• Nursery Rhymes of New York City (with additions)
  • The Time Machine: An Invention
  • Utopia
  • Some Unrecorded Letters of Caroline Norton, in the Altschul Collection of The Yale University Library
  • The Hunting of the Snark
  • Exercises Commemorative of Lida Shaw King, Dean of Pembroke 1905–1922, Held in Alumnae Hall, March 3, 1932
  • Champ Rosé, Wherein May Be Discovered the Roman Letters That Were Made by Geofroy Tory and Printed by Him at Paris in His Book Called “Champ Fleury”
  • A Christmas Carol in Prose, being a Ghost Story of Christmas
  • Persian Fairy Tales
  • A Catalogue of the Altschul Collection of George Meredith in the Yale University Library
  • Maxims of the duc de la Rochefoucauld
  • On Modern Gardening: An Essay by Horace Walpole
  • A Christmas Carol in Prose, being a Ghost Story of Christmas
  • Droll Stories: Thirty Tales by Honoré de Balzac, Completely Translated into Modern English by Jacques Le Clercq
  • Phoenixiana, A Collection of the Burlesques & Sketches of John Phoenix, alias John P. Squibob, who was, in fact, Lieutenant George H. Derby, U.S.A.
  • Queen Calafia’s Land, An Historical Sketch of California
  • Soldiers of the Overland, Being some account of the services of General Patrick Edward Connor & his Volunteers in the Old West
  • Sidney Lawton Smith: Designer, Etcher, Engraver, With Extracts from His Diary and a Check List of His Bookplates
  • Ace High, the Frisco Detective; Or, The Girl Sport’s Double Game. A story of the Sierra and the Golden Gate City
  • An Original Leaf, from the Bible of the Revolution, and an Essay concerning it, Colonial Edition
  • Jemima Condict: Her Book, Being a transcript of the diary of an Essex County maid during the Revolutionary War
  • Coulterville Chronicle: The Annals of a Mother Lode Mining Town
  • Dumbarton Oaks Inaugural Lectures
  • Stray Leaves from the Private Papers of Henry Rye-Croft
  • Life Among the Indians or: The Captivity of the Oatman Girls among the Apache and Mohave Indians…as given by Lorenzo D. and Olive A. Oatman, the only surviving members of their family, to the author, R.B. Stratton
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