Found 2,206,840 results for "Units"
by Mitch Albom
The last class of my old professor's life took place once a week in his house, by a window in the study where he could w...
by Church of England, J. A. Maurault
Where at the Death of our late Sovereign Lord King Edward the Sixth, there remained one uniform order of Common Service,...
by Charles Dickens, Diana C. Archibald
I SHALL never forget the one-fourth serious and three-fourths comical astonishment, with which, on the morning of the th...
by Harriet A. Jacobs
Eu nasci escrava, mas nunca soube disso até que seis anos de uma infância feliz tivessem se passado.
by Nevil Shute
LIEUTENANT COMMANDER PETER HOLMES of the Royal Australian Navy woke soon after dawn.
by Mark Twain
YOU DON'T know about me, without you have read a book by the name of "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer," but that ain't no m...
by James Joyce
Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the stairhead, bearing a bowl of lather on which a mirror and a razor lay crossed...
by Booker T. Washington
I WAS born a slave on a plantation in Franklin County, Virginia.
by Olaudah Equiano
I BELIEVE it is difficult for those who publish their own memoirs to escape the imputation of vanity; nor is this the on...
by Sinclair Lewis
The handsome dining room of the Hotel Wessex, with its gilded plaster shields and the mural depicting the Green Mountain...
by P. T. Barnum
IN THE UNITED STATES, where we have more land than people, it is not at all difficult for persons in good health to make...
by Margaret Mitchell
Scarlett O'Hara n'était pas d'une beauté classique, mais les hommes ne s'en apercevaient guere quand, å l'exemple des ju...
by Laura Ingalls Wilder
Once upon a time, sixty years ago, a little girl lived in the Big Woods of Wisconsin, in a little gray house made of log...
by Solomon Northup
Having been born a freeman, and for more than thirty years enjoyed the blessings of liberty in a free State-and having a...
by Frederick Douglass
Frederick Douglass was the most important African American leader and intellectual of the nineteenth century.
by W. E. B. Du Bois
BETWEEN me and the other world there is ever an unasked question: unasked by some through feelings of delicacy; by other...
by Sinclair Lewis
The towers of Zenith aspired above the morning mist; austere towers of steel and cement and limestone, sturdy as cliffs ...