The FictionMags Index
Index: Items by Author: Page 3273
Previous —
Names Index —
Table-of-Contents
Harris, Amanda B(artlett) (1824-1917) (about) (chron.)
- * About Birds, (nf) Wide Awake January 1893
- * About Christmas Cards, (ar) Wide Awake January 1882
- * Alice and Phbe Cary, (ar) Wide Awake April 1886
- * At a Day Nursery, (ar) Wide Awake December 1880
- * Aunt Kitty and Her Canaries (And the Plantain Seed!), (vi) St. Nicholas October 1884
- * Bayard Taylor, (ar) Wide Awake May 1886
- * A Boy Sculptor, (ss) Wide Awake November 1882
- * Brass and Pint Cups, (nf) Wide Awake December 1889
- * Bryant’s Word Pictures, (ar) Wide Awake January 1888
- * The Bufos, (ss) Wide Awake December 1881
- * Busy Bodies, (ss) Wide Awake January 1882
- * “Buy a Broom! Buy a Broom!”, (ss) Wide Awake November 1880
- * The Cardinal’s Flower, (ar) Wide Awake September 1882
- * Charlemagne’s Housetop Gardens, (ar) Wide Awake August 1891
- * Charles Kingsley, (ar) Wide Awake April 1883
- * Charles Lamb, (ar) Wide Awake December 1882
- * Charlotte Bronté and Others, (ar) Wide Awake September 1883
- * Chickaree and Chipmunk, (ss) Wide Awake May 1882
- * Children and Flowers, (ar) Wide Awake April 1882
- * A Chinese Mission School, (ar) Wide Awake February 1880
- * The Clocks of Basle, (ar) Wide Awake January 1891
- * The Contributors and the Children:
* ___ VI. Bryant’s Word Pictures, (ar) Wide Awake January 1888
* ___ VI. Seed-Sowing Birds, (ar) Wide Awake September 1887
* ___ VII. Veneer Women, (ar) Wide Awake November 1888
* ___ X. The Small Matters of Etiquette, (ar) Wide Awake February 1888
* ___ XXII. “Like to Like”, (ar) Wide Awake April 1887
* ___ XXVI. Murderous Millinery, (ar) Wide Awake May 1887
- * Daniel Webster in His New Hampshire Home, (ar) Wide Awake October 1888
- * A Day with Rags, Tatters & Co., (ss) Wide Awake July 1883
- * Dinah Maria Mulock-Craik, (ar) Wide Awake July 1883 [Ref. Dinah Maria Mulock Craik]
- * Dolly’s Shoes, (ss) Wide Awake January 1880
- * Donald Grant Mitchell, (ar) Wide Awake September 1886
- * Door-Yard Folks:
* ___ I. Sculpus, (ss) Wide Awake November 1881
* ___ II. The Bufos, (ss) Wide Awake December 1881
* ___ III. Busy Bodies, (ss) Wide Awake January 1882
* ___ IV. The Finny Kind, (ss) Wide Awake February 1882
* ___ V. Reynard, (ss) Wide Awake March 1882
* ___ VI. “Shadow-Tail”, (ss) Wide Awake April 1882
* ___ VII. Chickaree and Chipmunk, (ss) Wide Awake May 1882
* ___ VIII. A Mysterious One, (ss) Wide Awake June 1882
* ___ IX. The Mischievous Minx, (ss) Wide Awake July 1882
* ___ X. The Ponies, (ss) Wide Awake August 1882
* ___ XI. Suggestions, (ss) Wide Awake September 1882
- * Down in Sandwich Town, (ss) Wide Awake June 1887
- * Dr. John Brown, (ar) Wide Awake May 1883
- * Easter Day Beyond the Sea, (ar) Wide Awake April 1891
- * An Eastern Gymnasium, (nf) Wide Awake August 1889
- * An Edenhall Musgrave in Search of Stanley, (nf) Wide Awake December 1888
- * A Few of Our Experiments, (ar) Wide Awake March 1883
- * The Finny Kind, (ss) Wide Awake February 1882
- * Fire-Place Stories, (ss) Wide Awake December 1885
