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Thirty Famous Stories |
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Columbus and the Egg "Upon a Peak in Darien"—First Story "Upon a Peak in Darien"—Second Story The Fountain of Youth "Eureka!" Galileo and the Lamps Sir Isaac Newton and the Apple The First Printer John Gutenberg and the Voices James Watt and the Teakettle Dr. Johnson and His Father Webster and the Woodchuck Friar Bacon and the Brazen Head "As Rich as Croesus" The Gordian Knot Why Alexander Wept King Richard and Blondel King John and Prince Arthur King John and the Magna Charta Frederick Barbarossa The Man in the Iron Mask The Fall of Troy Penelope's Web How Rome Was Founded How Decius Mus Saved Rome "Delenda est Carthago" Hannibal, the Hero of Carthage Crossing the Rubicon The White-headed Zal Peter Klaus the Goatherd |
To the Boys and GirlsIt is now more than a year since you read my "Fifty Famous Stories." Those stories, as you will remember, are quite short and easy. Before you had finished your second year at school you could read every one of them without stopping to study the meaning of the words. Many thousands of children have read those fifty stories, and then they have asked for more; and this is my excuse for the present volume. You are older now, and you have learned many things which you did not know when we first became acquainted. You are able to read almost everything. And so, in telling you "Thirty More Famous Stories," I have chosen more difficult subjects and have not been so careful to select the shortest and easiest words. Still, you will not find this book hard to read, neither do I think it will prove to be less interesting than the earlier volume. Nearly all the stories are true, and there are not more than three or four that might not have happened. In every one there is something worth learning and remembering.
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