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قراءة كتاب Our Philadelphia

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‏اللغة: English
Our Philadelphia

Our Philadelphia

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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OUR PHILADELPHIA

DESCRIBED BY ELIZABETH ROBINS PENNELL
ILLUSTRATED WITH ONE HUNDRED & FIVE
LITHOGRAPHS BY JOSEPH PENNELL

Logo

PHILADELPHIA AND LONDON
J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
MCMXIV


COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
PUBLISHED OCTOBER, 1914
PRINTED BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
AT THE WASHINGTON SQUARE PRESS
PHILADELPHIA, U. S. A.

PREFACE

To-day, when it is the American born in the Ghetto, or Syria, or some other remote part of the earth, whose recollections are prized, it may seem as if the following pages called for an apology. I have none to make. They were written simply for the pleasure of gathering together my old memories of a town that, as my native place, is dear to me and my new impressions of it after an absence of a quarter of a century. But now I have finished I add to this pleasure in my book the pleasant belief that it will have its value for others, if only for two reasons. In the first place, J.'s drawings which illustrate it are his record of the old Philadelphia that has passed and the new Philadelphia that is passing—a record that in a few years it will be impossible for anybody to make, so continually is Philadelphia changing. In the second, my story of Philadelphia, perfect or imperfect, may in as short a time be equally impossible for anybody to repeat, since I am one of those old-fashioned Americans, American by birth with many generations of American fore-fathers, who are rapidly becoming rare creatures among the hordes of new-fashioned Americans who were anything and everything else no longer than a year or a week or an hour ago.

Elizabeth Robins Pennell

3 Adelphi Terrace House, London
May, 1914


CONTENTS

CHAPTER
 
PAGE
I. An Explanation 1
II. A Child in Philadelphia 24
III. A Child in Philadelphia (Continued) 48
IV. At the Convent 72
V. Transitional 104
VI. The Social Adventure 130
VII. The Social Adventure: The Assembly 154
VIII. A Question of Creed 175
IX. The First Awakening 205
X. The Miracle of Work 233
XI. The Romance of Work 268
XII. Philadelphia and Literature 304
XIII. Philadelphia and Literature (Continued) 332
XIV. Philadelphia and Art 368
XV. Philadelphia and Art (Continued) 390
XVI. Philadelphia at Table 413
XVII. Philadelphia at Table (Continued) 433
XVIII. Philadelphia after a Quarter of a Century 451
XIX. Philadelphia after a Quarter of a Century (Continued) 477
XX. Philadelphia after a Quarter of a Century (Continued)

Pages