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By: A. E. W. (Alfred Edward Woodley) Mason (1865-1948) | |
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Ensign Knightley and Other Stories |
By: A. E. W. Mason (1865-1948) | |
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The Four Feathers
The Four Feathers is a 1902 adventure novel by British writer A.E.W. Mason that has inspired many films of the same title.The novel tells the story of British officer, Harry Feversham, who resigns his commission in the East Surrey Regiment just prior to Sir Garnet Wolseley's 1882 expedition to Egypt to suppress the rising of Urabi Pasha. He is faced with censure from three of his comrades for cowardice, signified by the delivery of three white feathers to him, from Captain Trench and Lieutenants Castleton and Willoughby, and the loss of the support of his Irish fiancée, Ethne Eustace, who presents him with the fourth feather... |
By: A. Ethelwyn Wetherald (1857-1940) | |
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An Algonquin Maiden A Romance of the Early Days of Upper Canada | |
By: A. H. (Arthur Henry) Bullen (1857-1920) | |
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Lyrics from the Song-Books of the Elizabethan Age |
By: A. J. (Alec John) Dawson (1872-1952) | |
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The Message | |
Jan A Dog and a Romance | |
The Record of Nicholas Freydon An Autobiography |
By: A. J. (Augustine J.) O'Reilly | |
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Alvira, the Heroine of Vesuvius |
By: A. L. G. (Anna Louisa Geertruida) Bosboom-Toussaint (1812-1886) | |
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Major Frank |
By: A. Mary F. (Agnes Mary Frances) Robinson (1857-1944) | |
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Emily Brontë |
By: A. Maynard (Anna Maynard) Barbour (-1941) | |
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The Award of Justice Or, Told in the Rockies A Pen Picture of the West |
By: A. T. Mahan | |
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Shakespeare's Christmas Gift to Queen Bess |
By: A.E.W. Mason | |
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At the Villa Rose
Harry Wethermill, the brilliant young scientist, a graduate of Oxford and Munich, has made a fortune from his inventions, and is taking a vacation at Aix-les-Bains. There he meets, and immediately falls in love with, the young and beautiful Celia Harland, who serves as companion to the aging but warm-hearted Madam Dauvray of Paris. All this is observed by Julius Ricardo, a retired financier from the City of London, who spends every August at Aix, expecting there to find a pleasant and peaceful life... |
By: Abner Cosens | |
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War Rhymes by Wayfarer |
By: Abraham Cowley (1618-1667) | |
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Cowley's Essays |
By: Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) | |
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State of the Union Address |
By: Abraham Merritt | |
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The Metal Monster
The Metal Monster is an Abraham Merritt fantasy novel.Dr. Goodwin is on a botanical expedition in the Himalayas. There hemeets Dick Drake, the son of one of his old science acquaintances. They are witnesses of a strange aurora-like effect, but seemingly a deliberate one. As they go out to investigate, they meet Goodwin’s old friends Martin and Ruth Ventnor, brother and sister scientists. The two are besieged by Persians as Darius III led when Alexander of Macedon conquered them more than two thousand years ago.(Wikipedia) |
By: Abram Joseph Ryan (1839-1886) | |
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Poems: Patriotic, Religious |
By: Ada Cambridge (1844-1926) | |
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Sisters
Ada Cambridge (November 21, 1844 – July 19, 1926), later known as Ada Cross, was an English born Australian writer. While she gained recognition as Australia’s first woman poet of note, her longer term reputation rests on her novels. Overall she wrote more than twenty-five works of fiction, three volumes of poetry and two autobiographical works.[1] Many of her novels were serialised in Australian newspapers, and were never published in book form. The story pans over three – four decades revolving the four Pennycuick sisters. |
By: Ada Langworthy Collier (1843-) | |
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Lilith The Legend of the First Woman |
By: Ada Leverson (1862-1933) | |
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Bird of Paradise | |
The Limit | |
The Twelfth Hour |
By: Adam Gottlob Oehlenschläger (1779-1850) | |
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The Gold Horns |
By: Adam L. (Adam Luke) [Editor] Gowans | |
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The Hundred Best English Poems |
By: Adam Lindsay Gordon (1833-1870) | |
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Song of Autumn
Adam Lindsay Gordon was an Australian poet, jockey and politician. |
By: Adelaide Anne Procter (1825-1864) | |
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Three Rulers
Adelaide Anne Procter was an English poet and philanthropist. She worked prominently on behalf of unemployed women and the homeless, and was actively involved with feminist groups and journals. She became unhealthy, possibly due to her charity work, and died of tuberculosis at the age of 38. Procter's literary career began when she was a teenager; her poems were primarily published in Charles Dickens's periodicals Household Words and All the Year Round and later published in book form. Her charity work and her conversion to Roman Catholicism appear to have strongly influenced her poetry, which deals most commonly with such subjects as homelessness, poverty, and fallen women... | |
Legends and Lyrics Part 2 |
By: Adelbert von Chamisso (1781-1838) | |
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Peter Schlemihl | |
Peter Schlemihl |
By: Adeline Sergeant (1851-1904) | |
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Name and Fame A Novel |
By: Adolph Francis Alphonse Bandelier (1840-1914) | |
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The Delight Makers |
By: Adolphus William Ward (1837-1924) | |
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Chaucer |
By: Adrien Sylvain (1826-1914) | |
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Gold Dust A Collection of Golden Counsels for the Sanctification of Daily Life |
By: Agnes C. Laut (1871-1936) | |
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Lords of the North | |
Heralds of Empire Being the Story of One Ramsay Stanhope, Lieutenant to Pierre Radisson in the Northern Fur Trade | |
The Freebooters of the Wilderness |
By: Agnes Mary Frances Robinson (1857-1944) | |
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Emily Brontë
Emily Brontë is best known for her only novel, "Wuthering Heights." She was born in Yorkshire, northern England, where her father was an Anglican curate. When Brontë was three years old her mother died of cancer. At the age of six she joined her three sisters briefly at the Clergy Daughters' School, where privations and abuse contributed to the deaths of two of them. Her elder sister, Charlotte, immortalized this terrible place in "Jane Eyre." In 1846 Emily Brontë, under the pseudonym Ellis Bell, published a selection of her poetry... |
By: Agnes Repplier (1855-1950) | |
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Americans and Others
A collection of sometimes biting, always clever commentaries on some of life's foibles -- as apt today as when Ms. Repplier wrote them in 1912. Though less know to modern readers, Repplier was in her prime ranked among the likes of Willa Cather. Note: Section 13 contains the word niggards. I put it in print here so that it will not be mistaken for a racial epithet when heard. (written by Mary Schneider) |
By: Al Sevcik | |
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Survival Tactics | |
A Matter of Magnitude |
By: Alan Edward Nourse (1928-1992) | |
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Five Stories by Alan Nourse
These Five Stories were written by Alan Edward Nourse, an American science fiction (SF) author and physician. He wrote both juvenile and adult science fiction, as well as nonfiction works about medicine and science. His SF works generally focused on medicine and/or psionics. Psionics refers to the practice, study, or psychic ability of using the mind to induce paranormal phenomena. Examples of this include telepathy, telekinesis, and other workings of the outside world through the psyche. | |
Derelict | |
Bear Trap | |
Image of the Gods | |
Contamination Crew | |
My Friend Bobby | |
The Dark Door | |
Second Sight | |
The Native Soil | |
Letter of the Law | |
The Coffin Cure | |
Marley's Chain | |
Circus | |
Meeting of the Board | |
Infinite Intruder | |
Martyr | |
PRoblem | |
The Link |
By: Alan Sullivan (1868-1947) | |
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The Rapids |