Victorian Women Writers Project Library See Augusta Webster. I - Iron, Ralph. See Olive Schreiner. The Modern MarriageMarket . Schreiner, Olive (1855-1920); Skene, Felicia (1821-1899); Speranza. http://www.indiana.edu/~letrs/vwwp/vwwp-list.html
Victorian Women Writers Project Schreiner, Olive (18551920). 1. by Ralph Iron ie Olive Schreiner 326 p. Chapmanand Hall London 1883 The transcribed copy is from the Lilly Library, Indiana http://www.indiana.edu/~letrs/vwwp/schreiner/storyafr1.html
CENTRO CULTURA LUDICA Cutliffe), 18661944 Ibsen, Henrik, 1828-1906 Ide, Mrs. Charles W. AKA Ogden,Ruth, 1853-1927 Iles, George, 1852-1942 Iron, Ralph, 1855-1920 AKA Schreiner http://digilander.libero.it/lazzi/cur.html
Timeline 1920's Page Of ULTIMATE SCIENCE FICTION WEB GUIDE The Cave Girl 1925 Hugo Gernsback Ralph 124C41+ 1925 Taine (Eric Temple Bell) The Iron Star (New poet 1920 Ludwig Ganghofer (18551920) popular German http://www.magicdragon.com/UltimateSF/timeline1930.html
Extractions: Return to Ultimate SF Table of Contents May be posted electronically provided that it is transmitted unaltered, in its entirety, and without charge. Contains over 55 Kilobytes of text; may load slowly. Updated 24 December 2003 What happened in the world of Science Fiction and Fantasy between 1920 and 1930? There are hotlinks here to authors, magazines, films, or television items elsewhere in the Ultimate Science Fiction Web Guide or beyond. Executive Summary of the Decade Major Books of the Decade Major Films of this Decade Other Key Dates and Stories of this Decade ... Where to Go for More : 51 Useful Reference Books Executive Summary of the Decade inventions and innovations People at the Top of the News: Return to Top of Timeline 1920s Page Mundane Literature : 1920: Nobel Prize for Literature won by Knut Hamsun (Norway) 1921: Nobel Prize for Literature won by Anatole France (France) 1922: Nobel Prize for Literature won by Jacinto Benavente (Spain) 1923: Nobel Prize for Literature won by William Butler Yeats (Ireland) 1924: Nobel Prize for Literature won by Wladyslaw S. Reymont (Poland) 1925: Nobel Prize for Literature won by George Bernard Shaw (Ireland/Britain) 1926: Nobel Prize for Literature won by Grazia Deledda(Italy) 1927: Nobel Prize for Literature won by Henri Bergson (France) 1928: Nobel Prize for Literature won by Sigrid Undset (Norway) 1929: Nobel Prize for Literature won by Thomas Mann (Germany) 1930: Nobel Prize for Literature won by Sinclair Lewis (USA), citing "Babbitt"
This Is Project Gutenberg. This List Has Been Downloaded From AKA Ogden, Ruth, 18531927 Iles, George, 1852-1942 Inchbald, Mrs., 1753-1821 Inchfawn,Fay AKA Ward, Elizabeth Rebecca Iron, Ralph, 1855-1920 AKA Schreiner http://autumnmist.homeip.net:81/E-Books/- PROJECT GUTENBURG AUTHORS.TXT
Authors S-U Dan Schiller, Friedrich, 17591805 Schiller, Johann Christoph Friedrich von, 1759-1805Schreiner, Olive, 1855-1920 AKA Iron, Ralph, 1855-1920 Schwartau, Winn http://www.worldwide-library.co.uk/Authors/s-u.htm
Victorian Women Writers - A Guide To E-Texts Schreiner, Olive Emilie Albertina Ralph Iron (18551920) Skene, Felicia(1821-1899) Steel, Flora Annie (1847-1929). Taylor, Helen (1831-1907). http://www.mantex.co.uk/ou/aa810/vww-05.htm
Victorian Women Writers - A Guide To E-Texts Schreiner, Olive Emilie Albertina Ralph Iron (18551920) A CloserUnion (1909) SGML at VWWP http//www.indiana.edu/~letrs/vwwp http://www.mantex.co.uk/ou/aa810/vww-14.htm
Author Pseudonyms 1931) Claude Anet Schow, David J. (1955) Stephen Grave Schreiber, Hermann OLLujo Basserman Schreiner, Olive (1855-1920) Ralph Iron Schuetz, Dennis http://www.trussel.com/books/pseud_s.htm
Queerhis Marbod of Rennes Ralph, Archbishop of Tours 12thC Venantius Erik Thorsell 18991980Swedish Iron and steel 1988 Robert Ferro Howard Sturgis 1855-1920 writer. http://users.cybercity.dk/~dko12530/queerhis.htm
Free EBooks - Alphabetical List - GLOBUSZ PUBLISHING Woman And Labour. Schreiner, Olive, 18551920 AKA Iron, Ralph, 1855-1920Dream Life And Real Life; a little African story; Story of http://www.globusz.com/authors_s.asp
Food For Thought: Biographies Freeman, Sir Ralph (English civil engineer), 18801950. Frey, Adolf (Swiss poet, literaryhistorian), 1855-1920. Friedrich Karl (the Iron Prince) (Prussian soldier http://www.junkfoodforthought.com/bio/bio_F.htm
