The Harvard Classics, Two Years Before the Mast and Twenty-Four Years After, Collectors Edition
(The Harvard Classics,
Edited by Charles W. Eliot, LL.D.
W...)
The Harvard Classics,
Edited by Charles W. Eliot, LL.D.
With Instructions and Notes
Collector's Edition
Volume. DANA
Two Years Before the Mast
And twenty-four years after
By R. H. Dana, Jr.
Grolier Enterprises Corp.
Danbury, Connecticut
(A sailor's observation of a younger, wilder California
...)
A sailor's observation of a younger, wilder California
In this excerpt from Richard Henry Dana's around-the-Horn masterpiece, Two Years Before the Mast, we experience the wonder Dana felt when beholding the California coast for the first time, in 1835:
''There was a grandeur in everything around, which gave a solemnity to the scene, a silence and solitariness which affected every part! Not a human being but ourselves for miles, and no sound heard but the pulsations of the great Pacific!''
The passages taken from Two Years Before the Mast and compiled here reveal what California was like before the gold rush. The heavily forested San Francisco Bay Area is a fabulous place to collect firewood for the galley stoves. Monterey, with its whitewashed adobes, is more picturesque than Santa Barbara, where the adobes ''are mostly left of a mud color.'' Interestingly, San Pedro (Port of Los Angeles) is ''universally called the hell of California.''
This pocket-sized book aims to zero in on Dana's insightful descriptions of pre-American California. His eyewitness observations of a land vibrant with commerce yet largely undeveloped will appeal to anyone interested in the many incarnations of this state.
Address at the One Hundredth Anniversary of the Town of Dana, 1901
(Leopold is delighted to publish this classic book as part...)
Leopold is delighted to publish this classic book as part of our extensive Classic Library collection. Many of the books in our collection have been out of print for decades, and therefore have not been accessible to the general public. The aim of our publishing program is to facilitate rapid access to this vast reservoir of literature, and our view is that this is a significant literary work, which deserves to be brought back into print after many decades. The contents of the vast majority of titles in the Classic Library have been scanned from the original works. To ensure a high quality product, each title has been meticulously hand curated by our staff. This means that we have checked every single page in every title, making it highly unlikely that any material imperfections – such as poor picture quality, blurred or missing text - remain. When our staff observed such imperfections in the original work, these have either been repaired, or the title has been excluded from the Leopold Classic Library catalogue. As part of our on-going commitment to delivering value to the reader, within the book we have also provided you with a link to a website, where you may download a digital version of this work for free. Our philosophy has been guided by a desire to provide the reader with a book that is as close as possible to ownership of the original work. We hope that you will enjoy this wonderful classic work, and that for you it becomes an enriching experience. If you would like to learn more about the Leopold Classic Library collection please visit our website at www.leopoldclassiclibrary.com
The Seaman's Friend Containing a treatise on practical seamanship, with plates, a dictinary of sea terms, customs and usages of the merchant service
(This book was converted from its physical edition to the ...)
This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.
(2 works of Richard Henry Dana
American lawyer and politic...)
2 works of Richard Henry Dana
American lawyer and politician from Massachusetts (1815-1882)
This ebook presents a collection of 2 works of Richard Henry Dana. A dynamic table of contents allows you to jump directly to the work selected.
Table of Contents:
To Cuba and Back
Two Years Before the Mast
Handbook of Cross-Cultural and Multicultural Personality Assessment (Personality and Clinical Psychology Series)
(Throughout the world as in the United States, psychologis...)
Throughout the world as in the United States, psychologists are increasingly being called upon to evaluate clients whose backgrounds differ from their own. It has long been recognized that standard personality and psychopathology assessment instruments carry cultural biases, and in recent years, efforts to correct these biases have accelerated. The Handbook of Cross-Cultural and Multicultural Personality Assessment brings together researchers and practitioners from 12 countries with diverse ethnic and racial identities and training to present state-of-the-art knowledge about how best to minimize cultural biases in the assessment of personality and psychopathology. They consider research methodology, the design and construction of standard objective and projective tests, the use of measures of acculturation, racial identity, and culture-specific tests, the social etiquette of service delivery, and the interpretation of test data for clinical diagnosis. Ranging widely through all the relevant issues, they share a common collective vision of how culturally competent services should be delivered to clients.
