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         Crane Stephen:     more books (100)
  1. The Open Boat (Dodo Press) by Stephen Crane, 2008-04-18
  2. The Red Badge of Courage (Hrw Library) by Stephen Crane, 2000-01
  3. The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane, 2009-10-04
  4. Works of Stephen Crane. Including Maggie, Girl of the Streets, The Red Badge of Courage, The Little Regiment, The Open Boat and Other Tales of Adventure & more (mobi) by Stephen Crane, 2008-12-23
  5. The Portable Stephen Crane (Portable Library) by Stephen Crane, 1977-07-28
  6. Maggie, a Girl of the Streets by Stephen Crane, 1996-02-01
  7. The Collected Works of Stephen Crane (Halcyon Classics) by Stephen Crane, 2009-07-27
  8. The Blue Hotel (Dodo Press) by Stephen Crane, 2008-04-11
  9. Badge of Courage: The Life of Stephen Crane by Linda Davis, 1998-08-28
  10. New York City Sketches and Related Pieces by Stephen Crane, 1966-12
  11. Maggie: A Girl of the Streets and Other Short Fiction (Bantam Classic) by Stephen Crane, 1986-02-01
  12. The Red Badge of Courage And Four Stories by Stephen Crane, James Dickey, 1997-02-01
  13. The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane by Stephen Crane, 2009-12-20
  14. The New York City sketches of Stephen Crane, and related pieces by Stephen Crane, 1966

21. Stephen Crane (1871 - 1900)
Biografie, Links, Gedichte und Buchhinweise.
http://www.lesekost.de/amlit/HHK02.htm
Stephen Crane
zu den Links - Werke: englisch deutsch
Gedichte
Links
Stephen Crane Society Home Page
Stephen Crane Resources Whilomville Stories
The Modern English Collection
... Online Classical Literature Library
Reclams Literatur Kalender 1966 , S. 127-134
Werksauswahl englisch Bei Amazon nachschauen The Complete Poems of Stephen Crane. Cornell University Press, 1972. Taschenbuch - 154 Seiten. Great Short Works of Stephen Crane. Red Badge of Courage, Monster, Maggie, Open Boat, Blue Hotel, Bride Comes to Yellow Sky and Other Works. Harper Collins, 1975. Taschenbuch - 384 Seiten. Maggie: A Girl of the Streets and Selected Stories. Signet Book, 1991. Taschenbuch. The Portable Stephen Crane. Penguin Books, 1977. Taschenbuch - 550 Seiten. The Red Badge of Courage. Washington Square Press, 1996. Taschenbuch.
Werksauswahl deutsch bei amazon nachschauen Maggie, das Strassenkind. Maggie: A Girl of the Streets. A Story of New York. (Fremdsprachentexte). Ditzingen: Reclam, 1993. Taschenbuch - 135 Seiten.

22. DSM Stephen Crane Page
Welcome to the DMS stephen crane Page. The History Page lists major events in stephen crane s life and describes crane s relationship to Akron, Ohio.
http://www.uakron.edu/english/richards/edwards/crane.html
Welcome to the DMS Stephen Crane Page
Created by three University of Akron students, the DMS Stephen Crane page contains information and links on this historical American author.
Last updated on November 20, 1996
The History Page lists major events in Stephen Crane's life and describes Crane's relationship to Akron, Ohio.
Written by Matthew Whitecar, take a look at Crane's earlier years through the eyes of Crane's friend.
Written by Shannon Harrison, take a look at Crane's later years through the eyes of his doctor.
Picture Gallery
Links to Other Crane Sites
Feedback
Site Information
Picture at Top: Benfey, Christopher. The Double Life of Stephen Crane . New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1992. pg. 169

23. Stephen Crane Biography And Links To Etexts At Owl-Eyes
Short biography and links to etexts at other sites.
http://owleyes.org/crane.htm
Owl-Eyes Home Term Paper Helper Custom Writing Service Suggest a Link ... Advertising Info
Owl-Eyes Biography and Etexts
Stephen Crane
Click HERE for essays on Stephen Crane's novels and stories from The Paper Store.
Stephen Crane was born in Newark, New Jersey. After attending Syracuse University for one semester, he started working as a freelance reporter in the slums of New York City. He published his first work, Maggie, a Girl of the Streets (1893), drawing on this experience.
Crane is best known for The Red Badge of Courage (1895), a realistic look at the Civil War.
Crane served as a correspondent during the Spanish-American War in 1898. At that time, he published The Open Boat and Other Stories (1898). In 1897, he moved to England and associated himself with such writers as Joseph Conrad and Henry James.
Crane practiced a type of writing style known as naturalism, known for it's realistic and bleak outlook on the power of humanity to overcome natural forces.
Stephen Crane died of tuberculosis, which he caught accompanying an expedition from the United States to Cuba. another biography
The Works of Stephen Crane
The Red Badge of Courage(1895) full text Maggie: A Girl of the Streets(1893) full text The Open Boat(1898) full text If you can't find the information you need, then

