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Egeria: or, Voices of Thought and Counsel, for The Woods and WaysideMiscellany | E.H. Butler & Co. | 1853 Egeria: or, Voices of Thought and Counsel,
for The Woods and Wayside was published by E.H. Butler of Philadelphia in 1853
as a collection of Simms-authored laconics written over the course of many
years.[1] Simms began composing his proverbs as early
as April 1846 when he published selections of them in the Southern Patriot until April 1847 under the title, “Wayside
Laconics.” Soon afterward, Simms collected
these alongside many others and sought Rufus Griswold’s assistance in locating
a book publisher for the manuscript, which proved unsuccessful. Simms then ... |
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The Book of My Lady: A MelangeMiscellany | Key & Biddle | 1833 While a minor work overall in
the Simms canon, The Book of My Lady: A
Melange, published in 1833 by Key & Biddle of Philadelphia, is
nevertheless an important text. Here,
Simms presents several stories that appear in later works, positioning The Book of My Lady as an interesting
transitional work. This collection of
nineteen stories and ten poems also provides a clear glimpse of the influence
of Romanticism on Simms, particularly in his thinking about the complex
relationships between art, history, and nationality—subjects that would
fascinate the author throughout ... |
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The Charleston Book: A Miscellany in Prose and VerseMiscellany | The Reprint Company; Samuel Hart, Sen. | 1845, 1983 One of the major American cities
of the mid-19th century, Charleston was viewed by its citizens as a
hub of culture and erudition equal to that of the other great cities of the
time, including New York, Boston, Philadelphia, and Baltimore. To illustrate the quality of the city’s
intellectual life and literary merits, “Charleston book-seller and Reform
Jewish leader Samuel Hart, Sr. proposed that Charlestonians join the trend” of
putting together an anthology of writings by city residents, much as several
other cities had done throughout the late 1830s.[1] Simms, the leading ... |
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The Cosmopolitan: An OccasionalMiscellany | Wm. Estill | 1833 Simms was the primary, anonymous
contributor to the Cosmopolitan: An
Occasional, and the two numbers of this short-lived publication reveal the
state of his talents at the end of his apprenticeship period. Issued in May and July 1833 by Wm. Estill of
Charleston, the two issues of the Cosmopolitan
are among the works leading to what John C. Guilds calls Simms’s “flurry of
literary efforts that produced four major works of fiction within the next two
years.”.[1]
As such, Guilds suggests that the
Cosmopolitan be considered not so much for the quality of Simms’s
inconsistent ... |