Free Ebooks by Project Gutenberg from Project Gutenberg, the First Producer of Free Electronic Books (Ebooks)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Free Ebooks by Project Gutenberg from Project Gutenberg, the First Producer of Free Electronic Books (Ebooks) Search Book Catalog Catalog Search Form Advanced Search Browse Catalog Bookshelf Search Site Site Search Form Main Page Categories News Contact Info Donate Project Gutenberg needs your donation! More Info In Other Languages Português Free eBooks by Project Gutenberg From Project Gutenberg, the first producer of free electronic books (ebooks). Jump to: navigation, search Mobile Site · Book catalog · Bookshelves by topic · Book search · Top downloads · Recently added Project Gutenberg is the place where you can download over 33,000 free ebooks to read on your PC, iPad, Kindle, Sony Reader, iPhone, Android or other portable device. We carry high quality items: Our books were previously published on paper by bona fide publishers and digitized by us with the help of thousands of volunteers. All our ebooks can be easily downloaded: Choose between ePub, Mobipocket, HTML and simple text formats. No fee or registration is required, but if you find Project Gutenberg useful, we kindly ask you to donate a small amount so we can buy and digitize more books. Or you can help us digitize more books or help us record audio books. Over 100,000 free books are available through our Partners, Affiliates and Resources. Our books are free in the United States because their copyright has expired. They may not be free of copyright in other countries. Readers outside of the United States must check the copyright laws of their countries before downloading or redistributing our ebooks. On iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch you can now reach Project Gutenberg through the Stanza catalog. Upcoming Events The 5th annual World eBook Fair runs from July 4 through August 4. Project Gutenberg and partners will offer over one million new eBooks and similar items this year, for a total of over 3.5 million. Site Map The Online Book Catalog • Online Catalog : main page with browsing options. • Advanced Search : search page with more search options. • Recent eBooks , updated nightly. Newly added or changed ebook files. • RSS Feed of recent eBooks , updated nightly. • Top 100 Books and Authors : the most downloaded books and authors. Special areas • Offline Catalogs : handy ebook Listings to consult offline. • Audio Books , both human-read and computer-generated. • CD and DVD Project . Download entire CDs or DVDs, or have a free disc sent to you. • Digitized Sheet Music (dormant). About Us • About Us : About Project Gutenberg. • No Cost or Freedom? What does 'free ebook' mean? • License and Trademark information : What you are allowed to do with the books you download. • Linking Readme : Information for people who want to link to our site. • Robot Readme : Information for people who want to robot our site. • Donate : How to make a donation to Project Gutenberg. • News and Newsletters : Our news site. Contains the weekly and monthly newsletters by PG Founder Michael Hart (and the newsletter archives). • How-To's : In depth information about different topics. • FAQ : Frequently Asked Questions. • Partners, Affiliates and Resources : A collection of links. • Credits : Thanks to our most prominent volunteers. • Mailing lists : Join our mailing lists. • Contact Information : How to get in touch. Volunteering • Volunteering . How you can help Project Gutenberg. • Distributed Proofreaders . Help create an eBook. Getting started is easy, and just a page a day will help! • LibriVox . Help record audio books by joining LibriVox. • Provide missing pages . Help us complete projects. Take a look at our list of missing pages and find some for us. • Promote Project Gutenberg on