24. ClassicNotes: About Stephen Crane
stephen crane. ClassicNote on stephen crane. Born November 1, 1871, Newark, New Jersey. Died June 5, 1900, Badenweiler, Baden, Germany. About stephen crane.
http://www.gradesaver.com/ClassicNotes/Authors/about_stephen_crane.html
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ClassicNote on Stephen Crane
Born November 1, 1871, Newark, New Jersey
Died June 5, 1900, Badenweiler, Baden, Germany
About Stephen Crane
Stephen Crane was the youngest of fourteen children. His father was a strict Methodist minister, who died in 1880, leaving his devout, strong mother to raise the rest of the family. Crane lasted through preparatory school, but spent less than two years in college, excelling at Syracuse in baseball and partying far more than academics. After leaving school, he went to live in New York, doing freelance writing and working on his first book Maggie, A Girl of the Streets . His times in New York City were split between his apartment in the Bowery slum in Manhattan and well-off family in the nearby town of Port Jervis. Crane published Maggie , a study of an innocent slum girl and her downfall in a world of prostitution and abuse, in 1893 at his own expense. It was especially scandalous for the times, and sold few copies. It did attract the attention of other critics and writers, most notably William Dean Howells, who helped Crane receive backing for his next project, The Red Badge of Courage Published in 1895

25. Stephen Crane's Classic Short Stories, Sketches, And Novels
HTML etexts.
http://www.geocities.com/stephen_crane_us
Stephen Crane
Stephen Crane's life was restless and uneven and intensely American. Born in Newark, New Jersey, the fourteenth child of a Methodist pastor, he was the typical American boy, playing baseball, boxing, and hunting. In college he became the youngest captain and the best shortstop the Syracuse University baseball ever had. His mother, who supported the family after her husband's death, died when Stephen was eighteen, and for the next five years he lived in New York and nearly starved. The Bowery slums and a medical students' boardinghouse were his alternating surroundings while freelancing his way to a literary career. His first novel, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets , was about the people he saw there. Publishers would have none of it: it was "too honest." So Crane borrowed money to have it printed himself, sold it on newsstands at fifty cents a copy, and at the end of a year had disposed of fewer than a hundred copies. Not until The Red Badge of Courage was published in 1895 did Stephen Crane reach success. Though he was born six years after the Civil War ended, Crane was widely praised by veterans for his uncanny power to imagine and reproduce the sense of actual combat. The editors who had formerly turned him down now hounded him for stories. Overnight the boy who often hadn't a roof over his head knew comparative security, but he spent what he earned as fast as he got it. In the best of his work, Crane shows a rare ability to shape colorful settings, dramatic action, and perceptive characterization into ironic explorations of human nature and destiny. Joseph Conrad said of "The Open Boat" that "by the deep and simple humanity of its presentation [the story] seems somehow to illustrate the essentials of life itself, like a symbolic tale." Crane's literary generation was a tragic one, also losing Frank Norris and Harold Frederick prematurely from its ranks.

26. Your Search:
The stephen crane Society Home Page. The stephen crane Society offers crane scholars and other
http://www.i-une.com/cgi-bin/meta/search.cgi?lang=en&keywords=Crane, Stephen

