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Single Lectures
BY EDWARD HOWARD GRIGGS
Address: Orchard Hill, Croton-on-Hudson, New York
1.
The World Scene and America's Part in It.
2.
Youth Looks at Life.
3.
The Crisis for Representative Government.
4.
A Philosophy of Life for the Present Age.
5.
The Use of the Margin.
6.
Literature and American Culture.
7.
The New Meaning in Education and Life.
8.
The Fine Art of Living.
9.
Educating Leadership.
10.
Training Citizenship for America.
11.
Washington: the First American.
12.
Franklin: Schoolmaster of the Colonies.
13.
Jefferson: Philosopher of Democracy.
14.
Hamilton and the Making of Our Government.
15.
Lee: the American Warrior.
16.
Lincoln: the Prophetic American.
17.
Woodrow Wilson and Democracy in International Relations.
18.
Rudyard Kipling: Interpreter of the British Empire:
19.
Walt Whitman: Poet of Democracy.
20.
Edwin Markham: Poet of American Ideals.
21.
William Butler Yeats and the Irish Revival.
22.
Gilbert K. Chesterton: the Journalist Man of Letters.
23.
Work and Play in Education.
24.
Principles of Government in Home and School.
25.
The Influence of Parent and Teacher in Character Training.
26.
Culture and Service through the Vocation.
27.
The Greatest Power in the World.
28.
Good and Evil in the Present Economic Order.
29.
The New Humanism in Business and Industry.
30.
Socrates, Teacher and Martyr.
31.
Marcus Aurelius and the Sunset of Ancient Rome.
32.
Saint Francis of Assisi and the Spiritual Awakening of the Middle Age.
33.
Savonarola: the Moral Prophet of the Renaissance.
34.
Erasmus: the Humanist.
35.
Giordano Bruno: the Martyr of Science.
36.
Victor Hugo and the Spirit of France.
37.
Carlyle: the Man of Letters as Prophet and Interpreter.
38.
Emerson and Spiritual Leadership in Democracy.
39.
Tolstoy: the Moral Leader in Mysterious Russia.
40.
Women in Changing Society.
41.
Men in the Machine Age.
42.
The Humanity of Shakespeare.
43.
The Sonnets and the Revelation of Shakespeare, the Man.
44.
A Midsummer Night's Dream.
45.
Romeo and Juliet: the Romantic Tragedy.
46.
The Merchant of Venice: Shakespeare's Ethical Awakening.
47.
King John: the Dastard King.
48.
Richard II: the Frivolous King.
49.
Henry IV: the Astute King.
50.
Henry V: the Heroic King.
51.
Richard III: the Villain King.
52.
As You Like It: Relief in Nature.
53.
Twelfth Night: Refuge in Romance.
54.
Julius Caesar: Shakespeare's Study of the Citizen and the State.
55.
Hamlet: the Mystery of Mind and Personality.
56.
Macbeth: the Tragedy of Guilt.
57.
King Lear: the Dramatic Spectacle of Life.
58.
Othello: the Tragedy of Fate.
59.
Antony and Cleopatra: World Forces and the Individual.
60.
All's Well that Ends Well: Romance of the Woman Wooer.
61.
Cymbeline: the Culmination of Romance.
62.
The Winter's Tale: the Story of Human Life.
63.
The Tempest: Shakespeare's Final Philosophy.
64.
What is Progress? A Study of Modern Civilization.
65.
The Forces at Work in Human Progress.
66.
Elements that Mold Ideals of Life.
67.
Greek and Christian Ideals in Modern Civilization.
68.
The Poem of Job: the Protest against the Conventional World View.
69.
Shelley's Prometheus Unbound: the Protest against Social Injustice.
70.
Hauptmann's Weavers: the Protest against Economic Wrong.
71.
Ibsen's Brand: the Protest against Time-Serving Selfishness.
72.
Galsworthy's Justice: the Protest against Making Criminals.
73.
Calderon's Life Is a Dream: the Protest against Yielding to Fate.
74.
Art for Life's Sake.
75.
Race, Epoch and Artist as Forces behind Art.
76.
The Meaning and Function of Sculpture and Painting.
77.
Music's Meaning for Humanity.
78.
The Value of Music in Training Citizenship.
79.
The Meaning and Function of Poetry.
80.
Beauty and the Culture of the Spirit.
81.
Athens: the Source and Inspiration of Occidental Culture.
