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         Eliot George:     more books (100)
  1. The Lifted Veil by George Eliot, 2010-07-24
  2. Brother Jacob by George Eliot, 2009-07-01
  3. Four Novels of George Eliot (Wordsworth Special Editions) by George Eliot, 2005-09-05
  4. The Mill on the Floss by George Eliot, 2008-01-01
  5. George Eliot in Love by Brenda Maddox, 2010-09-28
  6. George Eliot by Jenny Uglow, 2009-01-01
  7. Middlemarch by George Eliot, 2006-12-01
  8. Daniel Deronda (Oxford World's Classics) by George Eliot, 2009-04-15
  9. Middlemarch (Oxford World's Classics) by George Eliot, 2008-09-01
  10. Silas Marner: The Weaver of Raveloe by George Eliot, 2010-02-22
  11. George Eliot and the Politics of National Inheritance by Bernard Semmel, 1994-03-31
  12. Silas Marner: The Weaver of Raveloe (Oxford World's Classics) by George Eliot, 2009-03-01
  13. The Cambridge Companion to George Eliot (Cambridge Companions to Literature)
  14. Selected Essays, Poems, and Other Writings (Penguin Classics) by George Eliot, 1991-03-05

1. Eliot
George EliotGeorge. Henry Lewes Studies. Editor William Baker, Northern Illinois University. Associate Editor Kenneth Womack, Penn State Altoona. Advisory Board Andrew Brown, Magdalene College, Cambridge University. K. J. The Editors invite contributions on any aspect. of George Eliot, George Henry Lewes, or the
http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/k/a/kaw16/Eliot.htm

2. George Eliot
George Eliot. ( Mary Ann Evans) ( 181980) The George Eliot Hyper-Concordance. The George Eliot Fellowship. Secretary Mrs Kathleen Adams. 71 Stepping Stones Road. Coventry CV5 8JT. U.K. Telephone
http://lang.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~matsuoka/Eliot.html
George Eliot
(Mary Ann Evans)
Pictures of George Eliot
Younger
Older Portrait The George Eliot Hyper-Concordance ... Daniel Deronda (e-text)
The George Eliot Fellowship
Secretary: Mrs Kathleen Adams
71 Stepping Stones Road
Coventry CV5 8JT
U.K.
Telephone: (+44) (0)1203 592231
The George Eliot Fellowship of Japan
  • Founded on 22 November 1997.
  • President: Shizuko Kawamoto
  • Hon. Sec.: Kimiaki Hara (Nihon University)
Contact Details
  • Tomoko Kanda
  • Department of English , College of Humanities and Sciences, Nihon University, 3-25-40, Sakurajosui, Setagaya, Tokyo 156-8550, Japan
  • Tel: (+81) (0)3-5317-9709
  • Fax: (+81) (0)3-5317-9336
  • E-mail:
The idea of God, so far as it has been a high spiritual influence, is the ideal of a goodness entirely human. (Letter to the Hon. Mrs H. F. Ponsonby, 10 December 1874) We do not expect people to be deeply moved by what is not unusual. That element of tragedy which lies in the very fact of frequency, has not yet wrought itself into the coarse emotion of mankind; and perhaps our frames could hardly bear much of it. ( Middlemarch bk. 2, ch. 20)

3. George Eliot
George Eliot. (Mary Ann Evans). (181980). Pictures Portrait The George EliotHyper-Concordance. Daniel Deronda (e-text). The George Eliot Fellowship.
http://www.lang.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~matsuoka/Eliot.html
George Eliot
(Mary Ann Evans)
Pictures of George Eliot
Younger
Older Portrait The George Eliot Hyper-Concordance ... Daniel Deronda (e-text)
The George Eliot Fellowship
Secretary: Mrs Kathleen Adams
71 Stepping Stones Road
Coventry CV5 8JT
U.K.
Telephone: (+44) (0)1203 592231
The George Eliot Fellowship of Japan
  • Founded on 22 November 1997.
  • President: Shizuko Kawamoto
  • Hon. Sec.: Kimiaki Hara (Nihon University)
Contact Details
  • Tomoko Kanda
  • Department of English , College of Humanities and Sciences, Nihon University, 3-25-40, Sakurajosui, Setagaya, Tokyo 156-8550, Japan
  • Tel: (+81) (0)3-5317-9709
  • Fax: (+81) (0)3-5317-9336
  • E-mail:
The idea of God, so far as it has been a high spiritual influence, is the ideal of a goodness entirely human. (Letter to the Hon. Mrs H. F. Ponsonby, 10 December 1874) We do not expect people to be deeply moved by what is not unusual. That element of tragedy which lies in the very fact of frequency, has not yet wrought itself into the coarse emotion of mankind; and perhaps our frames could hardly bear much of it. ( Middlemarch bk. 2, ch. 20)

