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Mary L. (Mary Louise) Booth
Mary Louise Booth was an American writer, editor, and translator, best known for her work as the founding editor of "Harper's Bazaar", where she served for over 20 years. Born in 1831 in Long Island, New York, she was a prolific translator, rendering over 40 works from French into English, including notable texts like "Memoirs of Madame de Motteville" and "The Marble-Workers' Manual." Booth was also an active supporter of the Union during the Civil War, contributing to patriotic causes. Her book "History of the City of New York" (1859) remains an important historical work on the city's early development.
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CHAPTER I. AMERICAN SLAVERY. If they had not triumphed, do you know who would have gained the victory? Slavery is only a word—a vile word, doubtless, but to which we in time become habituated. To what do we not become habituated? We have stores of indulgence and indifference for the social iniquities which have found their way into the current of cotemporary civilization, and which can invoke...
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INTRODUCTION By KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN There was once a green book, deliciously thick, with gilt-edged pages and the name of the author in gilt script on the front cover. Like an antique posy ring, it was a "box of jewels, shop of rarities"; it was a veritable Pandora's box, and if you laid warm, childish hands upon it and held it pressed close to your ear, you could hear, as Pandora did,...
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