World Literature
- 921
- The Negro and the Signs of Civilization
- Washington's essay from The Tradesman, 1899. Also includes "The Negro's Part in the Upbuilding of the South.
- 922
- Mother Bloor Remembers Walt Whitman in Camden
- From the autobiography entitled We Are Many, by Ella Reeve Bloor.
- 923
- A Sort of Visitor in Life
- Rob Couteau's biographical essay on the author, published in West Hills Review, 1985, explores the poet as an American ideal, focusing on his spirituality and politics.
- 928
- BrothersJudd.com - Review of Shirley Jackson's We Have Always Lived in the Castle
- Setting and review of the disturbing novel about two sisters living in a ruined house. Links to other material.
- 929
- NYTimes.com Review: Distress Signals
- A scathing review of the posthumous collection Just an Ordinary Day, which singles out the worthwhile stories buried among those that "should have been mercifully allowed to molder away". (December 29, 1996)
- 930
- Bartleby.com: The American Language
- Full text organized by chapter of Mencken's analysis of the discrepancies between British and American English and the distinguishing characteristics of the latter.
- 931
- Prejudices: First Series.
- HTML and SGML full text of H.L. Mencken's 1919 work, along with title page illustration. Sponsored by the Documenting the American South project at the University of North Carolina.
- 933
- Gradesaver: The Pearl
- Summary and analysis including biography, message board, background information and quiz.
- 934
- Proposals for Printing a Large Bible
- Announcement and subscription notice dated 1688. Part of the Evans Early American Imprint Collection.
- 935
- Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God
- Sermon preached at Enfield, Connecticut on July 8, 1741. Evans Early American Imprint Collection.