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By: Charles Reade (1814-1884) | |
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Put Yourself in His Place | |
A Terrible Temptation A Story of To-Day | |
A Woman-Hater | |
Peg Woffington | |
A Simpleton |
By: Charles Rogers (1825-1890) | |
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Modern Scottish Minstrel
Subtitled "Songs of Scotland of the Past Half-Century, with Memoirs of the Poets, and Sketches and Specimens in English Verse of the Most Celebrated Modern Gaelic Bards." | |
The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume I. The Songs of Scotland of the past half century | |
The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume IV. The Songs of Scotland of the Past Half Century | |
The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume V. The Songs of Scotland of the Past Half Century | |
The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume VI The Songs of Scotland of the Past Half Century | |
The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume II. The Songs of Scotland of the past half century | |
The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume III The Songs of Scotland of the Past Half Century |
By: Charles S. (Charles Stephen) Brooks (1878-1934) | |
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Chimney-Pot Papers | |
There's Pippins and Cheese to Come |
By: Charles S. Bentley | |
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The Fifth of November A Romance of the Stuarts |
By: Charles Sotheran (1847-1902) | |
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Percy Bysshe Shelley as a Philosopher and Reformer |
By: Charles Sprague (1791-1875) | |
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An Ode Pronounced Before the Inhabitants of Boston, September the Seventeenth, 1830, at the Centennial Celebration of the Settlement of the City |
By: Charles Stuart Calverley (1831-1884) | |
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Verses and Translations |
By: Charles Theodore Murray (1843-1924) | |
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Mlle. Fouchette A Novel of French Life |
By: Charles Turley (1868-1940) | |
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Godfrey Marten, Undergraduate |
By: Charles V. De Vet (1911-1997) | |
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There is a Reaper ... | |
Monkey On His Back | |
Vital Ingredient |
By: Charles W. Diffin (1884-1966) | |
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Two Thousand Miles Below
A science fiction novel that was originally produced in four parts in the publication: Astounding Stories in June, September, November 1932, January 1933. The main character is Dean Rawson, who plans on discovering a way of mining power from a dead volcano, but ends up discovering more than he bargained for. | |
Dark Moon
Mysterious, dark, out of the unknown deep comes a new satellite to lure three courageous Earthlings on to strange adventures. | |
The Finding of Haldgren
Chet Ballard answers the pinpoint of light that from the craggy desolation of the moon stabs out man's old call for help. |
By: Charles Waddell Chesnutt (1858-1932) | |
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House Behind the Cedars
In this, Chesnutt's first novel, he tells the tragic story of love set against a backdrop of racism, miscegenation and “passing” during the period spanning the antebellum and reconstruction eras in American history. And through his use of the vernacular prevalent in the South of that time, Chesnutt lent a compassionate voice to a group that America did not want to hear. More broadly, however, Chesnutt illustrated, in this character play, the vast and perhaps insurmountable debt this country continues to pay for the sins of slavery. | |
Colonel's Dream
In this novel, Chesnutt described the hopelessness of Reconstruction in a post-Civil War South that was bent on reestablishing the former status quo and rebuilding itself as a region of the United States where new forms of "slavery" would replace the old. This novel illustrated how race hatred and the impotence of a reluctant Federal Government trumped the rule of law, ultimately setting the stage for the rise of institutions such as Jim Crow, lynching, chain gangs and work farms--all established with the intent of disenfranchising African Americans. |
By: Charles Wesley Alexander (1837-1927) | |
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Angel Agnes The Heroine of the Yellow Fever Plague in Shreveport |
By: Charles Wesley Emerson (1837-1908) | |
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Evolution of Expression — Volume 1 |
By: Charles Willard Diffin (1884-1966) | |
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Moon Master
Through Infinite Deeps of Space Jerry Foster Hurtles to the Moon—Only to be Trapped by a Barbaric Race and Offered as a Living Sacrifice to Oong, their Loathsome, Hypnotic God. | |
The Hammer of Thor |
By: Charles William Eliot (1834-1926) | |
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Harvard Classics Volume 28 Essays English and American | |
The Harvard Classics, Volume 49, Epic and Saga With Introductions And Notes
MANUAL OF SURGERY, OXFORD MEDICAL PUBLICATIONSBY ALEXIS THOMSON, F.R.C.S.Ed.PREFACE TO SIXTH EDITION Much has happened since this Manual was last revised, and many surgical lessons have been learned in the hard school of war. Some may yet have to be unlearned, and others have but little bearing on the problems presented to the civilian surgeon. Save in its broadest principles, the surgery of warfare is a thing apart from the general surgery of civil life, and the exhaustive literature now available on every aspect of it makes it unnecessary that it should receive detailed consideration in a manual for students... |
By: Charlotte B. Herr (1875-1963) | |
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Their Mariposa Legend; a romance of Santa Catalina |
By: Charlotte Brontë (1816-1855) | |
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The Professor
The book tells the story of a young man named William Crimsworth. It describes his maturation, his loves and his eventual career as a professor at an all-girls’ school. | |
Shirley
Shirley is an 1849 social novel by the English novelist Charlotte Brontë. It was Brontë's second published novel after Jane Eyre (originally published under Brontë's pseudonym Currer Bell). The novel is set in Yorkshire in the period 1811–1812, during the industrial depression resulting from the Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812. The novel is set against a backdrop of the Luddite uprisings in the Yorkshire textile industry. | |
Biographical Notes on the Pseudonymous Bells |
By: Charlotte Endymion Porter (1859-1942) | |
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Shakespeare Study Programs; The Comedies |
By: Charlotte M. Brame (1836-1884) | |
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Dora Thorne |
By: Charlotte Mary Yonge (1823-1901) | |
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Heir of Redclyffe
The Heir of Redclyffe (1853) was the first of Charlotte M. Yonge's bestselling romantic novels. Its religious tone derives from the High Church background of her family and from her friendship with a leading figure in the Oxford Movement, John Keble, who closely supervised the writing of the book. The germ of its plot was suggested by her friend Marianne Dyson. | |
Clever Woman of the Family | |
Two Penniless Princesses | |
Abbeychurch | |
Unknown to History: a story of the captivity of Mary of Scotland | |
The Caged Lion | |
The Prince and the Page; a story of the last crusade | |
The Chaplet of Pearls | |
Heartsease, Or, the Brother's Wife | |
Beechcroft at Rockstone | |
Magnum Bonum | |
Hopes and Fears or, scenes from the life of a spinster | |
The Long Vacation | |
Love and Life An Old Story in Eighteenth Century Costume | |
That Stick | |
The Carbonels | |
A Modern Telemachus | |
Grisly Grisell | |
The Pigeon Pie | |
Friarswood Post Office |