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Jose Marti: An Introduction | ||
Chronology | ||
Suggestions for Further Reading | ||
Earliest Writings | 1 | |
Abdala | 3 | |
Letter to His Mother from Prison | 7 | |
Political Prison in Cuba | 9 | |
1871-1881 | 19 | |
Notebooks 1-3 | 21 | |
Early Journalism | 26 | |
The Poor Neighborhoods of Mexico City | 26 | |
Sarah Bernhardt | 28 | |
Impressions of America (by a very fresh Spaniard) | 32 | |
1882-1890 | 41 | |
Poetry | 43 | |
Prologue to Juan Antonio Perez Bonalde's Poem of Niagara | 43 | |
Ismaelillo | 52 | |
Waking Dream | 52 | |
Fragrant Arms | 53 | |
My Kinglet | 53 | |
Son of My Soul | 54 | |
Free Verses | 56 | |
My Verses | 57 | |
The Swiss Father | 58 | |
Famous Island | 60 | |
Love in the City | 62 | |
I Hate the Sea | 66 | |
Winged Cup | 68 | |
Notebooks 4-15 | 72 | |
Undated Fragment | 78 | |
A Passion | 79 | |
from The Golden Age | 82 | |
Pin the Tail on the Donkey: A New Game and Some Old Ones | 83 | |
Letters from New York | 89 | |
Coney Island | 89 | |
The Trial of Guiteau | 94 | |
Prizefight | 107 | |
Emerson | 116 | |
Tributes to Karl Marx, Who Has Died | 130 | |
from La America | 140 | |
The Brooklyn Bridge | 140 | |
The Glossograph | 145 | |
Indigenous Art | 146 | |
Mexico, the United States, and Protectionism | 149 | |
Graduation Day | 152 | |
The Indians in the United States | 157 | |
The World's Biggest Explosion | 164 | |
Impressionist Painters | 167 | |
A Great Confederate Celebration | 171 | |
The Cutting Case | 176 | |
The Poet Walt Whitman | 183 | |
Class War in Chicago: A Terrible Drama | 195 | |
A Walking Marathon | 219 | |
New York Under Snow | 225 | |
Blaine's Night | 231 | |
A Chinese Funeral | 237 | |
Inauguration Day | 244 | |
Political Correspondence | 255 | |
Letter to Emilio Nunez | 255 | |
Letter to General Maximo Gomez | 257 | |
A Vindication of Cuba | 261 | |
1891-1894 | 269 | |
Poetry | 270 | |
Simple Verses | 270 | |
Prologue | 270 | |
I (I am an honest man) | 272 | |
III (I hate the masks and vices) | 276 | |
XXVIII (Past the manor with the tomb) | 278 | |
XXX (Blood-hued lightning cleaves) | 280 | |
XXXVI (Yes, I know: flesh) | 282 | |
XLV (I dream of marble cloisters) | 282 | |
Notebooks 18-20 | 286 | |
Letters from New York | 288 | |
Our America | 288 | |
The Lynching of the Italians | 296 | |
The Monetary Conference of the American Republics | 304 | |
A Town Sets a Black Man on Fire | 310 | |
from Patria | 314 | |
The Abolition of Slavery in Puerto Rico | 314 | |
My Race | 318 | |
To Cuba! | 321 | |
The Truth About the United States | 329 | |
1895 | 335 | |
Politics | 337 | |
The Montecristi Manifesto | 337 | |
Final Correspondence | 346 | |
Letter to His Mother | 346 | |
Letter to Manuel Mercado | 346 | |
War Diaries | 350 | |
Pt. I | From Montecristi to Cap-Haitien | 350 |
Pt. II | From Cap-Haitien to Dos Rios | 380 |
Afterword | 415 | |
Notes | 419 | |
Index | 449 |
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Add Jose Marti: Selected Writings, José Martí (1853-1895) is the most renowned political and literary figure in the history of Cuba. A poet, essayist, orator, statesman, abolitionist, and the martyred revolutionary leader of Cuba's fight for independence from Spain, Martí liv, Jose Marti: Selected Writings to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Jose Marti: Selected Writings, José Martí (1853-1895) is the most renowned political and literary figure in the history of Cuba. A poet, essayist, orator, statesman, abolitionist, and the martyred revolutionary leader of Cuba's fight for independence from Spain, Martí liv, Jose Marti: Selected Writings to your collection on WonderClub |