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This premium quality edition contains the complete and unabridged
original classic version of "The Secret Garden," printed on heavy,
bright white paper in a large 6"x9" format, with page headers and a
fully laminated full-color cover featuring an original design.
Little Mary Lennox, raised in India by servants and left alone in
the world after a cholera epidemic, is sent to live with an uncle
she has never met in a nearly empty mansion on the edge of the
Yorkshire moors. Spoiled and self-absorbed, Mary soon finds that
the mansion is not so empty as it seems at first and gradually
learns that world does not revolve around her, and is filled with
wonderful living things and people who can become friends.
Locked away behind a wall Mary discovers the Secret Garden,
abandoned and neglected, and with the help of Dickon, a local boy
as at home with the wildlife and plants of the moor as with the
livestock and garden of his family's small farm, she begins to tend
the garden. And as the garden begins to recover and bloom with the
spring, so too does Mary, finding the meaning of friendship and the
warmth of human companionship.
The most remarkable transformation, though, is the change that
comes over her cousin Colin, sickly and feeble, hidden away from
the world in his private room and expecting death. First through
the companionship, and later the friendship, of Mary, and then
through the "magic" of the garden, Colin too learns that the world,
and the people living in it, can be wondrous things.
An inspirational and uplifting story, "The Secret Garden" is
generally considered one the 100 best children's books, and imparts
a message of the inherent power, and will, of all living things to
thrive and the need for each individual to realize the importance
and value of the natural world, and the people, around them.
This premium quality edition contains the complete and unabridged
original 1919 version of Edward S. Corwin's classic "John Marshall
and The Constitution: A Chronicle of the Supreme Court," printed on
heavy, bright white paper in a large 6"x9" format, with page
headers and a fully laminated full-color cover featuring an
original design. Additional contents include Corwin's bibliographic
examination of his contemporary sources and his original
annotations, together with a new, unique introductory note
explaining how to read and understand legal citations to Supreme
Court opinions.
Widely considered the foremost historian of the Supreme Court for
the first half of the 20th century, Corwin brought his historical
approach and renowned narrative style to bear in this eminently
readable account of the life and work of John Marshall, the single
most influential jurist in American history.
Authoritative without being an overly detailed scholarly treatise,
this unique work provides an excellent basic text for any reader
interested in the roots of Constitutional law in the United States
and the life of the man at the center of its early development.
Along with treating his subject generally, Corwin provides
detailed accounts of the process involved in the creation of the
federal judiciary, the conflicts between the Court and the
legislative and executive branches in the early years of the
Republic, and the early development of key areas of Constitutional
law, particularly the limitations of the exercise of power between
the federal and state governments. Additionally, Corwin discusses
the Aaron Burr treason case in some detail and examines the
authority of the government to interfere with rights arising from
private contracts.
This extremely readable book is one of the best sources available
for anyone interested in John Marshall and his role in the
development of American Constitutional law, and also provides a
valuable starting point for readers intending to pursue further
reading on these subjects.
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