your web site. The Project Gutenberg Wiki The Project Gutenberg Wiki will become a place full of useful information to the ebook community. You are invited to contribute. • This page was last modified on 7 July 2010, at 14:51. • Privacy policy About Gutenberg Disclaimers Online Book Catalog => Advanced Search -- Recent Books -- Top 100 -- Offline Catalogs -- My Bookmarks Main Page Project Gutenberg needs your donation! More Info Project Gutenberg is a free service open to all of you with no membership required. If you paid anybody to get access to Project Gutenberg you should ask them for a refund. Browse By Author: H Authors: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z other Titles: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z other Languages with more than 50 books: Chinese Dutch English Esperanto Finnish French German Greek Italian Latin Portuguese Spanish Swedish Tagalog Languages with up to 50 books: Afrikaans Aleut Arapaho Breton Bulgarian Caló Catalan Cebuano Czech Danish Frisian Friulian Gaelic, Scottish Galician Gamilaraay Giangan Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Iloko Interlingua Inuktitut Irish Iroquoian Japanese Kashubian Khasi Korean Lithuanian Maori Mayan Languages Middle English Nahuatl Napoletano- Calabrese North American Indian Norwegian Occitan Ojibwa, Western Old English Polish Romanian Russian Sanskrit Serbian Welsh Yiddish Categories: Audio Book, computer-generated Audio Book, human-read Compilations Data Music, recorded Music, Sheet Other recordings Pictures, moving Pictures, still Recent: last 24 hours last 7 days last 30 days Haan, Jacob Israël de, 1881-1924 • Wikipedia • Jerusalem (Dutch) (as Author) Haapanen, Emmi, 1866-1947 • Rahan valtaa Huvinäytelmä 1:ssä näytöksessä (Finnish) (as Author) Haaren, John H. (John Henry), 1855-1916 • Famous Men of the Middle Ages (English) (as Author) Habberton, John, 1842-1921 • Wikipedia • All He Knew A Story (English) (as Author) • Helen's Babies (English) (as Author) • Romance of California Life (English) (as Author) Habl, Franz • The Long Arm (English) (as Author) Hackley, E. Azalia • The Colored Girl Beautiful (English) (as Author) Hackwood, Frederick William • The Annals of Willenhall (English) (as Author) Hadamard, Jacques, 1865-1963 • Four Lectures on Mathematics Delivered at Columbia University in 1911 (English) (as Author) Hadden, J. Cuthbert (James Cuthbert), 1816-1914 • Haydn (English) (as Author) Haddock, Frank C. (Frank Channing), 1853-1915 • Mastery of Self for Wealth Power Success (English) (as Author) Haddon, Alfred C. (Alfred Cort), 1855-1940 • en.wikipedia • The Pagan Tribes of Borneo (English) (as Contributor) Hadermann, J. R. • Not Pretty, but Precious (English) (as Contributor) Hadley, Caroline • Woodside or, Look, Listen, and Learn. (English) (as Author) Hadley, Chalmers • Why do we need a public library? Material for a library campaign (English) (as Editor) Haeckel, Ernst Heinrich Philipp August, 1834-1919 • Wikipedia • Evolution in Modern Thought (English) (as Contributor) • The Evolution of Man (English) (as Author) • The Evolution of Man — Volume 1 (English) (as Author) • The Evolution of Man — Volume 2 (English) (as Author) • Freedom in Science and Teaching. from the German of Ernst Haeckel (English) (as Author) • Monism as Connecting Religion and Science A Man of Science (English) (as Author) Haensel, Johann Gottfried • Letters on the Nicobar islands, their natural productions, and the manners, customs, and superstitions of the natives with an account of an attempt made by the Church of the United Brethren, to convert them to Christianity (English) (as Author) Hagedorn, Hermann, 1882-1964 • Makers of Madness A Play in One Act and Three Scenes (English) (as Author) • Roosevelt in the Bad Lands (English) (as Author) Hägele, Joseph M. • Zuchthausgeschichten von einem ehemaligen Züchtling