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Books in Everyman's Library series

  • The last days of Pompeii

    Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton

    Hardcover (Dent, March 15, 1925)
    None
  • Reprinted Pieces

    Charles Dickens

    Hardcover (Dutton Adult, March 31, 1970)
    Dust jacket marked and worn, page egdes tanned. Shipped from the U.K. All orders received before 3pm sent that weekday.
  • Tales of Mystery and Imagination

    Edgar Allan Poe

    Hardcover (Dutton Adult, March 1, 1955)
    None
  • Doctor Thorne

    Anthony Trollope

    (Everyman's Library, Sept. 16, 1993)
    In the third novel of the Barsetshire series, Trollope continues his study of a small cathedral city and the surrounding rural community which he presents as a microcosm of nineteenth-century England. Through each of the Barsershire novels can be read on its own, the six together present an incomparable portrait of life and manners in the quiet but troubled heart of a great nation at the zenith of its prosperity. DOCTOR THORNE revolves round the characters of the doctor and his niece, Mary, but the complex social life of which they are a part, ranging in scope from great houses to poor cottages, is almost more important than individual characters. If God is in the details, these novels are indeed divine.
  • Arthurian Romances

    Chretien De Troyes

    Paperback (Everyman Paperbacks, July 15, 1990)
    None
  • Can You Forgive Her?

    Anthony Trollope

    Hardcover (Everyman's Library, Oct. 18, 1994)
    Anthony Trollope's stock-in-trade was the life of the great drawing rooms of mid-Victorian England, where the thirst for wealth and political power and the need for love continually formed and reformed in unexpected, illuminating combinations. Can You Forgive Her?, the story of Alice Vavasor, her conundrums in love, and her confusions about the rights and duties of a modern, is the first novel in his magnificent Palliser series; it is energized on every page by the affectionate and ironic delight Trollope felt in observing the entanglements of his splendid characters. (Book Jacket Status: Not Jacketed)
  • Troilus and Criseyde

    John (ed) CHAUCER, Geoffrey / WARRINGTON

    Hardcover (Dent, Jan. 1, 1969)
    Excerpt: ...me, that coude leest deserve Of hem that nombred been un-to thy grace, Hast holpen, ther I lykly was to sterve, 1270 And me bistowed in so heygh a place That thilke boundes may no blisse pace, I can no more, but laude and reverence Be to thy bounte and thyn excellence!' And therwith-al Criseyde anoon he kiste, 1275 Of which, certeyn, she felte no disese, And thus seyde he, Now wolde god I wiste, Myn herte swete, how I yow mighte plese! What man,' quod he, was ever thus at ese As I, on whiche the faireste and the beste 1280 That ever I say, deyneth hir herte reste. Here may men seen that mercy passeth right; The experience of that is felt in me, That am unworthy to so swete a wight. But herte myn, of your benignitee, 1285 So thenketh, though that I unworthy be, Yet mot I nede amenden in som wyse, Right thourgh the vertu of your heyghe servyse. And for the love of god, my lady dere, Sin god hath wrought me for I shal yow serve, 1290 As thus I mene, that ye wol be my stere, To do me live, if that yow liste, or sterve, So techeth me how that I may deserve Your thank, so that I, thurgh myn ignoraunce, Ne do no-thing that yow be displesaunce. 1295 For certes, fresshe wommanliche wyf, This dar I seye, that trouthe and diligence, That shal ye finden in me al my lyf, Ne wol not, certeyn, breken your defence; And if I do, present or in absence, 1300 For love of god, lat slee me with the dede, If that it lyke un-to your womanhede.' Y-wis,' quod she, myn owne hertes list, My ground of ese, and al myn herte dere, Graunt mercy, for on that is al my trist; 1305 But late us falle awey fro this matere; For it suffyseth, this that seyd is here. And at o word, with-outen repentaunce, Wel-come, my knight, my pees, my suffisaunce!' Of hir delyt, or Ioyes oon the leste 1310 Were impossible to my wit to seye; But iuggeth, ye that han ben at the feste, Of swich gladnesse, if that hem liste pleye! I can no more, but thus thise ilke tweye That night, be-twixen dreed and...
  • Dr. Thorne

    Anthony Trollope

    Hardcover (Chatto & Windus, Jan. 16, 1987)
    Doctor Thorne (Everyman's Library) [hardcover] Trollope, Anthony [Jan 01, 1967]
  • Under the Greenwood Tree

    Thomas Hardy

    Paperback (Everyman Paperbacks, Feb. 15, 1997)
    The love of a rustic Romeo for a femme fatale of the fields; the motley village band which acts a raucous chorus to their romance; the skylarking boys who dam a subterranean stream, and manipulate the destiny of a community. Hardy has pierced irrationalities of existence and the blind perversity of human nature, sketching his vision here through quirks of character and absurd ironies of fortune.
  • Brighton Rock

    Graham Greene

    Hardcover (Everyman's Library, March 11, 1993)
    Graham Greene's classic study in the banality of evil is set in the unforgettably evoked underworld of pre-war Brighton where Pinkie, a small-time ganster, meets his nemesis at the hands of Ida, the girl he betrays, Published in 1938, Greene's most celebrated novel signalled the beginning of the long series of masterpieces produced between then and his death in 1991
  • The Arabian Nights II: Sindbad and Other Popular Stories

    Everyman's Library, Husain Haddawy

    Hardcover (Everyman's Library, Oct. 20, 1998)
    (Book Jacket Status: Jacketed)Full of mischief and valor, ribaldry and romance, The Arabian Nights is a work that has enthralled readers for centuries.The origins of The Arabian Nights are obscure. About a thousand years ago a vast number of stories in Arabic from various countries began to be brought together; only much later was the collection called The Arabian Nights or the Thousand and One Nights.
  • The travels of Marco Polo the Venetian

    Marco Polo

    Hardcover (New York, Dutton, March 15, 1908)
    None