in the nineteenth century. This resource was developed by the Art Resource Developer in the Learning Department in the Gallery, working closely with staff who work with the Photographs Collection to produce a detailed and practical guide for working with these portraits.
    [Show full text]
  • 1000 Good Books List Primary Reading Level 1 - 3
    1000 Good Books List Primary Reading Level 1 - 3 Bible for Preschoolers & Beginning Readers The Bible should be read aloud to children before they can read it for themselves. The regular family Bible is fine for this. For reading stories to children, we particularly like the New English Translation for its clarity and accuracy. In addition, The Bible in Pictures, The Child’s Story Bible, Egermeier’s, and The Golden Children’s Bible are excellent read-aloud Bibles for children. The Bible in Pictures is further illustrated with quality artwork on every page. The Beginner’s Bible is a well-done edition that beginning readers can read independently. Finally, A is for Adam, D is for Dinosaur, and The Gospel for Children are highly recommended presentations of the gospel for children. Beginner’s Bible by Karyn Henley Bible in Pictures edited by Rev. Ralph Kirby, published by Greystone Press Child’s Story Bible by Catherine E. Vos Egermeier’s Bible Story Book by Elsie E. Egermeier Golden Children's Bible by Joseph A. Grispino and Samuel Terrien Book of Life by Newton Hall & Irving Wood, in 8 volumes A is for Adam by Ken and Mally Ham D is for Dinosaur by Ken and Mally Ham Gospel for Children by John B. Leuzarder Anthologies & Poetry The 1-3 Anthologies and Poetry, and 1-3 Picture Books, along with 4-6 books designated RA are excellent read-alouds for children from a very early age. A Apple Pie and Nursery Rhymes and others by Kate Greenaway RA Aesop for Children illustrated by Milo Winter (126 fables) RA Alan Garner’s Fairy Tales of Gold by Alan
    [Show full text]
  • First Grade Supplemental Reading List
    First Grade Supplemental Reading List Anthologies: • A Kate Greenaway Family Treasury by Kate Greenaway • Aesop’s Fables illustrated by Thomas Bewick • Alan Garner’s Fairy Tales of Gold by Alan Garner • Best-Loved Fairy Tales by Walter Crane • Caldecott’s Favorite Nursery Rhymes by Randolph Caldecott • Child’s Garden of Verses by Robert Louis Stevenson, illustrated by Jessie Willcox Smith • Child’s Treasury of Poems by Mark Daniel • Children’s Treasury of Virtues by William Bennett, illustrated by Michael Hague, and others in the series • Fables by Arnold Lobel • Fairy Tales by Hans Christiansen, illustrated by Peedersen and Frolich • Favorite Poems of Childhood by Philip Smith • Great Children’s Stories: The Classic Volland Edition, illus. by F. Richardson • Happy Prince and Other Fairy Tales by Oscar Wilde • How Many Spots Does a Leopard Have? and Other Tales, retold by Julius Lester • In a Circle Long Ago: A Treasury of Native Lore from North America, retold by Nancy Van Laan • James Herriot’s Treasury for Children by James Herriot • Johnny Appleseed, poem by Reeve Lindbergh, illustrated by Kathy Jakobsen • Let’s Play: Traditional Games of Childhood, Camilla Gryski • Moral Tales by Maria Edgeworth • Mother Goose’s Melodies (Facsimile of the Munroe and Francis “Copyright 1833” Version) • My Favorite Story Book by W. G. Vande Hulst RA • Nonsense Poems and others by Edward Lear RA • Now We Are Six by A. A. Milne RA • Nursery and Mother Goose Rhymes by Marguerite de Angeli • Once On A Time by A. A. Milne RA • Over the River and Through the Wood, by Lydia Maria Child, illustrated by Brinton Turkle • Paddington Treasury, by Michael Bond • Parent’s Assistant by Maria Edgeworth RA • Pleasant Field Mouse Storybook by Jan Wahl • Poems to Read to the Very Young by Josette Frank • Prince Rabbit by A.
    [Show full text]
  • Thomas Arnold, Christian Manliness and the Problem of Boyhood
    This is a repository copy of Thomas Arnold, Christian Manliness and the Problem of Boyhood. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/96748/ Version: Accepted Version Article: Ellis, H. (2014) Thomas Arnold, Christian Manliness and the Problem of Boyhood. Journal of Victorian Culture, 19 (4). pp. 425-441. ISSN 1355-5502 https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2014.969975 Reuse Unless indicated otherwise, fulltext items are protected by copyright with all rights reserved. The copyright exception in section 29 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 allows the making of a single copy solely for the purpose of non-commercial research or private study within the limits of fair dealing. The publisher or other rights-holder may allow further reproduction and re-use of this version - refer to the White Rose Research Online record for this item. Where records identify the publisher as the copyright holder, users can verify any specific terms of use on the publisher’s website. Takedown If you consider content in White Rose Research Online to be in breach of UK law, please notify us by emailing [email protected] including the URL of the record and the reason for the withdrawal request. [email protected] https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/ Thomas Arnold, Christian Manliness and the Problem of Boyhood Thomas Arnold is a well-known character in Victorian Studies. His life and work are usually discussed in relation to the development of the English public school system in his role as Headmaster of Rugby School. His importance in the history of Victorian manliness has, by contrast, been somewhat obscured.
    [Show full text]