Erster Theil (German) (as Author) • Zuchthausgeschichten von einem ehemaligen Züchtling Zweiter Theil (German) (as Author) Hagen, Alfred • Reis naar de Nieuwe Hebriden en de Salomons-eilanden De Aarde en haar Volken, 1906 (Dutch) (as Author) Haggard, Henry Rider, 1856-1925 • en.wikipedia • Allan and the Holy Flower (English) (as Author) • Allan Quatermain (English) (as Author) • Allan Quatermain (English) (as Author) • Allan's Wife (English) (as Author) • The Ancient Allan (English) (as Author) • Ayesha, the Return of She (English) (as Author) • Beatrice (Dutch) (as Author) • Beatrice (English) (as Author) • Benita, an African romance (English) (as Author) • Black Heart and White Heart (English) (as Author) • The Brethren (English) (as Author) • Cetywayo and his White Neighbours Remarks on Recent Events in Zululand, Natal, and the Transvaal (English) (as Author) • Child of Storm (English) (as Author) • Cleopatra (English) (as Author) • Colonel Quaritch, V.C. A Tale of Country Life (English) (as Author) • Dawn (English) (as Author) • Doctor Therne (English) (as Author) • Elissa (English) (as Author) • Eric Brighteyes (English) (as Author) • Fair Margaret (English) (as Author) • Finished (English) (as Author) • The Ghost Kings (English) (as Author) • Heart of the World (English) (as Author) • Hunter Quatermain's Story (English) (as Author) • The Ivory Child (English) (as Author) • Jess (English) (as Author) • King Solomon's Mines (English) (as Author) • King Solomon's Mines (English) (as Author) • The Lady of Blossholme (English) (as Author) • Long Odds (English) (as Author) • Long Odds (English) (as Author) • Love Eternal (English) (as Author) • Lysbeth, a Tale of the Dutch (English) (as Author) • The Mahatma and the Hare (English) (as Author) • Maiwa's Revenge (English) (as Author) • Marie An Episode in The Life of the late Allan Quatermain (English) (as Author) • As Minas de Salomão (Portuguese) (as Author) • Montezuma's Daughter (English) (as Author) • Moon of Israel (English) (as Author) • Morning Star (English) (as Author) • Mr. Meeson's Will (English) (as Author) • Nada the Lily (English) (as Author) • Pearl-Maiden (English)
Recommended publications
  • Realist Magic in the Fiction of William Dean Howells STEPHANIE C
    Realist Magic in the Fiction of William Dean Howells STEPHANIE C. PALMER 14LHEN the character Bartley Hubbard in William Dean Howells's A Modern In­ stance (1882) brags that the ideal newspaper would solicit "an account of suicide, or an elopement, or a murder, or an acci­ dent" from "every fellow that could spell, in any part of the country," he voices Howells's own misgivings about the sensa­ tional aspect of communication through mass culture.1 Rather than fostering cognitive and emotional connections between diverse social groups for the purpose of preventing further suf­ fering, newspaper accounts of personal calamities or large- scale industrial accidents in the late nineteenth century tried to thrill readers solely for the purposes of prestige and circula­ tion. Howells was not committed to determining how to pre­ vent suicide, murder, or industrial accidents, but he had a deep interest in determining what—if not sensational tales of for­ tune and disaster—would inspire people from different eco­ nomic, political, and religious backgrounds to see each other as respected members of a human community. Howells's key Nineteenth-Century Literature, Vol. 57, No. 2, pp. 210-236. ISSN: 0891-9356. © 2002 by The Regents of the University of California/Society. All rights reserved. Send requests for permission to reprint to: Rights and Permissions, University of California Press, Journals Division, 2000 Center Street, Suite 303, Berkeley, CA 94704-1223. 1 William Dean Howells, A Modern Instance, ed. George N. Bennett, David J. Nord- loh, and David Kleinman, vol. 10 of A Selected Edition of W. D.