4. George Eliot
George Eliot. Tools and Options. Mary Ann Evans (George Eliot) was born in ChilversCoton, Warwickshire. Her father was a carpenter who rose to be a land agent.
http://www.classicreader.com/author.php/aut.67/
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Victorian writer, a humane freethinker, whose insightful psychological novels paved way to modern character portrayals - contemporary of Dostoevsky (1821-1881), who at the same time in Russia developed similar narrative techniques. Eliot's liaison with the married writer and editor George Henry Lewes arise among the rigid Victorians much indignation, which calmed down with the progress of her literary fame. "Marriage, which has been the bourne of so many narratives, is still a great beginning, as it was to Adam and Eve, who kept their honeymoon in Eden, but had their first little one among the thorns and thistles of the wilderness. It is still the beginning of the home epic - the gradual conquest or irremediable loss of that complete union which makes the advancing years as a climax, and age the harvest of sweet memories in common." (from Middlemarch Mary Ann Evans (George Eliot) was born in Chilvers Coton, Warwickshire. Her father was a carpenter who rose to be a land agent. When she was a few months old, the family moved to Griff, a 'cheerful red-brick, ivory-covered house', and there Eliot spent 21 years of his life among people that he later depicted in her novels. She was educated at home and in several schools, and developed a strong evangelical piety at Mrs. Wallington's School at Neneaton. However, later Eliot rejected her dogmatic faith. When her mother died in 1836, she took charge of the family household. In 1841 she moved with her father to Coventry, where she lived with him until his death in 1849. During this time she met Charles Bray, a free-thinking Coventry manufacturer. His wife, Caroline (Cara) was the sister of Charles Hennel, the author of a work entitled

5. George Eliot - Books And Biography
Read Print George eliot george Eliot. Search within all works by George Eliot.To read literature by George Eliot, select from the list on the left.
http://www.readprint.com/author-35/George-Eliot
Fiction

Read Print
George Eliot
George Eliot
Search within all works by George Eliot
To read literature by George Eliot, select from the list on the left. George Eliot (1819-1880)
is regarded as one of the greatest Victorian novelists, especially noted for her insightful psychological characterization.
Mary Ann Evans (George Eliot) was born in Chilvers Coton, Warwickshire. Her father was a carpenter who rose to be a land agent. She was educated at home and in several schools, and developed a strong evangelical piety. However, later Eliot rejected her dogmatic faith. When her mother died in 1836, she took charge of the family household. In 1841 she moved with her father to Coventry, where she lived with him until his death in 1849. After her father's death, Eliot traveled around Europe. She settled in London and took up work as sub editor of Westminster Review.
Under Eliot's control the Westminster Review enjoyed success. She became the center of a literary circle, one of whose members was George Henry Lewes, who would be her companion until his death in 1878. Lewes's wife was mentally unbalanced and she had already had two children by another man. In 1854 Eliot went to Germany with Lewes. Their unconventional union caused some difficulties because Lewes was still married and he was unable to obtain divorce.
Eliot's first collection of tales Scenes Of Clerical Life , appeared in 1858 under the pseudonym George Eliot. It was followed by her first novel

6. Quotes - George Eliot , George Eliot Quotations, George Eliot Sayings - Famous Q
George Eliot Quotes, George Eliot Quotations, George Eliot Sayings Famous Quotes About reverence. George Eliot. Friendship
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These quotes have been contributed and attributed by members of the Famous Quotes and Famous Sayings Network and many were previously posted to The Famous Quotes Mailing List. Please let me know if you find any errors or omissions or if you want to contribute. I like not only to be loved, but also to be told that I am loved. I am not sure that you are of the same mind. But the realm of silence is large enough beyond the grave. This is the world of light and speech, and I shall take leave to tell you that you are very dear
George Eliot No soul is desolate as long as there is a human being for whom it can feel trust and reverence.

