Forthcoming Books, November 1999 Wood, Henry, Mrs., 18141887. East Lynne / Mrs. Henry Wood ; editedby Andrew Maunder. Peterborough, Ont. Broadview Press, 1999. http://collection.collectionscanada.ca/100/202/301/forthcoming/HTML/1999/99-11/e
Extractions: Forthcoming Books November 1999 800 LITERATURE (GENERAL) The best of Russian humor : over 1,500 original Russian jokes, quips, quotes, and anecdotes / compiled, translated, and edited by Vladimir Godunok ; copyedited by David McCabe ; illustrated by Sergei Kovalenko. London, Ont. : Russian Doll Pub., 1999.
Part 2: Oscar Wilde's Epigrammatic Theater people s standards of conduct. Mrs. Henry Wood, (18141887) East Lynne.London Richard Bentley, 1861. In Wilde s Lady Windermere s http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/fales/exhibits/wilde/1epigram.htm
Extractions: Oscar Wilde won his greatest literary fame in the theater, and his chosen mode of expression was the epigram a form which allowed him to flaunt his style and sophisticated mastery of life and literature. It is well known that Wilde's plays have epigrams liberally sprinkled throughout them, but it is important to realize the extent to which the epigram shapes Wilde's dramatic structure and themes. Wilde's epigrams invoke a response and then frustrate it. For example, a character in The Importance of Being Earnest While this has left Wilde open to charges of being a mere theatrical manipulator, it is in fact central to the type of theater Wilde wanted to create: a space in which the audience is allowed to recognize the rules of literary and theatrical history, and to share the pleasure of watching those rules circumvented. Wilde thus shares the pleasure of being in an elitist community with his audience, establishing an alternate aristocracy of the "ins" and "outs," with knowledge not money or birth required for membership. This is the pleasure of Wilde's epigrammatic theater. Francesca Coppa
Mrs. Henry Wood - AnsMe.com Dictionary (define) Mrs. Henry Wood (noun) . 1. English writer of novels about murders andthefts and forgeries (1814-1887) Synonyms Wood, Ellen Price Wood. http://define.ansme.com/words/m/mrs._henry_wood.html
Penn State Harrisburg Library Individual Personal Name Files In CR (Catherine Read), 17901872 WILLKIE, Edith Mrs. Wendell L. WILSON, Edith BollingGalt, 1872-1961 WINGO, Effigene Wood, Henry, Mrs., 1814-1887 WoodS, Kate http://www.hbg.psu.edu/library/womenslist.html
Virginia Woolf And Modernism--Notes known. BACK. Mrs. Henry Wood (18141887), English novelist, very popularduring her time. BACK. That name is modernism! BACK. Interesting http://xroads.virginia.edu/~CLASS/workshop97/Gribbin/notes.html
Extractions: Henry Fielding (1707-1754), novelist and playwright, considered one of the founders of the English novel. BACK Jane Austen (1775-1817) English writer who first gave the novel its distinctly modern character through her treatment of ordinary people in everyday life. Pride and Prejudice (1813) is one of her most well known novels. BACK William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863), English novelist. His novel, The History of Pendennis (1848-50) is a partly fictionalized autobiography. BACK H(erbert) G(eorge) Wells (1866-1946), English novelist, journalist, sociologist, and historian. BACK (Enoch) Arnold Bennett (1867-1931), British novelist, playwright, critic, and essayist whose major works form an important link between the English novel and the mainstream of European realism. BACK John Galsworthy (1867-1933), English novelist and playwright, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1932. BACK Thomas Hardy (1840-1928), English poet and his nation's foremost regional novelist. Jude the Obscure (1895) was his last novel. BACK Joseph Conrad (1857-1924), Polish-born English novelist and short-story writer. His collection of short stories