    [Show full text]
  • Markens Grøde (1917) I Et Bokhistorisk Perspektiv
    MARKENS GRØDE (1917) I ET BOKHISTORISK PERSPEKTIV Ståle Dingstad Sammendrag: Markens Grøde (1917) forbindes gjerne med Hamsuns periode som jordbruker på Hamarøy og knyttes nært til nordlandsnaturen. Det er ikke helt galt, men et godt stykke fra sannheten. For det var sørover Hamsun flyttet da han ikke orket mer av jordbrukslivet nordpå. Og det var til byen Larvik i Vestfold fylke han reiste der han bosatte seg med familien og fullførte romanen. Artikkelen forsøker å belyse noen av rammebetingelsene for fullføringen av romanen. Det er betingelser knyttet til tid, sted og mennesker i nærmiljøet gjennom våren, sommeren og høsten 1917. Grenselandet der Hamsun leide seg et uthus for å arbeide, heter Nanset og lå mellom bykommunen Larvik og landkommunen Hedrum. Videre tar artikkelen for seg distribusjonen og resepsjonen av romanen og noen av de konsekvensene som fulgte med tildelingen av Nobels litteraturpris i 1920 for denne romanen. Av særlig interesse er det å undersøke hvilken virkning romanen hadde gjennom mellomkrigstiden med hensyn til den rasismen og antisemittismen som kommer til uttrykk i romanen. Mens flere anmeldere sluttet seg til Hamsuns synspunkter, advarte anmelderen Carl Joachim Hambro som den eneste, mot Hamsuns tenkemåte. Den belyses derfor nærmere gjennom møtet med handelsmannen Aron i romanen og Hamsuns nabo på Nanset, Israel Leib Sachnowitz. Abstract Growth of the Soil (1917) is usually associated with Hamsun’s period as a farmer on Hamarøy and is closely connected to the nature of Nordland. That is not completely wrong, but far from the truth, as Hamsun moved south when he grew tired of the farming life up North.
    [Show full text]
  • Knut Hamsun at the Movies in Transnational Contexts
    KNUT HAMSUN AT THE MOVIES IN TRANSNATIONAL CONTEXTS Arne Lunde This article is a historical overview that examines how the literary works of Knut Hamsun have been adapted into films over the past century. This “Cook’s Tour” of Hamsun at the movies will trace how different national and transnational cinemas have appropri- ated his novels at different historical moments. This is by no means a complete and exhaustive overview. The present study does not cite, for example, Hamsun films made for television or non-feature length Hamsun films. Thus I apologize in advance for any favorite Hamsun-related films that may have been overlooked. But ideally the article will address most of the high points in the international Hamsun filmography. On the subject of the cinema, Hamsun is famously quoted as having said in the 1920s: “I don’t understand film and I’m at home in bed with the flu” (Rottem 2). Yet while Hamsun was volun- tarily undergoing psychoanalysis in Oslo in 1926, he writes to his wife Marie about wishing to learn to dance and about going to the movies more (Næss 129). Biographer Robert Ferguson reports that in 1926, Hamsun began regularly visiting the cinemas in Oslo “taking great delight in the experience, particularly enjoying adventure films and comedies” (Ferguson 286). So we have the classic Hamsun paradox of conflicting statements on a subject, in this case the movies. Meanwhile, it is also important to remember that the films that Hamsun saw in 1926 would still have been silent movies with intertitles and musical accompaniment, and thus his poor hearing would not have been an impediment to his enjoyment.
    [Show full text]
  • Apartheid, Liberalism and Romance a Critical Investigation of the Writing of Joy Packer
    UNIVERSITY OF UMEÅ DISSERTATION ISSN 0345-0155 ISBN 91-7191-140-5 From the Department of English, Faculty of Humanities, Umeå University, Sweden Apartheid, Liberalism and Romance A Critical Investigation of the Writing of Joy Packer AN ACADEMIC DISSERTATION which will, on the proper authority of the Chancellor’s Office of Umeå University for passing the doctoral examination, be publicly defended in hörsal F, Humanisthuset, on Friday, 23rd February 1996, at 3.15 p.m. John A Stotesbury Umeå University Umeå 1996 Abstract This is the first full-length study of the writing of the South African Joy Packer (1905-1977), whose 17 works of autobiography and romantic fiction were primarily popular. Packer’s writing, which appeared mainly between 1945 and 1977, blends popular narrative with contemporary social and political discourses. Her first main works, three volumes of memoirs published between 1945 and 1953, cover her experience of a wide area of the world before, during and after the Second World War: South Africa, Britain, the Mediterranean and the Balkans, and China. In the early 1950s she also toured extensive areas of colonial "Darkest Africa." When Packer retired to the Cape with her British husband, Admiral Sir Herbert Packer, after an absence of more than 25 years, she adopted fiction as an alternative literary mode. Her subsequent production, ten popular romantic novels and a further three volumes of memoirs, is notable for the density of its sociopolitical commentary on contemporary South Africa. This thesis takes as its starting-point the dilemma, formulated by the South African critic Dorothy Driver, of the white woman writing within a colonial environment which compels her to adopt contradictory, ambivalent and oblique discursive stances and strategies.