27. Manacled (1900) By Stephen Crane
Text of the story Manacled .
http://www.mtroyal.ab.ca/programs/arts/english/gaslight/manacled.htm
The following is a Gaslight etext.... A message to you about
STEPHEN CRANE
Manacled
The Argosy , August 1900.] In the First Act there had been a farm scene, wherein real horses had drunk real water out of real buckets, afterward dragging a real wagon off stage left. The audience was consumed with admiration of this play, and the great Theatre Nouveau rang to its roof with the crowd's plaudits. The Second Act was now well advanced. The hero, cruelly victimised by his enemies, stood in prison garb, panting with rage, while two brutal wardens fastened real handcuffs on his wrists and real anklets on his ankles. And the hovering villain sneered. "'Tis well, Aubrey Pettingill," said the prisoner. "You have so far succeeded; but mark you, there will come a time" The villain retorted with a cutting allusion to the young lady whom the hero loved. "Curse you," cried the hero, and he made as if to spring upon this demon; but, as the pitying audience saw, he could only take steps four inches long. Drowning the mocking laughter of the villain came cries from both the audience and the people back of the wings. "Fire! Fire! Fire!" Throughout the great house resounded the roaring crashes of a throng of human beings moving in terror, and even above this noise could be heard the screams of women more shrill than whistles. The building hummed and shook; it was like a glade which holds some bellowing cataract of the mountains. Most of the people who were killed on the stairs still clutched their play-bills in their hands as if they had resolved to save them at all costs.

28. Stephen Crane Society Home Page
Conferences. stephen crane Studies. Bibliography. Queries. Membership. Teaching. FAQ. Links to crane Sites. See also the sites listed on the Teaching crane page. stephen crane Papers at Columbia University.
http://www.gonzaga.edu/faculty/campbell/crane/clinks.htm

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See also the sites listed on the Teaching Crane page. Research Sites Crane Biography Links

29. Poets' Corner - Stephen Crane - Selected Works
At the Poets' Corner website.
http://www.theotherpages.org/poems/crane03.html
Poets' Corner Home Page News and Recent Additions
    Legends
      I
      A MAN builded a bugle for the storms to blow.
      The focused winds hurled him afar.
      He said that the instrument was a failure.
      II
      When the suicide arrived at the sky, the people there asked him: "Why?"
      He replied: "Because no one admired me."
      III
      A man said: "Thou tree!"
      The tree answered with the same scorn: "Thou man!
      Thou art greater than I only in thy possibilities."
      IV
      A warrior stood upon a peak and defied the stars.
      A little magpie, happening there, desired the soldier's plume, and so plucked it.
      V
      The wind that waves the blossoms sang, sang, sang from age to age.
      The flowers were made curious by this joy.
      "Oh, wind," they said, "why sing you at your labour, while we, pink beneficiaries, sing not, but idle, idle, idle from age to age?"
      VI
      Stephen Crane
    Voices
      E ACH small gleam was a voice
      -A lantern voice-
      In little songs of carmine, violet, green, gold.
      A chorus of colors came over the water;
      The wondrous leaf-shadow no longer wavered,
      No pines crooned on the hills
      The blue night was elsewhere a silence
      When the chorus of colors came over the water

30. Reader's Companion To American History - -CRANE, STEPHEN
crane, stephen. John Berryman, stephen crane (1950); Stanley Wertheim and Paul Sorrentino, eds., The Correspondence of stephen crane (1988). JC Levenson.
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/rcah/html/ah_021700_cranestephen.htm
Entries Publication Data Advisory Board Contributors ... World Civilizations The Reader's Companion to American History
CRANE, STEPHEN
, writer. Crane, the son of a Methodist minister and a leader in the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, grew up in Port Jervis, New York, which became the small town of his boyhood memory, just as the hunting and fishing country of Sullivan County became a (tame) kind of wilderness memory for him. His early, somewhat fantasized Sullivan Country Sketches and his late, partly realistic Whilomville Stories drew on these resources. In 1883 Crane moved with his widowed mother to Asbury Park, New Jersey, where a few years later he was to work as a reporter for his brother's news agency. After a semester at Lafayette College, he transferred to Syracuse University in 1891. Writing and baseball were more interesting to him than his studies, and he left college at the end of the term. That summer he met Hamlin Garland, whose popular lectures on realism and impressionism helped shape his literary ideal—a "personal honesty" about the world as seen "with his own pair of eyes." Crane began his career in New York, where doing sketches of the slums helped him write his first novel