- * The First Day of School: and What Was Said, Done and Studied, (ar) Wide Awake September 1884
- * The Forest Queen, (ss) Peterson’s Magazine Nov, Dec 1850
- * Four Hundred Cows with Red Ears, (vi) St. Nicholas May 1877
- * Francis Parkman, (ar) Wide Awake July 1886
- * George MacDonald, (ar) Wide Awake June 1883
- * George William Curtis, (ar) Wide Awake August 1886
- * Gilbert White, (ar) Wide Awake January 1883
- * The Gypsies’ Corn-Field, (ss) Wide Awake June 1891
- * Harriet Beecher Stowe, (ar) Wide Awake March 1886
- * Henry David Thoreau; and Other “Out-of-Door” Writers, (ar) Wide Awake June 1886
- * Hepaticas, (ar) Wide Awake May 1882
- * “H.H.” and Others, (ar) Wide Awake October 1886
- * Horatius at the Bridge, (ar) Wide Awake December 1881
- * The House, and What the Children Wore, (ar) Wide Awake August 1884
- * How Easter Came to the Little Nuremberg Maids, (ss) Wide Awake April 1892
- * How Professor Drummond “Impressed” Them, (nf) Wide Awake February 1890
- * How the Penny Family Lived, (ss) Wide Awake October 1879
- * How to Study Natural History, (nf) Wide Awake November 1889
- * How We Went Birds’-Nesting. Part I, (ar) Wide Awake May 1880
- * How We Went Birds’-Nesting. Part II, (ar) Wide Awake July 1880
- * How We Went Birds’-Nesting. Part III, (ar) Wide Awake August 1880
- * How We Went Birds’-Nesting. Part IV, (ar) Wide Awake September 1880
- * An Indian-Corn Talk, (ar) Wide Awake October 1887
- * Indian Pipe, (ar) Wide Awake October 1882
- * Is It “A Small Matter?”, (ar) Wide Awake February 1883
- * James Fenimore Cooper, (ar) Wide Awake November 1885
- * James Henry Leigh Hunt, (ar) Wide Awake March 1883
- * Jane Austen, (ar) Wide Awake February 1883
- * John Ruskin, (ar) Wide Awake August 1883
- * King Alfred’s Lantern, (vi) St. Nicholas December 1878
- * “Like to Like”, (ar) Wide Awake April 1887
- * Linnæa, (ar) Wide Awake August 1882
- * Little Biographies: Pleasant Authors for Young Folks:
* ___ I. Sir Walter Scott, (ar) Wide Awake October 1882
* ___ II. Mary Russell Mitford, (ar) Wide Awake November 1882
* ___ III. Charles Lamb, (ar) Wide Awake December 1882
* ___ IV. Gilbert White, (ar) Wide Awake January 1883
* ___ V. Jane Austen, (ar) Wide Awake February 1883
* ___ VI. James Henry Leigh Hunt, (ar) Wide Awake March 1883
* ___ VII. Charles Kingsley, (ar) Wide Awake April 1883
* ___ VIII. Dr. John Brown, (ar) Wide Awake May 1883
* ___ IX. George MacDonald, (ar) Wide Awake June 1883
* ___ X. Dinah Maria Mulock-Craik, (ar) Wide Awake July 1883 [Ref. Dinah Maria Mulock Craik]
* ___ XI. John Ruskin, (ar) Wide Awake August 1883
* ___ XII. Charlotte Bronté and Others, (ar) Wide Awake September 1883
- * The Little Folks; and the Mischievous Ones, (ar) Wide Awake October 1884
- * The Luck of Edenhall, (ss) Wide Awake November 1887
- * Magna Charta Stories:
* ___ III. Horatius at the Bridge, (ar) Wide Awake December 1881
- * Making Aprons, (ar) Wide Awake December 1884
- * A Maple Sugar Camp, (ar) Wide Awake April 1884
- * Mary Russell Mitford, (ar) Wide Awake November 1882