The Handbook offers the first comprehensive view of a consistent approach to cultural competence in assessment--a necessary precursor of effective intervention. It will become an indispensable reference for all those whose practice or research involves individuals with different ethnic and racial identities.
Richard Henry Dana was an American poet, whose influence on the literary development of the country came from the vigorous thought, simplicity, and directness of expression which marked his work, in contrast to the sentimental and florid style which characterized most writings of his time.
Background
Richard Henry Dana was born on November 15, 1787 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. He was the son of Francis Dana, Revolutionary patriot, and his mother was Elizabeth Ellery, daughter of William Ellery, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. There were seven children of this marriage, an elder sister becoming the wife of Washington Allston.
Education
Entering Harvard College in 1804, Dana was not graduated in regular course, being implicated in the “rotten cabbage” rebellion of the classes in 1807.
Many years later he received his degree as of 1808.
Career
Dana's studies of law in Boston, Newport, and Baltimore were interspersed with wide readings in English literature, and on returning to Boston he was admitted to the bar in 1811 and later represented Cambridge in the Massachusetts legislature. Neither the law, nor politics, nor any form of public affairs, attracted him permanently, and before he was twenty-five years of age he had abandoned them wholly for literature, thus forsaking the profession which so many of his forebears had adorned. For some years after the establishment of the North American Review in 1815, he was associated with its editorial direction and contributed to it reviews and essays on literary subjects.
In 1821 he began the publication of a periodical called The Idle Man, modeled upon Washington Irving’s Salmagundi, continued it for about six months with no financial success, and wrote some of his earliest fiction, including two novels, “Tom Thornton” and “Paul Felton, ” for its pages. He also wrote for and contributed some of his first poetry to the New York Review—edited by his warm friend William Cullen Bryant—the American Quarterly Observer, The Biblical Repository, The Literary and Theological Review, and other periodical publications.
In 1827 his first book of poetry, The Buccaneer and Other Poems, was published, followed in 1833 by his Poems and Prose Writings, which seventeen years later was brought out in a new and extended edition.
A reviewer in Blackwood’s Magazine described “The Buccaneer” as “by far the most powerful and original of American poetical compositions, ” and added that, although Dana was “no servile follower of those great masters, ” his style showed the influence of Crabbe, Wordsworth, and Coleridge. The supernatural is one of its dominant elements, and for it he may have derived some inspiration from “The Ancient Mariner. ” Some of his poems appear in anthologies and school books on literature.
Although his reputation survived through his entire lifetime, his active career practically ended by the time he was forty. He had acquired no popularity, none of his writings appealing to the general public, and he did not seek it.
Perhaps his most conspicuous appearance in public was in 1839-40, when he delivered a course of eight lectures on Shakespeare, in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and other cities, contending that Shakespeare was the greatest poet of the English language, and not Pope, as was then claimed by many authorities.
During more than half his years he lived in a quiet and dignified retirement, writing, studying, reading, in Cambridge in early life, later in Boston, and during the summer on the shores of Cape Ann, where his son Richard Henry bought an estate for him in 1845.
Achievements
Dana's contributions consisted of critical papers and his novelettes ‘Paul Felton, ’ ‘Tom Thornton, ’ and ‘Edward and Mary. ’
(The Harvard Classics,
Edited by Charles W. Eliot, LL.D.
W...)
Religion
During the great controversy in 1825-33 which resulted in the schism between the Trinitarians and the Unitarians in the Congregational Church, he took active part with the former, and later in life became affiliated with the Protestant Episcopal Church.
Views
Dana's view was academic, and he looked upon mankind and the world from the library and the scholar’s cloister.
Personality
As a writer Dana had little sympathy with or interest in the affairs of the world, or with social and personal progress in politics, art, science, or literature, tendencies which were foremost in the son who bore his name.
He was a notable personality and a man of physical and mental distinction.
Connections
Dana married Ruth Charlotte, daughter of John Wilson Smith, of Taunton, Massachusetts, in 1813, and they had four children.