7. WIEM: Eliot George
eliot george wlasciwie Mary Ann Evans (18191880), powiesciopisarkaangielska. Literatura, Wielka Brytania eliot george (1819-1880).
http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/00f0ea.html
WIEM 2004 - zobacz now± edycjê encyklopedii! Kup abonament i encyklopediê na CD-ROM, sprawd¼ ofertê cenow±!
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Prace redakcyjne nad edycj± 2001 zosta³y zakoñczone. Zapraszamy do korzystania z nowej, codziennie aktualizowanej i wzbogacanej w nowe tre¶ci edycji WIEM 2004 Literatura, Wielka Brytania
Eliot George
Eliot George w³a¶ciwie Mary Ann Evans (1819-1880), powie¶ciopisarka angielska. Wychowana na prowincji w surowych zasadach protestantyzmu , z czasem sta³a siê zwolenniczk± racjonalizmu oraz pozytywistycznego liberalizmu J.S. MillemH. Spencerem Posiada³a wszechstronne, samodzielnie zdobyte wykszta³cenie. Powie¶ci na wysokim poziomie artystycznym, podejmuj±ce problemy ¿ycia prowincji i emancypacji kobiet, pe³ne pog³êbionych analiz psychologicznych, np.: Adam Bede (1859, wydanie polskie 1891-1892), M³yn nad Flos± (1860, wydanie polskie 1960), Silas Marner (1861, wydanie polskie 1960). WIEM zosta³a opracowana na podstawie Popularnej Encyklopedii Powszechnej Wydawnictwa Fogra zobacz wszystkie serwisy do góry

8. George Eliot :: Biographie Bibliographie Livres De Ou Sur George Eliot
Translate this page Commandez ! amazon.fr, Adam bede eliot george. amazon.fr, The mill on the flosseliot george. amazon.fr, La conversion de jeanne. scènes de l eliot george.
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9. LE NOVITA
Translate this page eliot george. Libri di eliot george pubblicati da Garzanti Middlemarch.Directory Autori. a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h. i, j, k, l, m, n, o, p. q, r,s, t, u, v, w, x. y, z.
http://www.garzantilibri.it/autori_main.php?page=schedaautore&CPID=201

10. Dr. Karen Droisen: George Eliot
George Eliot, The Mill on the Floss (1862). Read the novel. BibliomaniaPrinceton University. Get the snapshots. George Eliot Sites.
http://www.unlv.edu/faculty/droisen/eliot.html
Dr. Karen A. Droisen
Department of English
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
KDroisen@hotmail.com
George Eliot, The Mill on the Floss
Read the novel. Bibliomania Princeton University Get the snapshots. George Eliot Sites The George Eliot Page
Includes a chronology and collection of links to selected sites on or related to George Eliot. Brown University's Victorian Web: George Eliot
Includes background information, links to related sites, a brief biography, a chronology, and commentary on some of Eliot's work. Many links are no longer active, however.
Concordances.com: searchable concordances to the works of George Eliot and many other authors. Also includes an on-line dictionary, thesaurus, and assorted search engines. Read Eliot's essay, "Silly Novels by Lady Novelists". The Wit and Wisdom of George Eliot: a fan page of favorite quotations. Includes a fairly comprehensive set of web links to other Eliot sites. A letter from Eliot describing Charles Dickens. Related Sites Visit Warwickshire, Eliot's childhood home.

