skip to content
Close Window

Please sign in to WorldCat 

Don't have an account? You can easily create a free account.

A Puritan in Babylon, the story of Calvin Coolidge, Preview this item
ClosePreview this item
  • Preview this Item (Questia)

A Puritan in Babylon, the story of Calvin Coolidge,

Author: William Allen White
Publisher: New York, The Macmillan company, 1938.
Edition/Format: Book : EnglishView all editions and formats
Rating:

Retrieving ratings and reviews data...  

 

Find a copy in the library

Retrieving... Finding libraries that hold this item...

Details

Named Person: Calvin Coolidge
Document Type: Book
All Authors / Contributors: William Allen White
ISBN: 0844631736 9780844631738
OCLC Number: 844610
Notes: "First printing."
Description: xvi p., 2 l., 460 p. front. (port.) 24 cm.
Contents: The museum that was Vermont -- The museum piece -- Wherein the museum piece peers through his enclosing walls -- Our hero stages himself as a Cinderella in the academic ashes -- In which our hero takes his first faltering forward steps toward the big wide world -- His baptism of fire -- Our hero does the best day's work in his life -- Our hero meets a powerful patron -- Wherein again our hero creaks through his predestined role of Cinderella -- Herein we meet our fairy prince -- Our hero dances at the grand ball and meets one grand old duke -- And tries on the crystal slipper -- Fate begins to shift scenery for a new day -- Our hero's stage is set -- Enter the hero R.U.E. -- Our hero's unheroic chores -- He pussyfoots the path to glory -- He waits off stage for his cue -- Curtain for the big second act -- Then cuffing Cinderella, the stepsisters went upstairs to bed -- He stands before kings -- Tragedy approaches with her spotlight -- Our hero dwells in marble halls -- And sits in the seat of the mighty -- But recites some dull lines -- Cosmic scene shifters sweat at their work -- The big scene in act III -- Upon which our hero plays second fiddle -- And publicly stubs his toe -- The big bull pageant swings across the stage -- Being an intermezzo while only the stage hands work -- Our hero plays Sphinx -- And all the world wonders -- A series of plots, visions and illusions -- The queen in the parlor eating bread and honey -- A gaudy pageant moves gaily to its doom -- The clock in the tower struck twelve and all her fine clothes turned to rags -- The long day closes -- Twilight and evening bell -- And after that the dark -- The sadness of farewell.
Responsibility: by William Allen White.

Reviews

Retrieving WorldCat reviews...
Retrieving EMRO reviews...
Retrieving weRead reviews...
Retrieving GoodReads reviews...
Retrieving Amazon reviews...

Tags

Be the first.

Similar Items

Related Subjects:(1)

Confirm this request

You may have already requested this item. Please select Ok if you would like to proceed with this request anyway.