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Poetry and the PracticalSpeech | The University of Arkansas Press | 1996 Poetry and the Practical was published
in 1996 by The University of Arkansas Press as part of The Simms Series. Edited with an introduction and notes by
James Everett Kibler Jr., the book contains a lecture written by Simms between
the years of 1851-54, which expanded from one to three parts. Kibler summarizes the lecture as “a clear,
forceful, inspired defense of poetry against those who would relegate it to the
margins of life.”[1] In a 12 November 1850 letter to Evert Augustus
Duyckinck, Simms made first mention of the lecture: “I recieve [sic] another application for a public
Lecture ... |
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Selections from the Letters and Speeches of the Hon. James H. Hammond, of South CarolinaDocuments | The Reprint Company; John F. Trow & Co. | 1866, 1978 Selections from the Letters and
Speeches of the Hon. James H. Hammond, of South Carolina was originally
published in New York by John F. Trow & Co. in 1866. The Southern Studies Program at the
University of South Carolina included Selections
in the South Caroliniana Series, and so it was published by the Reprint Company
in 1978. James Henry Hammond (1807-1864)
served South Carolina as a member of Congress from 1835-1836, governor from
1842-1844, and United States senator from 1857 until 1860, when he resigned
upon South Carolina’s secession from the Union.
Hammond ... |
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The Cub of the Panther: A Hunter Legend of the ''Old North State''Novel (Romance) | The University of Arkansas Press | 1997 In the closing years of his
life, William Gilmore Simms found himself physically unwell, near-indigent, and
living in a post-Civil War world that challenged his entire conception of
social order. Yet, out of this, Simms
produced one last great flourish of creativity, including The Cub of the Panther: A Hunter
Legend of the “Old North State.”
This novel shares certain features with the author’s earlier border
romances, exhibiting a similar interest in violence, comedy, and social
stratification. Yet, the different socio-political
circumstances of the postbellum world ... |
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The Letters of William Gilmore Simms. Vol. 6, SupplementCorrespondence | U of South Carolina P | 2012 In his lifetime, William Gilmore Simms “was the author of thirty-four works of fiction,
nineteen volumes of poetry, three of drama, three anthologies, three volumes of
history, two of geography, six of biography, and twelve of reviews,
miscellanies and addresses, a total of eighty-two volumes.”[1] The estimate of the output was impressive, if not quite complete.[2] Regardless, Simms’s influence was unparalleled. No
mid-nineteenth-century writer and editor did more to frame white southern
self-identity and nationalism, shape southern historical consciousness, or
foster ... |