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Books published by publisher Macmillan And Co. Limited

  • Paddle your own canoe

    LORD BADEN-POWELL

    Hardcover (Macmillan And Co, Limited, Jan. 1, 1939)
    None
  • The Heroes Or Greek Fairy Tales

    Charles Kingsley

    Hardcover (Macmillan and Co. Limited, Aug. 16, 1908)
    None
  • The Magic City

    E. Nesbit

    Hardcover (Macmillan and Co, Limited, Jan. 1, 1980)
    None
  • The Renaissance

    Walter Pater

    Hardcover (Macmillan and Co., Limited, March 15, 1922)
    None
  • The dove in the eagle's nest,

    Charlotte Mary Yonge

    Hardcover (Macmillan and Co., Limited, March 15, 1909)
    None
  • The River Of Adventure

    Enid Blyton

    Hardcover (Macmillan & Co Limited, March 15, 1956)
    None
  • Jude the Obscure

    Thomas HARDY

    Hardcover (Macmillan and Co., Limited, Jan. 1, 1951)
    None
  • The Second Jungle Book. With Decorations By J. Lockwood Kipling, C.I.E.

    Rudyard Kipling

    Leather Bound (Macmillan And Co., Limited, Jan. 1, 1926)
    None
  • The Renaissance; Studies in Art and Poetry

    Walter Pater

    Hardcover (Macmillan and co., limited, March 15, 1925)
    Physical description; xv, 238 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. Subjects; Pater, Walter - Criticism and interpretation. Renaissance.
  • Puck of Pook's Hill

    Rudyard Kipling

    Hardcover (Macmillan and Co., Limited, Aug. 16, 1906)
    None
  • The Sacred Tree: the tree in religion and myth

    J. H. Philpot

    (London MACMILLAN AND CO, Nov. 5, 2014)
    The reader is requested to bear in mind that this volume lays no claim to scholarship, independent research, or originality of view. Its aim has been to select and collate, from sources not always easily accessible to the general reader, certain facts and conclusions bearing upon a subject of acknowledged interest. In so dealing with one of the many modes of primitive religion, it is perhaps inevitable that the writer should seem to exaggerate its importance, and in isolating a given series of data to undervalue the significance of the parallel facts from which they are severed. It is undeniable that the worship of the spirit-inhabited tree has usually, if not always, been linked with, and in many cases overshadowed by other cults; that sun, moon, and stars, sacred springs and stones, holy mountains, and animals of the most diverse kind, have all been approached with singular impartiality by primitive man, as enshrining or symbolising a divine principle. But no other form of pagan ritual has been so widely distributed, has left behind it such persistent traces, or appeals so closely to modern sympathies as the worship of the tree; of none is the study better calculated to throw light on the dark ways of primitive thought, or to arouse general interest in a branch of research which is as vigorous and fruitful as it is new. For these reasons, in spite of obvious disadvantages, its separate treatment has seemed to the writer to be completely justifiable.
  • Mathematical Recreations and Essays

    W.W. Rouse Ball

    Hardcover (Macmillan And Co., Limited, March 15, 1928)
    None