Rural HoursSyracuse University Press, 1968 - 337 ページ RURAL HOURS (1850) is one of the earliest pieces of American nature writing and the first by a woman--the daughter of James Fenimore Cooper--who reveals her ideal society as a rural one, carefully poised between the receding wilderness and a looming industrialization. This first full printing since 1876 restores passages earlier deleted. |
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afternoon autumn banks beautiful berries birds bloom blossoms blue branches bright charming cheerful color common Cooperstown dark delicate elms Europe evergreen farms feet Fenimore Cooper fields flock flowers foliage forest fragrant frequently fresh Friday gardens gathered grass gray green ground groves growing Gyrfalcon half handsome hemlock hills Indian James Fenimore Cooper kind lake leaves light little creatures look maize maple meadows miles Monday morning Mount Vision native neighborhood nest never night observed Otsego Otsego Lake passed peculiar Peregrine Falcon perhaps pine plants pleasant pretty rare river robins Rural Hours Saturday scarcely scarlet season seems seen seldom shade Shubrick snow spot spring sugar maple summer Susan Cooper Susan Fenimore Cooper sweet Thursday to-day trees tribe Tuesday usual valley variety village violets walk warm weather Wednesday whip-poor-will wild wild cherries wind winter woods yellow young