    [Show full text]
  • Of Desperate Remedies
    Colby Quarterly Volume 15 Issue 3 September Article 6 September 1979 Tess of the d'Urbervilles and the "New Edition" of Desperate Remedies Lawrence Jones Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/cq Recommended Citation Colby Library Quarterly, Volume 15, no.3, September 1979, p.194-200 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Colby. It has been accepted for inclusion in Colby Quarterly by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ Colby. Jones: Tess of the d'Urbervilles and the "New Edition" of Desperate Reme Tess of the d'Urbervilles and the "New Edition" of Desperate Remedies by LAWRENCE JONES N THE autumn of 1884, Thomas Hardy was approached by the re­ I cently established publishing firm of Ward and Downey concerning the republication of his first novel, Desperate Remedies. Although it had been published in America by Henry Holt in his Leisure Hour series in 1874, the novel had not appeared in England since the first, anony­ mous publication by Tinsley Brothers in 1871. That first edition, in three volumes, had consisted of a printing of 500 (only 280 of which had been sold at list price). 1 Since that time Hardy had published eight more novels and had established himself to the extent that Charles Kegan Paul could refer to him in the British Quarterly Review in 1881 as the true "successor of George Eliot," 2 and Havelock Ellis could open a survey article in the Westminster Review in 1883 with the remark that "The high position which the author of Far from the Madding Crowd holds among contemporary English novelists is now generally recognized." 3 As his reputation grew, his earlier novels were republished in England in one-volume editions: Far from the Madding Crowd, A Pair of Blue Eyes, and The Hand ofEthelberta in 1877, Under the Greenwood Tree in 1878, The Return of the Native in 1880, A Laodicean in 1882, and Two on a Tower in 1883.
    [Show full text]
  • Fall 2005) Page 1
    The Howellsian, Volume 8, Number 2 (Fall 2005) Page 1 New Series Volume 8, Number 2 The Howellsian Fall 2005 A Message from the Editor Inside this issue: We hope that all our readers have had a pleas- Speech and Howells,” revised from his ant and perhaps even a productive summer. presentation at the ALA conference last From our perspective, it passed too quickly, From the Editor 1 spring; 3) a Call for Papers, with the topics but autumn, too, is a beautiful season, not selected and the deadline for submission of only in the Midwest where W. D. Howells proposals, for the 2006 ALA conference to Howells Society Activities 1 lived before setting out for Italy, but also be held in San Francisco next May; 4) a along the eastern seaboard, where he resided review by Sarah B. Daugherty of the new after his return. This fall, however, leads us biography by Susan Goodman and Carl Howells Abstracts from ALA 2005 3 to think westward, toward San Francisco, Dawson: William Dean Howells: A where the William Dean Howells Society will Writer’s Life , pub- next meet again to present a program now in lished earlier this Jerome Loving, “Twain’s Whittier 5 its initial stage of preparation. We look for- Birthday Speech and Howells” year; and 5) a dues ward to seeing you all there. notice for 2006 Following our editorial message, this Book Review: William Dean 10 with a membership Howells: A Writer’s Life by Susan expanded issue of The Howellsian in- form. Goodman and Carl Dawson.