- * Men and Things:
* ___ II. An Edenhall Musgrave in Search of Stanley, (nf) Wide Awake December 1888
* ___ XI. About Birds, (nf) Wide Awake January 1893
* ___ XI. Brass and Pint Cups, (nf) Wide Awake December 1889
* ___ XVIII. More About Small Things, (nf) Wide Awake July 1892
* ___ XXX. An Eastern Gymnasium, (nf) Wide Awake August 1889
* ___ XXXIII. How Professor Drummond “Impressed” Them, (nf) Wide Awake February 1890
* ___ XXXIV. A Progressive Dinner, (nf) Wide Awake February 1889
* ___ XLVII. Saying the Pleasant Thing, (nf) Wide Awake March 1892
* ___ L. Some Blunderers, (nf) Wide Awake April 1891
* ___ LI. Overheard, (nf) Wide Awake November 1892
* ___ LVII. How to Study Natural History, (nf) Wide Awake November 1889
* ___ LIX. More About the “Luck of Edenhall”, (nf) Wide Awake April 1890
* ___ LXII. A Pleasing Russian Ilustration, (nf) Wide Awake April 1890
* ___ LXV. “Mud-Larking”, (nf) Wide Awake May 1889
- * The Mischievous Minx, (ss) Wide Awake July 1882
- * A Modern Pied Piper, (ar) Wide Awake March 1891
- * More About Small Things, (nf) Wide Awake July 1892
- * More About the “Luck of Edenhall”, (nf) Wide Awake April 1890
- * Mr. Ko Kun-Hua, the Chinese Professor at Harvard University, and His Family, (ar) Wide Awake December 1879
- * Mr. Littlejohn’s Animals, (ss) Wide Awake July 1881
- * “Mud-Larking”, (nf) Wide Awake May 1889
- * Murderous Millinery, (ar) Wide Awake May 1887
- * A Mysterious One, (ss) Wide Awake June 1882
- * Nathaniel Hawthorne, (ar) Wide Awake February 1886
- * Old-Fashioned Games, (ar) Wide Awake November 1884
- * Old School-Days:
* ___ I. The House, and What the Children Wore, (ar) Wide Awake August 1884
* ___ II. The First Day of School: and What Was Said, Done and Studied, (ar) Wide Awake September 1884
* ___ III. The Little Folks; and the Mischievous Ones, (ar) Wide Awake October 1884
* ___ IV. Old-Fashioned Games, (ar) Wide Awake November 1884
- * One Lady’s Way of Teaching “How to Write Compositions”, (ar) Wide Awake February 1887
- * One of the Pleasant Authors: Annie Keary, (ar) Wide Awake November 1887
- * Other Thoughts About Cats, (ar) Wide Awake July 1879
- * Overheard, (nf) Wide Awake November 1892
- * The Pasture, (ar) Wide Awake July 1882
- * A Period of “Free Coinage”, (ar) Wide Awake June 1891
- * Pleasant Authors for Young Folks:
* ___ I. Washington Irving, (ar) Wide Awake October 1885
* ___ II. James Fenimore Cooper, (ar) Wide Awake November 1885
* ___ III. William Hickling Prescott, (ar) Wide Awake December 1885
* ___ IV. Ralph Waldo Emerson, (ar) Wide Awake January 1886
* ___ V. Nathaniel Hawthorne, (ar) Wide Awake February 1886
* ___ VI. Harriet Beecher Stowe, (ar) Wide Awake March 1886
* ___ VII. Alice and Phbe Cary, (ar) Wide Awake April 1886
* ___ VIII. Bayard Taylor, (ar) Wide Awake May 1886
* ___ IX. Henry David Thoreau; and Other “Out-of-Door” Writers, (ar) Wide Awake June 1886
* ___ X. Francis Parkman, (ar) Wide Awake July 1886
* ___ XI. George William Curtis, (ar) Wide Awake August 1886
* ___ XII. Donald Grant Mitchell, (ar) Wide Awake September 1886
