

New York and The Hudson: A Spring Impression (4) James mixes English and American spelling conventions, favoring the English spelling in words like "honour" and "savour" and the American spelling in other words such as "recognize." (3) To facilitate searching, accent marks in foreign words have been removed and the ligatured æ, which James usually employs, has been changed to unligatured ae. Then paragraphs will be ended with two hard returns and HTML tags, (capital P enclosed in angle-brackets).
BANISHED FISHING DOCK RADIUS DOWNLOAD
(2) In downloading, if you wish to avoid the insertion of hard returns at the end of every line (which makes searching across line-breaks difficult), download with the HTML option, not the TXT option. Unlike some of the later reprintings, such as the Library of America edition, this etext includes ALL of the original running heads for right-hand pages and in their proper places, e. (1) Page numbers, in parentheses, indicate the start of a new printed page. The American edition, also published in 1907, did not contain the English edition's seventh section of the last chapter.
This etext of The American Scene (London, Chapman & Hall, ltd., 1907), was produced by Richard Hathaway, with assistance from Ross Arthur, Ann Bubb, and Sarah Koch it was proofread in its entirety by Leatrice Chan. * Return to "the Henry James scholar's Guide to Web Sites" *