Extractions: Faber, Frederick William (English clergyman, hymn writer) Faber, Sir Geoffrey Cust (English publisher, writer) Faber, Johann Lothar von (German pencil manufacturer) Faber, Johannes (orig. Heigerlin) (German bishop, theologian) Faber, John Eberhard (German-born American pencil manufacturer) Faber, Peter (orig. Pierre Favre) (French Jesuit theologian) Faberge, Karl Gustavovich (Russian goldsmith, jeweler) Fabert, Abraham de (French soldier) Fabius (Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus) (Roman general) d.203 BC Fabre, Emile (French playwright) Fabre, Ferdinand (French novelist) Fabre, Jean-Henri-Casimir (French entomologist) Fabre d'Eglantine, Philippe-Francois-Nazaire (Fr. playwright) Fabrice, Georg Friedrich Alfred von (German general) Fabrici (or Fabrizio), Girolamo (Italian surgeon, anatomist) Fabricius, David (German clergyman, astronomer) Fabricius, Johannes (German astronomer; son of David) 1587-c.1615 Fabricius, Johann Christian (Danish entomologist) Fabritius, Barent (orig. surname Pieterz) (Dutch painter) Fabritius, Carel (orig. surname Pieterz) (Dutch painter)
History Vol I of a tenant farmer, Koizumi Shukichi (18531903) and his wife Katsu (1855-1920). Koizumiwas an Iron-willed man of the highest probity By Jumbo and Ralph Morris http://www.budokwai.org/history_vol_i.htm
Extractions: Up [History Vol I] History -Vol II History Vol III Battle 1970 History Volume I - Founding of Budokwai to circa 1932 ... International Summer Schools The Budokwai Its Roots and Early History And Some Other Early Matters Richard Bowen - Vice-President. The Budokwai 1999 On Saturday, January 26th 1918, The Budokwai opened its doors for the first time. Two days later, on the Monday evening, those training on the mat heard the sound of gunfire - London was still being subjected to the occasional bombing. It was to be many months and many thousands of deaths before the Armistice on November 11th 1918 brought the carnage on the Western Front and elsewhere to an end. But how did The Budokwai come into existence? Gunji Koizumi - Early Life Koizumi comes to Britain By 1917, married and with a thriving business, he felt that he had to make some contribution to help his adopted country (when asked why he never became British he would give a gentle laugh and, pointing to his face, remark, "The face is wrong!" ). The contribution took the form of starting an institute for the study of the martial arts and their related cultural activities. He found and leased two shops in Lower Grosvenor Place, Victoria. As we have seen, the premises opened on January 26th 1918. There was one dojo (training hall) of about twenty feet by twenty feet. The baby Budokwai was solidly democratic, with an elected committee, annual general meetings, a constitution and so on - although these took a little time to establish.
Extractions: Average customer rating for Susan R. Horton - Difficult Women, Artful Lives: Olive Schreiner and Isak Dinesen, in and Out of Africa (Parallax: Re-Visions of Culture and Society) is: Ralph Iron and Titania Critical works on Dinesen and Schreiner, individually,are few and far in between. This book which looks at both authors is some sort of a gem.
The Story Of An African Farm (in MARION) Title The story of an African farm / Olive Schreiner (Ralph Iron) ; edited withan introduction by Joseph Bristow. Author Schreiner, Olive, 18551920. http://www.ccpl.org/MARION/ABZ-9456
Records For Oxford World S Classics (Oxford University Press) (in Schreiner, Olive, 18551920. The story of an African farm / Olive Schreiner(Ralph Iron) ; edited with an introduction by Joseph Bristow. http://www.ccpl.org/MARION/ OXFORD WORLDS CLASSICS OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS/42ba4
Workuno Rachel in the first one, and Ralph and Katharine fabric must be clamped togetherwith bolts of Iron . Eleanor Marx (185598) and Olive Schreiner (1855-1920). http://mural.uv.es/lourmar/workuno.html
Extractions: She also wrote a great many reviews and critical essays, collected in "The Common Reader" (1925) and "The Second Common Reader" (1932); informal and personal in tone, her criticism is suggestive rather than authoritative and has an engaging air of spontaneity. She is equally concerned with her own craft as a writer and with what it was like to be a quite different person living in a different age. Virginia Woolf was much concerned with the position of women, specially professional women, and the constrictions they suffered under. She wrote several cogent essays on the subject, notably in "A Room of One's Own" (1929) and "Three Guineas" (1938). Her novel "The Years" (1937) was originally to have included reflections on the position of women interspersed amid the action, but she later decided to publish them as a separate book, which became "Three Guineas".# "The Norton Anthology of English literature", by Abrams, M. H., edited by W. W. Norton, New York, 1979.