    [Show full text]
  • Stae
    GEORGE C. CARRINGTON, JR. STAe <ffnwnetibe The World and Art of the Howells Novel Ohio State University Press $6.25 THE IMMENSE COMPLEX DRAMA The World and Art of the Howells Novel GEORGE C. CARRINGTON, JR. One of the most productive and complex of the major American writers, William Dean Howells presents many aspects to his biogra­ phers and critics — novelist, playwright, liter­ ary critic, editor, literary businessman, and Christian Socialist. Mr. Carrington chooses Howells the novelist as the subject of this penetrating examination of the complex relationships of theme, subject, technique, and form in the world of Howells fiction. He attempts to answer such questions as, What happens if we look at the novels of Howells with the irreducible minimum of exter­ nal reference and examine them for meaning? What do their structures tell us? What are their characteristic elements? Is there significance in the use of these elements? In the frequency of their use? In the patterns of their use? Avoiding the scholar-critic's preoccupation with programmatic realism, cultural concerns, historical phenomena, and parallels and influ­ ences, Mr. Carrington moves from the world of technical criticism into Howells' fiction and beyond, into the modern world of anxious, struggling, middle-class man. As a result, a new Howells emerges — a Howells who interests us not just because he was a novelist, but because of the novels he wrote: a Howells who lives as an artist or not at all. George C. Carrington, Jr., is assistant pro­ fessor of English at the Case Institute of Tech­ nology in Cleveland, Ohio.
    [Show full text]
  • Music Inspired by the Works of Thomas Hardy
    This article was first published in The Hardy Review , Volume XVI-i, Spring 2014, pp. 29-45, and is reproduced by kind permission of The Thomas Hardy Association, editor Rosemarie Morgan. Should you wish to purchase a copy of the paper please go to: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/ttha/thr/2014/00000016/0 0000001/art00004 LITERATURE INTO MUSIC: MUSIC INSPIRED BY THE WORKS OF THOMAS HARDY Part Two: Music composed after Hardy’s lifetime CHARLES P. C. PETTIT Part One of this article was published in the Autumn 2013 issue. It covered music composed during Hardy’s lifetime. This second article covers music composed since Hardy’s death, coming right up to the present day. The focus is again on music by those composers who wrote operatic and orchestral works, and only mentions song settings of poems, and music in dramatisations for radio and other media, when they were written by featured composers. Hardy’s work is seen to have inspired a wide variety of music, from full-length operas and musicals, via short pieces featuring particular fictional episodes, to ballet music and purely orchestral responses. Hardy-inspired compositions show no sign of reducing in number over the decades. However despite the quantity of music produced and the quality of much of it, there is not the sense in this period that Hardy maintained the kind of universal appeal for composers that was evident during the last two decades of his life. Keywords : Thomas Hardy, Music, Opera, Far from the Madding Crowd , Tess of the d’Urbervilles , Alun Hoddinott, Benjamin Britten, Elizabeth Maconchy In my earlier article, published in the Autumn 2013 issue of the Hardy Review , I covered Hardy-inspired music composed during Hardy’s lifetime.
    [Show full text]
  • A Comparison of Relations Between Abrahamic Religions in Medieval Spain and Its Reflection in Odat Y’S Israel-Palestine Relations
    DePaul University Via Sapientiae College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences 6-2018 Consulting the past: a comparison of relations between Abrahamic religions in medieval Spain and its reflection in odat y’s Israel-Palestine relations Morgan Reyes DePaul University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/etd Recommended Citation Reyes, Morgan, "Consulting the past: a comparison of relations between Abrahamic religions in medieval Spain and its reflection in odat y’s Israel-Palestine relations" (2018). College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations. 251. https://via.library.depaul.edu/etd/251 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences at Via Sapientiae. It has been accepted for inclusion in College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Via Sapientiae. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Consulting the Past: A Comparison of Relations Between Abrahamic Religions in Medieval Spain and its Reflection in Today’s Israel-Palestine Relations A Thesis Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts June, 2018 By Morgan Reyes Department of Modern Languages College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences DePaul University Chicago, Illinois Consulting the Past Spring 2018 Reyes, 1 Table of Contents Timeline of Events in Medieval Iberia
    [Show full text]
  • Pessimism in the Novels of Thomas Hardy Submitted To
    PESSIMISM IN THE NOVELS OF THOMAS HARDY A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF ATLANTA UNIVERSITY IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS BY LOTTIE GREENE REID DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH ATLANTA, GEORGIA AUGUST 195t \J p PREFACE "Of all approbrious names,11 saya Florence Emily Hardy, "Hardy resented most 'pessimist.1Hl Yet a thorough atudy of his novels will certainly convince one that his attitude to ward life is definitely pessimistic* Mrs. Hardy quotes him as saying: "My motto is, first correctly diagnose the complaint — in this caae human Ills —- and ascertain the causes then set about finding a remedy if one exists.1'2 According to Hardy, humanity is ill. In diagnosing the case, he is not much concerned with the surface of things, but is more interested in probing far below the surface to find the force behind them. Since this force in his novels is always Fate, and since he is always certain to make things end tragi cally, the writer of this study will attempt to show that he well deserves the name, "pessimist." In this study the writer will attempt to analyze Hardy1 s novels in order to ascertain the nature of his pessimism, as well as point out the techniques by which pessimism is evinced in his novels. In discussing the causes of pessimism, the writer ^■Florence E. Hardy, "The Later Years of Thomas Hardy," reviewed by Wilbur Cross, The Yale Review, XX (September, 1930), p. 176. ' 2Ibid. ii ill deems it necessary to consider Hardy's personality, influences, and philosophy, which appear to be the chief causes of the pes simistic attitude taken by him.