11. George Fielding Eliot
eliot george FIELDING. Shoup,L. Minter,W. Imperial Brain Trust. 1977(121). pages cited this search 1 Order hard copy of these pages
http://www.namebase.org/xedf/George-Fielding-Eliot.html
ELIOT GEORGE FIELDING
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12. DVD Videos Music Games Maps Gifts Bargain Books
Your search for eliot+george yielded 110 results using author Displayingresults 1 to 25. 1. Mill on the Floss, The Eliot, George
http://www.countrybookshop.co.uk/cgi-bin/search.pl?searchtype=author&searchtext=

13. A Chronological List By Date Of Publication Of George Eliot's Novels, Short Stor
Text search engine and links to full versions.
http://www.princeton.edu/~batke/eliot/
CHRONOLOGICAL LIST BY DATE OF PUBLICATION OF GEORGE ELIOT'S NOVELS, SHORT STORIES AND POEMS
click here to search all Eliot novels (LONG FORM) click here to search all Eliot novels (SHORT FORM) Scenes of Clerical Life.
Adam Bede.
...
Felix Holt, The Radical.

1868 The Spanish Gypsy.
Middlemarch.

1876 Daniel Deronda.
1869 Agatha. (Later included in The Legend of Jubal and Other Poems. 1874.)
1869 Brother and Sister.
1869 How Lisa Loved the King.
1870 The Legend of Jubal.
1871 Armgart. 1874 Arion. 1874 A Minor Prophet. 1874 Stradivarius. 1878 A College Breakfast Party. (Reprinted in The Legend of Jubal and Other Poems. 2nd edition. 1879.) 1879 The Death of Moses. 1879 Impressions of Theophrastus Such. 1919 Early Essays. (Dating from the period of about 1846. Three essays only included in the Dictionary.)

14. George Eliot
eliot The Last Victorian by Kathryn Hughes (1999) Museums Arbury Hall in Warwickshire,Nuneaton CV10 7PT, former home of george eliot - george Henry Lewes
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/gelliot.htm
Choose another writer in this calendar: by name:
A
B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback George Eliot (1819-1880) - pseudonym for Mary Ann Cross, also Marian Evans, original surname Evans Victorian writer, a humane freethinker, whose insightful psychological novels paved way to modern character portrayals - contemporary of Dostoevsky (1821-1881), who at the same time in Russia developed similar narrative techniques. Eliot's liaison with the married writer and editor George Henry Lewes arise among the rigid Victorians much indignation, which calmed down with the progress of her literary fame. "Marriage, which has been the bourne of so many narratives, is still a great beginning, as it was to Adam and Eve, who kept their honeymoon in Eden, but had their first little one among the thorns and thistles of the wilderness. It is still the beginning of the home epic - the gradual conquest or irremediable loss of that complete union which makes the advancing years as a climax, and age the harvest of sweet memories in common." (from Middlemarch Mary Ann Evans (George Eliot) was born in Chilvers Coton, Warwickshire. Her father was a carpenter who rose to be a land agent. When she was a few months old, the family moved to Griff, a 'cheerful red-brick, ivory-covered house', and there Eliot spent 21 years of his life among people that he later depicted in her novels. She was educated at home and in several schools, and developed a strong evangelical piety at Mrs. Wallington's School at Neneaton. However, later Eliot rejected her dogmatic faith. When her mother died in 1836, she took charge of the family household. In 1841 she moved with her father to Coventry, where she lived with him until his death in 1849. During this time she met Charles Bray, a free-thinking Coventry manufacturer. His wife, Caroline (Cara) was the sister of Charles Hennel, the author of a work entitled

15. George Eliot: An Overview
Biography Works. History Politics Religion Science Technology.Genre Literature Visual Arts Themes. Characterization Imagery
http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/eliot/eliotov.html

