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Books with title The Spanish Letters

  • The Letters

    Kazumi Yumoto, Cathy Hirano

    School & Library Binding (San Val, Nov. 16, 2003)
    None
  • THE LETTERS

    JANE AUSTEN

    eBook
    This edition of Jane Austen's letters was edited by Fanny Knight's son Edward Hugessen Knatchbull-Hugessen (the first Baron Brabourne, lived 1829-1893), and was published in 1884. It's neither complete (about two thirds of the letters now known to have survived are included), nor are the texts of the letters necessarily always transcribed with minute scholarly fidelity, but it's out of copyright, and includes many annotations and quaint comments on the letters. (The latest edition of
  • The Letters

    Martin Kelly

    Imaginary beings, including the A women and the Y men, play the beautiful game, at night, while children sleep.
  • THE SPANISH PAPERS

    Washington Irving

    None
  • The Spanish Letters

    Hunter, No Illustrations

    Hardcover (Funk & Wagnalls, Aug. 16, 1964)
    None
  • The Letters

    Jane Austen

    Paperback (Jazzybee Verlag, April 27, 2016)
    The letters included in this series comprise about three quarters of the collection in two volumes published in 1884 by her great-nephew Lord Brabourne. The lightness, almost friskiness, of their tone cannot fail to strike the reader. Modern letters written by women are filled more or less with hints and queries; questionings as to the why and the wherefore occur; allusions to the various "fads" of the day, literary or artistic, Ibsen, Tolstoi, Browning, Esoteric Buddhism, Wagner's Music, the Mind Cure, Social Science, Causes and Reforms. But Cowper and Crabbe were the poetical sensations in Miss Austen's time, Scott and Byron its phenomenal novelties; it took months to get most books printed, and years to persuade anybody to read them. Furthermore the letters, in all probability, are carefully chosen to reveal only the more superficial side of their writer.
  • THE LETTERS

    JANE AUSTEN

    (, May 31, 2020)
    This edition of Jane Austen's letters was edited by Fanny Knight's son Edward Hugessen Knatchbull-Hugessen (the first Baron Brabourne, lived 1829-1893), and was published in 1884. It's neither complete (about two thirds of the letters now known to have survived are included), nor are the texts of the letters necessarily always transcribed with minute scholarly fidelity, but it's out of copyright, and includes many annotations and quaint comments on the letters. (The latest edition of