• Dumbarton Oaks Inaugural Lectures
  • A Columbia College Student in the Eighteenth Century
  • The Pilgrim’s Progress
  • The Praise of Folly
  • Pepperfoot of Thursday Market
  • Ancient European Musical Instruments
  • Pewter in America, Its Makers and Their Marks
  • Translations from the Chinese
  • WAD to RR, a Letter about Designing Type
  • Soldiers of the American Army, 1776–1941
  • Vashington ou la Liberté du Nouveau Monde, Tragédie en Quatre Actes
  • Safawid Rugs and Textiles; the Collection of the Shrine of Imam ’Ali at Al-Najaf
  • A Christmas Carol in Prose, being a Ghost Story of Christmas
  • Ceremonial Costumes of the Pueblo Indians, their Evolution, Fabrication, and Significance in the Prayer Drama
  • A Second Treasury of the World’s Great Letters
  • Early Houses of the King’s Province in the Narragansett Country
  • Iran in the Ancient East
  • The Athenaeum Gallery, 1827–1873: The Boston Athenaeum as an Early Patron of Art
  • Lincoln’s Kalamazoo Address Against Extending Slavery
  • Stories of the Streets and of the Town, from The Chicago Record, 1893–1900
  • An Evening with Ninon, A Didactic Poem containing a translation of Racine’s Bernice
  • The Sun Girl. A True Story about Dawamana, the Little Hopi Indian Maid of Gold Oraibi in Arizona, and of How She Learned to Dance the Butterfly Dance at Moencopi, as told by her lifelong friend Po-Lin-Gay-Si (Mrs. Elizabeth White)
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