31. Stephen Crane Biography Pictures Portrait Books Online Forum
The complete online HTML text, extensively annotated, with references crosslinked to the Encyclopedia of the Self.
http://www.selfknowledge.com/98au.htm
Forum pictures biography and Stephen Crane books online: Maggie, Girl of the Steets, The Red Badge of Courage
Stephen Crane Books Online
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(Courtesy of AuthorsDirectory.Com) Search Open Directory for Stephen Crane books (Courtesy of Dmoz.Org) Search Yahoo for Stephen Crane books (Courtesy of Yahoo.Com) Search LookSmart for Stephen Crane books (Courtesy of LookSmart.Com) Search About for Stephen Crane books (Courtesy of About.Com) Online books and articles by Mark Zimmerman Format - Real Audio The Old Man of the Holy Mountain The Book that Changed My Life Subtitle: The Making of The Old Man of the Holy Mountain How to Make the World a Better Place Chapter 1: Emotional Literacy Education and Self-Knowledge Chapter 2: Emotional Literacy Language and Vocabulary Chapter 3: Emotional Literacy Education Teaching Compassion Chapter 4: Emotional Literacy Education Understanding Fear Encyclopedia of Self-Knowledge Classical Authors Index Classical Authors Directory ... Outline of Self-Knowledge See main index page via link at top of this page.

32. Reader's Companion To American History - -CRANE, STEPHEN
Publication Data. Advisory Board. Contributors. Introduction. Appendix. U.S. History. Western Civilization. World Civilizations. The Reader's Companion to American History. crane, stephen. ( 18711900), writer. settled with him in England as "Mrs. stephen crane." In the autumn and winter of 1897-1898 he
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/rcah/html/rc_021700_cranestephen.htm
Entries Publication Data Advisory Board Contributors ... World Civilizations The Reader's Companion to American History
CRANE, STEPHEN
, writer. Crane, the son of a Methodist minister and a leader in the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, grew up in Port Jervis, New York, which became the small town of his boyhood memory, just as the hunting and fishing country of Sullivan County became a (tame) kind of wilderness memory for him. His early, somewhat fantasized Sullivan Country Sketches and his late, partly realistic Whilomville Stories drew on these resources. In 1883 Crane moved with his widowed mother to Asbury Park, New Jersey, where a few years later he was to work as a reporter for his brother's news agency. After a semester at Lafayette College, he transferred to Syracuse University in 1891. Writing and baseball were more interesting to him than his studies, and he left college at the end of the term. That summer he met Hamlin Garland, whose popular lectures on realism and impressionism helped shape his literary ideal—a "personal honesty" about the world as seen "with his own pair of eyes." Crane began his career in New York, where doing sketches of the slums helped him write his first novel

33. The Red Badge Of Courage
Complete chapterindexed e-text from Literature Project.
http://www.literatureproject.com/red-badge-of-courage/index.htm
The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane An Episode of the American Civil War Download Palm eBook
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Table of Contents:
Chapter 1
Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4
...
Chapter 24

34. Stephen Crane (1871-1900)
stephen crane (18711900). b. Nov. 1, 1871, Newark, NJ, US d. June 5, 1900, Badenweiler, Baden, Ger. Writings (SCS=The stephen crane Society) The Black Riders
http://www.nagasaki-gaigo.ac.jp/ishikawa/amlit/c/crane_s19re.htm

Stephen Crane (1871-1900)
    b. Nov. 1, 1871, Newark, N.J., U.S.
    d. June 5, 1900, Badenweiler, Baden, Ger.
    American novelist, poet, and short-story writer, best known for his novels Maggie: A Girl of the Streets (1893) and The
    Red Badge of Courage (1895) and the short stories "The Open Boat," "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky," and "The
    Blue Hotel."
    Stephen's father, Jonathan Crane, was a Methodist minister who died in 1880, leaving Stephen, the youngest of 14
    children, to be reared by his devout, strong-minded mother. After attending preparatory school at the Claverack
    College (1888-90), Crane spent less than two years at college and then went to New York City to live in a medical
    students' boardinghouse while freelancing his way to a literary career. While alternating bohemian student life and explorations of the Bowery slums with visits to genteel relatives in the country near Port Jervis, N.Y., Crane wrote his first book, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets (1893), a sympathetic study of an innocent and abused slum girl's descent into

