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By: Alfred Arthur Reade | |
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![]() Not a complete history of tea, but a pleasant diversion concerning tea, the pleasures found in its drinking, effects, benefits, cautions, etc. Sprinkled with poetry and excerpts from historical personages and the occasional sermon. - Summary by KevinS |
By: Alfred Austin (1835-1913) | |
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![]() Not all of the English poets laureate have been the greatest masters of verse. Alfred Austin, who assumed this post after Alfred Lord Tennyson, was one of the less distinguished - if more prolific - late Victorian poets. In modern times, his verse has become celebrated not for its smooth earnestness, but rather for the occasional howlers it contains. A notable example is this song from his pastoral epic Fortunatus the Pessimist, the final couplet of which is a popular favourite in anthologies of bad verse. - Summary by Algy Pug | |
By: Alfred Ayres (1826-1902) | |
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![]() Ayres arranges usage problems alphabetically and treats certain areas in greater detail as he sees fit. For example, his first entry is A-AN (articles). His second is ABILITY-CAPACITY, in which he distinguishes between the meanings. The alphabetical arrangement continues through to YOURS. (Introduction by Bill Boerst) |
By: Alfred B. Richards | |
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By: Alfred Bester (1913-1987) | |
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![]() Science fiction from the 50s by one of the masters, Alfred Bester. Society has committed itself to complete stability. Nothing is allowed to upset this stability, nothing that is not planned and approved and accounted for in advance. Yes, this is hard to imagine but this has produced decades, nay, centuries of predictable prosperity and peace. Even the newspapers have very little to write about. One reporter however is curious about the "Prog" building, where pronouncements are issued every day just as Moses issued the commandments... |
By: Alfred Biese (1856-1930) | |
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By: Alfred Binet (1857-1911) | |
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![]() Today, almost every layperson understands the concept of intelligence tests and can glibly discuss IQ scores. In fact, these have become so common in the popular imagination that magazines, websites and pop quizzes offer to assess your intelligence at the drop of a hat! In this scenario, it's interesting to recall the very first person who proposed the concept of measurable intelligence. Alfred Binet was basically a clinical psychologist whose wide-ranging interests in learning difficulties faced by school children prompted him to undertake extensive studies in human cognition, psychology, learning and behavior... |
By: Alfred Brittain | |
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By: Alfred Burnett (1824-1884) | |
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By: Alfred C. Chapin | |
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By: Alfred Carmichael (1874-1963) | |
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By: Alfred Chaston Chapman (1869-1932) | |
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![]() Great as is the debt of gratitude which the brewing industry owes to the labours of scientific men, it has been more than repaid by the immense services which that industry has indirectly rendered to the advancement of modern science. It may be said without exaggeration that in respect of the number of scientific investigations of the first order of importance to which it has given rise, the brewing industry stands easily preeminent among the industries of mankind, and that without the stimulus furnished... |
By: Alfred Comyn Lyall (1835-1911) | |
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By: Alfred Coppel (1921-2004) | |
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By: Alfred Crowquill (1804-1872) | |
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By: Alfred de Musset (1810-1857) | |
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![]() In this autobiographic novel, an aging man reflects on his past. We are witness to the relationships he has along the way, his mistakes, and finally- in the most unexpected and honorable way- the sudden developement of his belief in god. |
By: Alfred de Vigny (1797-1863) | |
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By: Alfred Dreyfus (1859-1935) | |
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![]() Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish captain in the French Army was court martialed in 1894 on a trumped up charge of treason and condemned to life imprisonment on Devil’s island, a penal colony off French Guiana. His prison diary, published as Five Years of My Life in 1901 is a heroic tale of survival against daunting odds: isolation, deprivation, torture . . Alfred left behind in Paris his wife Lucie, who, forbidden to join her husband in exile, struggled to protect their two children from the rampant anti-Semitism that swirled about them, while she begged her husband to hold onto life as she tried to clear his name... |
By: Alfred E. Johnson (1879-) | |
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By: Alfred E. Pease | |
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By: Alfred Edgar Coppard (1878-1957) | |
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![]() Twenty-four short stories by famous and not-so-famous British authors. |
By: Alfred Edward Taylor (1869-1945) | |
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![]() This work is a look at the life and ideas of Thomas Hobbes, English philosopher of the seventeenth century. The most important ideas are found in his famous work Leviathan. Taylor looks at such concepts of Hobbes as the contract, naturalism, sovereignty, natural laws, church and state, absolutism, and political obligation, etc. |
By: Alfred Elwes (1819-1888) | |
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![]() This fictional work is written in 1st person by the dog himself. It's a cute story of the adventures in the life of a noble dog who is appropriately named, Job. The canine society in which he lives is an interesting parallel to human society. | |
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By: Alfred Farthing Robbins (1856-1931) | |
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