* ___ XIII. “H.H.” and Others, (ar) Wide Awake October 1886
- * A Pleasing Russian Ilustration, (nf) Wide Awake April 1890
- * The Ponies, (ss) Wide Awake August 1882
- * A Precious Bug, (ss) Wide Awake April 1891
- * A Progressive Dinner, (nf) Wide Awake February 1889
- * The Queen Lily, (ss) Wide Awake August 1890
- * Ralph Waldo Emerson, (ar) Wide Awake January 1886
- * Reynard, (ss) Wide Awake March 1882
- * A Rush-Light, (ss) Wide Awake July 1891
- * Saying the Pleasant Thing, (nf) Wide Awake March 1892
- * Sculpus, (ss) Wide Awake November 1881
- * Seed-Sowing Birds, (ar) Wide Awake September 1887
- * “Shadow-Tail”, (ss) Wide Awake April 1882
- * Sir Walter Scott, (ar) Wide Awake October 1882
- * The Small Matters of Etiquette, (ar) Wide Awake February 1888
- * Some Blunderers, (nf) Wide Awake April 1891
- * Some Educated Horses, (ar) Wide Awake September 1883
- * Some Little Shakers, (ss) Wide Awake June 1884
- * The Story of Jokel, (ss) Wide Awake November 1891
- * Suggestions, (ss) Wide Awake September 1882
- * A Thrice-Told Tale, (ss) Wide Awake December 1888
- * “Twenty Bushels of Roses”, (ss) Wide Awake November 1890
- * Two Bears, (ss) Wide Awake October 1881
- * Two Pet Lions and Their Mistress, (ss) Wide Awake December 1878
- * “Two Yellow Boots”, (ss) Wide Awake March 1892
- * Untitled, (ar) Wide Awake January 1883
- * Veneer Women, (ar) Wide Awake November 1888
- * Violets, Dandelions, Cowslips and Buttercups, (ar) Wide Awake June 1882
- * Washington Irving, (ar) Wide Awake October 1885
- * The Way He Made the Fishing-Rod, (ar) Wide Awake September 1881
- * Ways to Do Things:
* ___ IX. A Wild-Flower Book, (ar) Wide Awake August 1889
* ___ XXX. Making Aprons, (ar) Wide Awake December 1884
* ___ XXXIX. Word-Stories, (ar) Wide Awake March 1886
* ___ LII. One Lady’s Way of Teaching “How to Write Compositions”, (ar) Wide Awake February 1887
- * “What Makes the Sea Salt?”, (ar) Wide Awake October 1891
- * What Shall We Do with Poky?, (ss) Wide Awake November 1878
- * Why the Gypsies Have No Churches, (ar) Wide Awake January 1892
- * A Wild-Flower Book, (ar) Wide Awake August 1889
- * Wild Flower Papers:
* ___ I. Children and Flowers, (ar) Wide Awake April 1882
* ___ II. Hepaticas, (ar) Wide Awake May 1882
* ___ III. Violets, Dandelions, Cowslips and Buttercups, (ar) Wide Awake June 1882
* ___ IV. The Pasture, (ar) Wide Awake July 1882
* ___ V. Linnæa, (ar) Wide Awake August 1882
* ___ VI. The Cardinal’s Flower, (ar) Wide Awake September 1882
* ___ VII. Indian Pipe, (ar) Wide Awake October 1882
- * The Wild White Cattle of England, (ar) Wide Awake June 1888
- * William Hickling Prescott, (ar) Wide Awake December 1885
- * A Wind-mill Pilgrimage, (ar) Wide Awake June 1885
- * A Winter Garden:
* ___ I. Untitled, (ar) Wide Awake January 1883
* ___ II. Is It “A Small Matter?”, (ar) Wide Awake February 1883
* ___ III. A Few of Our Experiments, (ar) Wide Awake March 1883
- * Word-Stories, (ar) Wide Awake March 1886
- * A Young Antiquarian and His Society, (ar) Wide Awake May 1884
Next —
Names Index —
Table-of-Contents