35. From Revolution To Reconstruction: Outlines: Outline Of American Literature: The
FRtR Outlines American Literature The Rise of Realism 18601914 stephen crane (1871-1900). The Rise of Realism 1860-1914 stephen crane (1871-1900).
http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/LIT/crane.htm
FRtR Outlines American Literature The Rise of Realism: 1860-1914: Stephen Crane (1871-1900)
An Outline of American Literature
by Kathryn VanSpanckeren
The Rise of Realism: 1860-1914: Stephen Crane (1871-1900)
Index Stephen Crane, born in New Jersey, had roots going back to Revolutionary War soldiers, clergymen, sheriffs, judges, and farmers who had lived a century earlier. Primarily a journalist who also wrote fiction, essays, poetry, and plays, Crane saw life at its rawest, in slums and on battlefields. His short stories in particular, "The Open Boat," "The Blue Hotel," and "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky" exemplified that literary form. His haunting Civil War novel, The Red Badge of Courage , was published to great acclaim in 1895, but he barely had time to bask in the attention before he died, at 29, having neglected his health. He was virtually forgotten during the first two decades of the 20th century, but was resurrected through a laudatory biography by Thomas Beer in 1923. He has enjoyed continued success ever since as a champion of the common man, a realist, and a symbolist. Crane's Maggie: A Girl of the Streets (1893) is one of the best, if not the earliest, naturalistic American novels. It is the harrowing story of a poor, sensitive young girl whose uneducated, alcoholic parents utterly fail her. In love and eager to escape her violent home life, she allows herself to be seduced into living with a young man, who soon deserts her. When her self-righteous mother rejects her, Maggie becomes a prostitute to survive, but soon commits suicide out of despair. Crane's earthy subject matter and his objective, scientific style, devoid of moralizing, earmark Maggie as a naturalist work.

36. Crane, Stephen. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001. crane, stephen. 1871–1900, American novelist, poet, and shortstory writer, b. Newark
http://www.bartleby.com/65/cr/Crane-St.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Crane, Stephen

37. Crane, Stephen. The American Heritage® Dictionary Of The English Language: Four
crane, stephen. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language Fourth Edition. 2000. 2000. crane, stephen. DATES 1871–1900.
http://www.bartleby.com/61/30/C0723000.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference American Heritage Dictionary Crane, (Harold) Hart ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition.

38. The Monster And Other Stories, By Stephen Crane
The Monster and Other Stories. By stephen crane. This collection, when first published in 1899, consisted of the first three stories below.
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/People/spok/metabook/monster.html
The Monster and Other Stories
By Stephen Crane
This collection, when first published in 1899, consisted of the first three stories below. A later collection with the same title in 1901 included the rest of the stories named here, not all of which are on-line at this time. The links below go to on-line illustrated editions of the stories as they appeared in magazine form between 1898 and 1900. This may be somewhat different from the way they were later published in book form. The electronic editions are courtesy of the University of Virginia. This is a "meta-book", which stitches together separate files elsewhere on the Web as they appeared in a previously published book. It is subject to removal if someone produces an integrated edition; if this happens, The Online Books Page will point to the integrated version. For questions, and comments, write to onlinebooks@pobox.upenn.edu

39. Stephen Crane
Translate this page Home_Page stephen crane (1871-1900), Novelista y poeta estadounidense, uno de los primeros exponentes del estilo naturalista. crane
http://www.epdlp.com/scrane.html
Stephen Crane
N Maggie, una chica de la calle La roja insignia del valor El barco abierto y otros relatos Los jinetes negros y otros versos (1895) y La guerra es amable y otros poemas (1899), son ejemplos pioneros e importantes de verso libre. Otras obras son Servicio activo Relatos de Whilomville (1900) y Heridas en la lluvia eMe Textos:
Los jinetes negros (fragmento)

Archivo Midi epdlp

40. DSM Stephen Crane History Page
DMS stephen crane History Page. American classes. Created by Doug Edwards, this page lists significant events in stephen crane s life.
http://www3.uakron.edu/english/richards/edwards/crane1.html
DMS Stephen Crane History Page
American writer and poet Stephen Crane was one of the first naturalist writers, who described humanity truthfully and objectively. Naturalist writers used detached narration, attention to detail, and characters from lower social classes. Created by Doug Edwards, this page lists significant events in Stephen Crane's life.
November 1, 1871 The youngest of fourteen children, Stephen Crane was born in Newark, New Jersey.
Crane wrote his first story titled "Uncle Jake and the Bell-Handle", although it was not published during his lifetime. Crane enrolled at Pennington Seminary in Pennington, New Jersey.
December 1887 Crane withdrew from Pennington in protest of hazing charges.
In January, Crane enrolled at Hudson River Institute (Claverack College) in Claverack, New York.
February 1890 Crane's first sketch titled "Henry M. Stanely" was published in the school magazine, the Vidette . Crane probably heard war tales from retired civil war general (now teacher) General Van Petten.
September 1890 Crane entered Lafayette College as a mining engineering student, but he did not regularly attend class.

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