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Dorothy Day. Foulke, William Dudley, 1848–1935 
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DOROTHY DAY

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DOROTHY DAY

BY

WILLIAM DUDLEY FOULKE


AUTHOR OF "MAYA," AND OF OTHER BOOKS

NEW YORK
THE COSMOPOLITAN PRESS
1911

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COPYRIGHT, 1911, BY
WILLIAM DUDLEY FOULKE

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PREFACE

Once when the writer was examining a landscape, upon which a castle, a lake, a fertile plain, a river, some mountains and various other objects appeared, he asked the artist from what particular place the scene was taken. The answer, given with Teutonic solemnity, was: "Es ist componirt!' Now it has been assumed that the following narrative is an authentic autobiography. This is by no means the fact, for while recollections of personal experiences, as well as the knowledge of what others have done and thought, have all been very freely used; they have been combined with each other and with imaginary occurrences in such a way as to constitute no true story of the life of any particular person, though it is hoped their main features are essentially true of a certain class of persons who lived just before and during the Civil War, and that they are not inconsistent with the vital characteristics of human nature itself.

NAUHEIM, GERMANY August 1, 1911

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CONTENTS

BOOK I—CHILDHOOD

  • I. The Home 11
  • II. Mother 21
  • III. Father 34
  • IV. The Rest of the Household 48
  • V. Our Friends and Neighbors 56
  • VI. My Occupations 62
  • VII. Grandfather Dillingham and Uncle Benjamin 66
  • VIII. Our Summer Home 74
  • IX. My Companions and Acquaintances 82
  • X. The Ocean 90
  • XI. School 94
  • XII. Supplementary Education—Commencement 103
  • XIII. Preparing for College 110

BOOK II—THE NEW ERA

  • I. My Beard 119
  • II. Our Secret Societies 124
  • III. Our Professors 133
  • IV. Our Escapades 147
  • V. Albert Visconti 154
  • VI. A Summer in Europe 164
  • VII. The Days 173
  • VIII. Albert and Ethel 185

BOOK III—THE WAR

  • I. The Call to Arms 203
  • II. Army Life 216
  • III. Soldierly Characteristics 229
  • IV. The Invasion of Pennsylvania 237
  • V. The First Day's Battle of Gettysburg 252
  • VI. The Battles on Cemetery Ridge 260
  • VII. The Third Day's Battle 272
  • VIII. Dorothy 286
  • IX. Conclusion 292
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