    [Show full text]
  • Bat Rabies and Other Lyssavirus Infections
    Prepared by the USGS National Wildlife Health Center Bat Rabies and Other Lyssavirus Infections Circular 1329 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Front cover photo (D.G. Constantine) A Townsend’s big-eared bat. Bat Rabies and Other Lyssavirus Infections By Denny G. Constantine Edited by David S. Blehert Circular 1329 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Department of the Interior KEN SALAZAR, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey Suzette M. Kimball, Acting Director U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia: 2009 For more information on the USGS—the Federal source for science about the Earth, its natural and living resources, natural hazards, and the environment, visit http://www.usgs.gov or call 1–888–ASK–USGS For an overview of USGS information products, including maps, imagery, and publications, visit http://www.usgs.gov/pubprod To order this and other USGS information products, visit http://store.usgs.gov Any use of trade, product, or firm names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. Although this report is in the public domain, permission must be secured from the individual copyright owners to reproduce any copyrighted materials contained within this report. Suggested citation: Constantine, D.G., 2009, Bat rabies and other lyssavirus infections: Reston, Va., U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1329, 68 p. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Constantine, Denny G., 1925– Bat rabies and other lyssavirus infections / by Denny G. Constantine. p. cm. - - (Geological circular ; 1329) ISBN 978–1–4113–2259–2 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Stevensoniana; an Anecdotal Life and Appreciation of Robert Louis Stevenson, Ed. from the Writings of JM Barrie, SR Crocket
    : R. L. S. AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES 225 XII R. L. S. AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES Few authors of note have seen so many and frank judg- ments of their work from the pens of their contemporaries as Stevenson saw. He was a ^persona grata ' with the whole world of letters, and some of his m,ost admiring critics were they of his own craft—poets, novelists, essayists. In the following pages the object in view has been to garner a sheaf of memories and criticisms written—before and after his death—for the most part by eminent contemporaries of the novelist, and interesting, apart from intrinsic worth, by reason of their writers. Mr. Henry James, in his ' Partial Portraits,' devotes a long and brilliant essay to Stevenson. Although written seven years prior to Stevenson's death, and thus before some of the most remarkable productions of his genius had appeared, there is but little in -i^^^ Mr. James's paper which would require modi- fication to-day. Himself the wielder of a literary style more elusive, more tricksy than Stevenson's, it is difficult to take single passages from his paper, the whole galaxy of thought and suggestion being so cleverly meshed about by the dainty frippery of his manner. Mr. James begins by regretting the 'extinction of the pleasant fashion of the literary portrait,' and while deciding that no individual can bring it back, he goes on to say It is sufficient to note, in passing, that if Mr. Stevenson had P 226 STEVENSONIANA presented himself in an age, or in a country, of portraiture, the painters would certainly each have had a turn at him.
    [Show full text]