Found 63 results for "Blind women in fiction"
by Wilkie Collins, William Collins
THIS is the story of what a Woman's patience can denture, and what a Man's resolution can achieve.
by Mark Twain
My brother had just been appointed Secretary of Nevada Territory-an office of such majesty that is concentrated in itsel...
by Wilkie Collins
In the first part of Robinson Crusoe, at page one hundred and twenty-nine, you will find it thus written: ;Now I saw, th...
by Jane Austen
Jane Austen was born on December 16, 1775, in the year before the American Declaration of Independence, and she died on ...
by Charles Dickens
MARLEY was dead, to begin with.
by Wilkie Collins, Camille de Cendrey
In offering this book to you, I have no Preface to write.
by Anne McCaffrey
Almost as if the elements, too, mourned the death of the gentle old Harper, a southeaster blew for three days, locking e...
by Wilkie Collins
THE hands on the hall clock pointed to half past six in the morning.
by Wilkie Collins
You are here invited to read the story of an Event which occurred in an out-of-the-way corner of England, some years sin...
by Wilkie Collins
NOT far from the source of the famous river, which rises in the mountains between Loch Katrine and Loch Lornond, and div...
by Wilkie Collins, Norman Page
IN the spring of the year eighteen hundred and sixty-eight there lived, in a certain county of North Britain, two venera...
by George Eliot
MORE than three centuries and a half ago, in the mid springtime of 1492, we are sure that the angel of the dawn, as he t...
by Wilkie Collins
AT a quarter to one o'clock, on a wet Sunday afternoon, in November 1837, Samuel Snoxell, page to Mr Zachary Thorpe, of ...
by Wilkie Collins
AT the request of a person who has claims on me that I must not disown, I consent to look back through a long interval o...