82.
Naples and the Art of Greater Hellas.
83.
Rome: the Giver of Law and Order and the Center of Civilization.
84.
Ravenna: the Cradle of Christian Art.
85.
Venice: the City of Golden Dreams.
86.
Florence: the Heart of the Renaissance.
87.
The Life and Message of Browning: Rabbi Ben Ezra.
88.
Abt Vogler: Browning's Philosophy of Music and the Spirit.
89.
Andrea del Sarto: the Study of Personality.
90.
Cleon: Browning's Philosophy by Dramatic Irony.
91.
Saul: the Prophetic Vision.
92.
Paracelsus: the Tragedy of the Pursuit of Knowledge.
93.
The Ring and the Book: Browning's Philosophy of Art and Life.
94.
The Jewels of the Ring: Caponsacchi and Pompilia.
95.
Florence and the Brownings.
96.
Pippa Passes: the Interweaving of Lives.
97.
Dramatic Moments: Browning's Briefer Poems.
98.
Sordello: the Poet's Struggle to Become Man.
99.
Dramatic Heights: Colombe's Birthday, Luria, In a Balcony.
100.
The Inn Album: a Study of Damaged Souls.
101.
Browning's Poems on Religion.
102.
Poems of Personal Revelation in Browning and Mrs. Browning.
103.
John Stuart Mill: an Admirable Education and the Recovery from It.
104.
Pierre Loti: the Sensitive Dreamer as Child and Man.
105.
Benvenuto Cellini: the Life Adventure of a Master Technician.
106.
George John Romanes: the Modern Religious Problem.
107.
Marie Bashkirtseff: the Unfulfilled Life of a Woman Genius.
108.
Sonya Kovalevsky: the Conflict in the Modern Woman's Life.
109.
Amiel: a Modern Hamlet in Personal Life.
110.
Peer Gynt: Ibsen the Poet.
111.
A Doll's House: Ibsen the Teacher.
112.
An Enemy of the People: Ibsen's Criticism of Democracy.
113.
The Wild Duck: the Nadir of Ibsen's Pessimism.
114.
Rosmersholm: Ibsen the Interpreter of the Moral Order.
115.
The Lady from the Sea: the Dream of Life Fulfilled.
116.
Hedda Gabler: Realism and Modern Society.
117.
The Master Builder: Ibsen's Personal Dream.
118.
Little Eyolf: Psychology and Symbolism.
119.
When We Dead Awaken: Ibsen's Great Epilogue.
120.
The Idylls of the King.
121.
Tennyson's Ethical Philosophy: the Holy Grail and the Passing of Arthur.
122.
Tennyson's Spiritual Philosophy: In Memoriam.
123.
The Spiritual Dramas of Maeterlinck.
124.
Maeterlinck, the Interpreter of Life: Monna Vanna.
125.
Maeterlinck, the Nature Lover: the Life of the Bee and the Blue Bird.
126.
Dante and the Divine Comedy.
127.
Leonardo da Vinci: the Master Mind of the Renaissance.
128.
Michael Angelo: Prophet of the Afternoon and the Sunset.
129.
Voltaire: the Intellectual Leader of the Eighteenth Century.
130.
Goethe and the Spirit of Modern Culture.
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Single Lectures: by Edward Howard Griggs |
| Date Original | 1904/1932 |
| Topical Subject (LCSH) |
Lectures and lecturing Lecturers |
| Personal Name Subject | Griggs, Edward Howard |
| Type (DCMIType) | Text |
| Type (AAT) |
Brochures Promotional materials |
| Type (IMT) | jpeg |
| Digital Collection | Traveling Culture: Circuit Chautauqua in the Twentieth Century |
| Contributing Institution | University of Iowa. Libraries. Special Collections Dept. |
| Archival Collection | Redpath Chautauqua Collection |
| Subcollection | Chautauqua Brochures |
| Collection Guide | http://lib.uiowa.edu/collguides/?MSC0150 |
| Collection Identifier | MSC0150 |
| Rights Management | Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this digital image. Commercial use or distribution of the image is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder. |
| Contact Information | Contact the Special Collections Dept. at The University of Iowa Libraries: http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/contact/index/ |
| Height (cm) | 13 |
| Number of Pages | 8 |
| Digitization Specifications | Scanned at 600 dpi, 32-bit color. Master image available in tiff format. |
| Date Digital | 2001 |
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