16. ClassicNotes: George Eliot
Biography of george eliot written by Harvard students. Biography of george eliot. george eliot was the pseudonym of Mary Anne Evans, born in 1819 in small transformation into the fiction writer george eliot began in 1856, when Mary
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Biography of George Eliot
George Eliot was the pseudonym of Mary Anne Evans, born in 1819 in small-town England, and the youngest of five children. Mary Anne was afforded the privileges of a private education, and enjoyed books and learning from a young age; she was introspective and quiet, much like her character Dorothea from Middlemarch, and was a bit of an anomaly among young women of the time. However, Mary Anne had to leave school at the age of 19, when her mother died in early 1839. However, her father still continued to indulge her love of learning, purchasing books for her and helping her learn German and Italian. In 1841, Mary Anne's father moved them to the larger town of Foleshill, where Mary Anne met Charles and Cara Bray, who would be good friends of hers for some time to come. Through the Brays, Mary Anne met others who would become close friends, and was even introduced to Ralph Waldo Emerson. However, Mary Anne soon became very self-conscious about her unconventionality among this more accepting group of friends. She also began to renounce her faith in Christianity, which caused distance between Mary Anne and her father. Mr. Evans died in 1849, leaving Mary Anne little money in his will. Through the Brays, she met John Chapman, a publisher and bookseller from London. Chapman and Mary Anne became good friends, and soon he asked Mary Anne to become the behind-the-scenes editor for the Westminster Review. Mary Anne worked at the Review for two years, despite getting no credit for her work. In 1851, Mary Anne met George Henry Lewes, and they soon became romantically involved. Though Lewes was already married, he and his wife had been separated for some years, and his wife was already living with another man; Lewes and Mary Anne soon decided to live together as husband and wife, despite the scandal it would cause.

17. George Eliot - Free Online Library
george eliot online books, eliot, george Free Online Library - george eliot Adam Bede, george eliot Brother Jacob, george eliot The Lifted Veil, george eliot Middlemarch, george eliot The Mill
http://eliot.thefreelibrary.com/
Library George Eliot Dictionary
George Eliot
George Eliot was the pen name of Mary Anne Evans, who was born in Warwickshire, England in 1819. She spent her early life in the country, nursing a sick father, and beginning to develop the ideas that she would later explore in her writing. After the death of Mr. Evans, she travelled through Europe and eventually moved to London, where she became the editor of the “Westminster Review”. There she met George Henry Lewes, a married man at the time, who would be her companion until his death in 1878. In 1856, she decided to try her hand at writing fiction, something she had always wanted to do. With encouragement from Lewes, she wrote what later became SCENES OF CLERICAL LIFE. It was published in 1857, under the name of George Eliot. ADAM BEDE, the following year, became a huge sensation in the literary world. When the author’s identity was discovered, her publisher was afraid to print her next work because of the controversy surrounding the Lewes’ marriage. However, his fears proved unfounded, and George Eliot continued writing. She produced several other books, of which the most famous is MIDDLEMARCH, a tale of life in a fictional English midlands town before the Reform Bill of 1832. Lewes passed away in 1878, and after mourning him for two years Evans accepted the proposal of John Cross, a man twenty years her junior. In 1880, after only seven months of marriage, George Eliot died of a sudden illness. She left behind her a legacy as a humane freethinker, and the author of novels that paved the way for modern character portrayals.

18. George Eliot: Biography
george eliot Biography. From Mary Anne Evans. to george eliot. Mary Anne Evans The Early Years . The World of Ideas . Alone . george Henry Lewes " Married" Life . george eliot Is Born . Alone Again modulated, musical voice, which impressed everyone who knew george eliot in later years" (Haight, GEB 11). At Miss
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/english/eliot/middlemarch/bio.html
    Henry James said of Eliot, "She is magnificently uglydeliciously hideous...in this vast ugliness resides a most powerful beauty which, in a very few minutes steals forth and charms the mind, so that you end as I ended, in falling in love with her."
    George Eliot: Biography
    From Mary Anne Evans
    to George Eliot
    Mary Anne Evans: The Early Years
    The World of Ideas

    Alone

    George Henry Lewes
    ...
    Alone Again

    Mary Anne Evans: The Early Years
    Mary Anne Evans (1)
    was born at South Farm, Arbury, on November 22, 1819. The youngest child of Robert Evans and Christiana Pearson Evans, she had four siblings: Robert, Fanny, Chrissy, and Isaac. Mary Anne shared an especially close relationship with her brother Isaac they were inseparable playmates. However, in 1824, Isaac was sent to school at Foleshill, and Mary Anne was sent to Miss Latham's boarding school. At Miss Lathim's, missing the companionship and comfort of her brother, Mary Anne first turned to books as a source of amusement. Those who knew her found Mary Anne a serious, sensitive, and introspective child. She had straight light-brown hair and a plain face. Mathilde Blind described her as "a queer, three-cornered, awkward girl, who sat in corners and shyly watched her elders" (qtd. in Haight GEB In 1828, after finishing at Miss Latham's, Mary Anne was sent to Mrs. Wallington's Boarding School at Nuneaton. It was at Mrs. Wallington's that she met the woman who was to be the most influential figure of her early life, Miss Maria Lewis. Maria Lewis, a kind woman with strong evangelical beliefs, was a governess at the school. She took an immediate interest in the shy Mary Anne, and marking the exceptional quality of the child's mind, took it upon herself to foster it. By the time Mary Anne was thirteen, she had learned all that Mrs. Wallington's school had to offer. When she left, however, she maintained a close relationship with Miss Lewis a relationship they kept up for nearly fourteen years. Upon leaving Miss Wallington's, Mary Anne attended Miss Franklin's school at Coventry. It was here that Mary Anne worked to rid herself of her Midland accent and cultivated the "low, well-modulated, musical voice, which impressed everyone who knew George Eliot in later years" (Haight

