"The advantage of the animal over the vegetable kingdom is obvious. The cabbage, should its environment tend to become worse, must live it out, or die; the rabbit may move on in quest of a better."
| Beard, Charles A. |
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Charles A. BeardNovember 27, 1874 to September 1, 1948 Born in Knightstown, Indiana & Died in New Haven, Connecticut Historian and author of numerous books. His best known books were coauthored with his wife Mary Beard.
Quote "You need only reflect that one of the best ways to get yourself a reputation as a dangerous citizen these days is to go about repeating the very phrases which our founding fathers used in the struggle for independence."
Off-Site Resource
BibliographyThe Office of the Justice of the Peace in England: In Its Origin and Development - 1904 (Doctoral Dissertation) The Development of Modern Europe - 1907 (with James Harvey Robinson 2 volumes) American City Government: A Survey of Newer Tendencies - 1912 Readings in American Government and Politics - 1912 An Economic Interpretation of the United States Constitution - 1913 An Economic Interpretation of Jeffersonian Democracy - 1915 The Economic Basis of Politics - 1922 The Rise of American Civilization - 1927 (2 volumes with Mary Beard) Whither Mankind: A Panorama of Modern Civilization - 1928 A Charter for Social Sciences in Schools - 1932 America in Midpassage - 1939 (with Mary Beard -- a continuation of The Rise of American Civilization) President Roosevelt and the Coming of War: Appearances and Realities - 1941 The American Spirit - 1943 (with Mary Beard) The Beard's Basic History of The United States - 1944
Index of all Authors on Happy Dead Trees
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"The advantage of the animal over the vegetable kingdom is obvious. The cabbage, should its environment tend to become worse, must live it out, or die; the rabbit may move on in quest of a better."
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