Found 2,011 results for "N. G. Martin"
by H. G. Wells
H. G. Wells was an astonishingly versatile and prolific writer.
by H. G. Wells
NO ONE would have believed in the last years of the nineteenth century that this world was being watched keenly and clos...
by James Fenimore Cooper
IT WAS a feature peculiar to the colonial wars of North America, that the toils and dangers of the wilderness were to be...
by Voltaire
Chapitre I. Comment candide fut élevé dans un beau château, et comment il fut chassé d'icelui. Il y avait en Vestp...
by Gilbert Keith Chesterton
THE only possible excuse for this book is that it is an answer to a challenge.
by Charles Dickens
WHETHER I shall turn out to be the hero of my own life, or whether that station will be held by any body else, these pag...
by Henry James
At the little town of Vevey, in Switzerland, there is a particularly comfortable hotel.
by Aristotle
THE science which has to do with nature clearly concerns itself for the most part with bodies and magnitudes and their p...
by Gilbert Keith Chesterton
The suburb of Saffron Park lay on the sunset side of London, as red and ragged as a cloud of sunset.
by Gilbert Keith Chesterton
Rabelais, or his wild illustrator Gustave Dore, must have had something to do with the designing of the things called fl...
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 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
[FAUST, lying among grass and flowers, exhausted and restless, trying to sleep.]
by George Orwell
Nous sommes à la ferme, à la tombée de la nuit, alors que M.Jones vient de rentrer du pub. Il est ce soir bien trop émé...
by William Shakespeare
1.1 King Lear, intending to divide his power and kingdom among his three daughters, demands public professions of their ...
by Niccolò Machiavelli
ALL THE STATES and Governments by which men are or ever have been ruled, have been and are either Republics or Princedom...
by Thomas Bulfinch
ANCIENT mythologies have much to do with modern literature.
by Joseph Conrad
The bell, hung on the door by means of a curved ribbon of steel, was difficult to circumvent.