Extractions: Back to Playbills UKC/POS/LDN STD : 0595558 Playbill advertising THE SHAUGHRAUN at the Standard Theatre, 22 July 1889. MENTIONED ON THE PLAYBILL:- author : Boucicault, Dion, Mr, 1820-1890 actor : Boucicault, A., Mr UKC/POS/LDN STD : 0595559 Playbill advertising Ethel Arden and company in EAST LYNNE at the Standard Theatre, 23 March [1891?] and during the week. MENTIONED ON THE PLAYBILL:- author : Wood, -, Mrs, 1814-1887 (wife of Henry Wood) UKC/POS/LDN STD : 0595560 Playbill advertising "the great Anglo-American success" THE STILL ALARM at the Standard Theatre, 11 March 1895 and during the week. MENTIONED ON THE PLAYBILL:- UKC/POS/LDN STD : 0595561 Playbill advertising the "grand Autumn production" THE GIRL WHO LOST HER CHARACTER at the Standard Theatre, 10 October 1904 "and every evening." MENTIONED ON THE PLAYBILL:- author : Melville, Walter, Mr composer : Reeves, Edward, Mr
Extractions: Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay (Chatterjee) My literary debt is not limited to my predecessors only. I'm forever indebted to the deprived, ordinary people who give this world everything they have and yet receive nothing in return, to the weak and oppressed people whose tears nobody bothers to notice and to the endlessly hassled, distressed (weighed down by life) and helplesss people who don't even have a moment to think that: despite having everything, they have right to nothing. They made me start to speak. They inspired me to take up their case and plead for them. I have witnessed endless injustice to these people, unfair intolerable indiscriminate justice. It's true that springs do come to this world for some - full of beauty and wealth - with its sweet smelling breeze perfumed with newly bloomed flowers and spiced with cuckoo's song, but such good things remained well outside the sphere where my sight remained imprismed. This poverty abounds in my writings.
Fantastic Victoriana: O Visitor (1857). Mrs. Henry Wood, née Ellen Price (18141887),was the creator of Johnny Ludlow, and I cover her there. A http://www.geocities.com/jessnevins/vico.html
Extractions: 'Halloran, Jack. Jack O'Halloran is the narrator of Tom Greer's A Modern Daedalus (1887). Greer (1846-1904) was an Irish writer and surgeon who lived in England from about 1880. The novel is set in 1887 and is...well, marred, from beginning to end; O'Halloran writes that he doesn't want to be accused of "unpardonable egotism and wearisome prolixity," but that is an adequate description of both the narrator and the book, which is a tedious attempt at singing the ills of British treatment of Irish. Which is not a simple matter by any means, and the British were and are not innocent of wrong-doing in Irelandfar from itbut Greer loads the deck with his portrayal of egotistical, evil Brits and good, brave, noble Irish. O'Halloran is obsessed with flight, even as a child; after graduating from college he returns to Ireland to build a flying device. After much experimentation he discovers a means of unaided unpowered flight. The specifics are never detailed, although he talks about wearing a pair of six-foot-long wings and flying with them. Nor are his means of propulsion detailed; the reader is left with the implication that O'Halloran flaps like a bird to propel himself. There are some obvious logical difficulties with this, especially since he routinely hits speeds of 100 mph. Jack is rescued by his brother, who he teaches to fly. They escape together to Ireland and Jack, now forgiven by his brother and hailed by the common people as a hero, trains a brigade of fliers. They drop bombs on a British brigade and sink a few British ironclads, and while Jack hypocritically mews about how what he is doing makes him sick he continues onward and helps kill hundreds more soldiers. They destroy the English forces in Ireland, England submits to Irish independence, and the Irish continue to build a flying force, which at novel's end is a thousand strong.
