{"product_id":"2940011841361","title":"The Deluge","description":"This ebook is complete with linked Table of Content making navigation quicker and easier.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eWhen Napoleon was about to crown himself -- so I have somewhere read -- they submitted to him the royal genealogy they had faked up for him. He crumpled the parchment and flung it in the face of the chief herald, or whoever it was. \"My line,\" said he, \"dates from Montenotte.\" And so I say, my line dates from the campaign that completed and established my fame -- from \"Wild Week.\"\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eI shall not pause to recite the details of the obscurity from which I emerged. It would be an interesting, a romantic story; but it is a familiar story, also, in this land which Lincoln so finely and so fully described when he said: \"The republic is opportunity.\"\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eOne fact only: I did not take the name Blacklock.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eSome one has written: \"It was a great day for fools when modesty was made a virtue.\" I heartily subscribe to that. Life means action; action means self-assertion; self-assertion rouses all the small, colorless people to the only sort of action of which they are capable -- to sneering at the doer as egotistical, vain, conceited, bumptious and the like. So be it! I have an individuality, aggressive, restless and, like all such individualities, necessarily in the lime-light; I have from the beginning lost no opportunity to impress that individuality upon my time. Let those who have nothing to advertise, and those less courageous and less successful than I at advertisement, jeer and spit. I ignore them. I make no apologies for egotism. I think, when my readers have finished, they will demand none. They will see that I had work to do, and that I did it in the only way an intelligent man ever tries to do his work -- his own way, the way natural to him!\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eDavid Graham Phillips was an American journalist and novelist. Phillips wrote an article in Cosmopolitan in March 1906, called \"The Treason of the Senate\", exposing campaign contributors being rewarded by certain members of the U. S. Senate. The story launched a scathing attack on Rhode Island senator Nelson W. Aldrich, and brought Phillips a great deal of national exposure. This and other similar articles helped lead to the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, initiating popular instead of state-legislature election of U. S. senators.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eDavid Graham Philips is known for producing one of the most important investigations exposing details of the corruption by big businesses of the Senate, in particular, by the Standard Oil Company. He was among a few other writers during that time that helped prompt President Theodore Roosevelt to use the term “Muckrakers”.","brand":"WHITE DOG PUBLISHING","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":47078556139760,"sku":"2940011841361","price":0.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0737\/7593\/9824\/files\/2940011841361_p0.jpg?v=1763550235","url":"https:\/\/shop-qa.barnesandnoble.com\/products\/2940011841361","provider":"Barnes \u0026 Noble (DEV)","version":"1.0","type":"link"}