19. Coventry And Warwickshire Network CWN - George Eliot By Kathleen Adams
george eliot A WOMAN IN ADVANCE OF HER TIME. Kathleen Adams is Secretary ofthe george eliot Fellowship 71, Stepping Stones Road, Coventry CV5 8JT.
http://www.coventry.org.uk/heritage2/people/eliot/kaeliot.htm
George Eliot
A WOMAN IN ADVANCE OF HER TIME A Short Pen Picture by Kathleen Adams A farmhouse tucked away within the park at Arbury Hall near Nuneaton was the birthplace of Mary Ann Evans in 1819. Her father Robert Evans was agent to the Newdegate family at Arbury and when Mary Ann was four months old the family moved to Griff House on the edge of the estate. Here Mary Ann had a very happy childhood with her pretty sister Chrissey and her beloved brother Isaac. She and Chrissey went to boarding school in Nuneaton until Mary Ann was moved, at the age of 13, to a boarding school in Coventry at 29 Warwick Row. She did very well at the Coventry school and remained there until she was 16. At this point her mother died and Mary Ann was with the family at Griff at this sad time. She and Chrissey ran the house between them although it is clear that Robert Evans relied upon his youngest daughter in many things, particularly when Chrissey married and went to live at Meriden. Mary Ann had been a bright scholar at all of her schools and was now having lessons from teachers who went out to Griff from Coventry and Leamington. Robert Evans retired to Coventry in 1841, taking Mary Ann with him and leaving Isaac at Griff to take over his father's job at Arbury. A new life was beginning for Mary Ann at their new home at Foleshill and she was making new and influential friends, including the Coventry ribbon manufacturer, Charles Bray and his wife Caroline who lived at 'Rosehill' on Radford Road. In their home Mary Ann met men of letters the like of whom she would never have met in Nuneaton, and in a stimulating intellectual circle she blossomed, writing articles for Bray's Coventry Herald newspaper. The previously devout Mary Ann had already had religious doubts and in this new circle she realised her faith had gone. She refused to attend Holy Trinity Church with her father, causing great distress within her family, only resolved because of the pain she was causing her father. She went back to church with him but reserved the right to think her own thoughts during the service!

20. UTEL: George Eliot, By Leslie Stephen (1902)
Full online text of Stephen's 1902 study of the author.
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/utel/criticism/stephenl_geliot/geliot_titlepage.h
UTEL History of English English Composition Literary Authors ... Literary Criticism
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George Eliot (1902)
by Leslie Stephen
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  • Electronic Source: Originally scanned for UTEL.
  • Printed Source: First edition (London: Macmillan and Co., 1902; reprinted 1913).
  • Recommended Critical Editions: none available.
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Acknowledgements
The University of Toronto English Library is a project of the Department of English and the Faculty of Arts and Science, funded by the Provost's Electronic Courseware Fund. UTEL was created by Ian Lancashire, Christopher Douglas, and Dennis G. Jerz. We wish to thank the University of Toronto Information Commons, and the members of the Centre for Academic Technology, especially John Bradley, Ian Graham, and Allen Forsyth.
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This text was scanned by Sharine Leung for UTEL from a University of Toronto library copy of a 1913 reprint of the 1902 text. The HTML text was created from the scanned text and edited by Marc Plamondon. The text here is as close to the original text as possible.

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