Index Wharton, Edith, 18621937 Early Short Fiction Of Edith Wharton, The Part 2, byWharton, Edith, 1862-1937 East Lynne, by Wood, Henry, Mrs., 1814-1887 Ebb-Tide http://www.elbooks.sk/angdieloE.html
UK Literature Search Engine UK Directory UK Literature UK Flowers dedicated site to the Works of Ellen Wood (Mrs. Henry Wood, Victorian Literatureand Novels. Contents of this Site Ellen Wood ELLEN Wood (1814-1887). http://www.theenginerooms.com/engine_rooms__literature_3.htm
Literature UK Directory UK Literature UK Websites site to the Works of Ellen Wood (Mrs. Henry Wood, Victorian Literature and Novels.Contents of this Site Ellen Wood ELLEN Wood (1814-1887) - ELLEN Wood http://www.theenginerooms.com/pages/Arts_UK/Literature_UK/more10.html
EBOOKS - ALPHABETICAL LIST ~ W Wollstonecraft, Mary, 17591797. Wood, Eugene, 1840-1923. Wood, Henry, Mrs., 1814-1887.Wood, Robert Williams, 1868-1955. Wood, William Charles Henry, 1864-1947. http://www.globusz.com/authors_w1.html
Wood TutorGig.com Dictionary Sir Henry Wood, Sir Henry Joseph Wood 5 English writer of novels about murdersand thefts and forgeries (18141887) syn Wood, Mrs. Henry Wood, Ellen Price http://www.tutorgig.com/dict.jsp?keywords=Wood
Newton's Library - All Books Wood, Ellen (Mrs. Henry Wood) 18141887 Reality or Delusion? () AQ. Young,Allyn Abbott 1876-1929 Increasing Returns and Economic Progress () AQ. http://www.newtonslibrary.org/all.shtml
Newton's Library (W) Wood, Ellen (Mrs. Henry Wood) 18141887 Reality or Delusion? universal format,v 1.0 15k stuffed - 82k unstuffed * downloads This is a ghost story. http://www.newtonslibrary.org/w.shtml
Extractions: A B C ... W - X - Y - Z - anonymous/unknown You will need Stuffit Expander 5.x or better to decompress the archives. If you haven't done so yet, go to Aladdin's website and download it now! It's free, and available for both Mac and Windows. - Note that the unstuffed size of the archives below is about twice the amount of space the book will actually occupy on your newton. John Walker Programs Are Programs - How To Make Money In the Software Business universal format, v 1.0
Wood syn Sir Henry Wood, Sir Henry Joseph Wood 5 English writer of novels about murdersand thefts and forgeries (18141887) syn Mrs. Henry Wood, Ellen Price http://wood.word.sytes.org/
Extractions: wood From WordNet (r) 2.0 wood n 1: the hard fibrous lignified substance under the bark of trees 2: the trees and other plants in a large densely wooded area [syn: forest woods ] 3: United States film actress (1938-1981) [syn: Natalie Wood ] 4: English conductor (1869-1944) [syn: Sir Henry Wood Sir Henry Joseph Wood ] 5: English writer of novels about murders and thefts and forgeries (1814-1887) [syn: Mrs. Henry Wood Ellen Price Wood ] 6: United States painter noted for works based on life in the Midwest (1892-1942) [syn: Grant Wood ] 7: any wind instrument other than the brass instruments [syn: woodwind woodwind instrument ] 8: a golf club with a long shaft used to hit long shots; originally made with a wooden head; metal woods are now available From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) Wood Wednesday .] Mad; insane; possessed; rabid; furious; frantic. [Obs.] [Written also wode .] Our hoste gan to swear as [if] he were wood. Chaucer. From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) Wood From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) Wood Wood acid Wood vinegar (Chem.), a complex acid liquid obtained in the dry distillation of wood, and containing large quantities of acetic acid; hence, specifically, acetic acid. Formerly called
HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results 2. Wood, Mrs Henry (18141887)(born Ellen Price) The Hutchinson Dictionary ofthe Arts; January 1, 1998 include the melodramatic East Lynne 1861. http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_dictiona
The Lost Continent Of - You Have Destroyed My Machine! PG (Pelham Grenville), 18811975 Wolf, Emma, 1865-1932 Wollstonecraft, Mary, 1759-1797Wood, Eugene, 1840-1923 Wood, Henry, Mrs., 1814-1887 Wood, Robert http://www.lost.co.nz/main/library/gutenauth.html