Patience Sparhawk and Her Times: A Novel

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Title: Patience Sparhawk and Her Times

A Novel

Author: Gertrude Franklin Horn Atherton

Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

E-text prepared by Mardi Desjardins
and the online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team
(http://www.pgdpcanada.net)
from page images generously made available by
Internet Archive/American Libraries
(https://archive.org/details/americana)

Note: Images of the original pages are available through Internet Archive/American Libraries. See https://archive.org/details/sparhawkpatience00atherich


PATIENCE SPARHAWK

AND HER TIMES

 

BY

GERTRUDE ATHERTON

 

AUTHOR OF “A WHIRL ASUNDER,” “THE DOOMSWOMAN,”

“BEFORE THE GRINGO CAME,” ETC.

JOHN LANE: THE BODLEY HEAD

LONDON AND NEW YORK

1897


Copyright, 1895,

By Gertrude Atherton.

 

Copyright, 1897,

By John Lane.

 

All rights reserved.

 

 

 

 

 

University Press:

John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, U.S.A.


CONTENTS

Book I
Book II
Book III
Book IV
Book V
 

TO

M. PAUL BOURGET,

Who alone, of all foreigners, has detected, in its full significance, that the motive power, the cohering force, the ultimate religion of that strange composite known as “The American,” is Individual Will. Leaving the ultra-religious element out of the question, the high, the low, the rich, the poor, the man, the woman of this section of the Western world, each, consciously or unconsciously, believes in, relies on himself primarily. In the higher civilisation this amounts to intellectual anarchy, and its tendency is to make Americans, or, more exactly, United Statesians, a New Race in a sense far more portentous than in any which has yet been recognised. As M. Bourget prophesies, destruction, chaos, may eventuate. On the other hand, the final result may be a race of harder fibre and larger faculties than any in the history of civilisation. That this extraordinary self-dependence and independence of certain traditions that govern older nations make the quintessential part of the women as of the men of this race I have endeavoured to illustrate in the following pages.

G. A.


Patience Sparhawk and Her Times


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