Browse all books

Books with title The Sorrows of Satan

  • The Sorrows of Satan

    Marie Corelli, Cloud Cover Classics

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 21, 2017)
    The Sorrows of Satan by Marie Corelli, 1895.
  • The Sorrows of Satan

    Marie Corelli

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Dec. 3, 2015)
    Marie Corelli was a 19th century British novelist best known for her Victorian titles and Christian themes. In her day, she was more widely read than popular contemporaries like Rudyard Kipling and Arthur Conan Doyle.
  • The Sorrows of Satan

    Marie Corelli

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, April 2, 2017)
    The Sorrows of Satan is an 1895 faustian novel by Marie Corelli. It is widely regarded as one of the world's first bestsellers, partly due to an upheaval in the system British libraries used to purchase their books and partly due to its popular appeal. Roundly condemned by critics for Corelli's moralistic and prosaic style it nonetheless had strong supporters in Oscar Wilde and various members of royalty. Widely ignored in literary circles, it is increasingly regarded as an influential fin de siècle text. The book is occasionally subtitled "Or the Strange Experience of one Geoffrey Tempest, Millionaire".
  • The Sorrows of Satan

    Marie Corelli

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Feb. 13, 2017)
    The Sorrows of Satan is an 1895 faustian novel by Marie Corelli. It is widely regarded as one of the world's first bestsellers, partly due to an upheaval in the system British libraries used to purchase their books and partly due to its popular appeal. Roundly condemned by critics for Corelli's moralistic and prosaic style it nonetheless had strong supporters in Oscar Wilde and various members of royalty. Widely ignored in literary circles, it is increasingly regarded as an influential fin de siècle text. The book is occasionally subtitled "Or the Strange Experience of one Geoffrey Tempest, Millionaire".
  • The Sorrows of Satan

    Marie Corelli

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, May 27, 2015)
    "Do you know what it is to be poor? Not poor with the arrogant poverty complained of by certain people who have five or six thousand a year to live upon, and who yet swear they can hardly manage to make both ends meet, but really poor,—downright, cruelly, hideously poor, with a poverty that is graceless, sordid and miserable? Poverty that compels you to dress in your one suit of clothes till it is worn threadbare,—that denies you clean linen on account of the ruinous charges of washerwomen,—that robs you of your own self-respect, and causes you to slink along the streets vaguely abashed, instead of walking erect among your fellow-men in independent ease,—this is the sort of poverty I mean. This is the grinding curse that keeps down noble aspiration under a load of ignoble care; this is the moral cancer that eats into the heart of an otherwise well-intentioned human creature and makes him envious and malignant, and inclined to the use of dynamite..."
  • The Sorrows of Satan

    Marie Corelli

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, April 11, 2014)
    The Sorrows of Satan is an 1895 faustian novel by Marie Corelli. It is widely regarded as one of the world's first bestsellers, partly due to an upheaval in the system British libraries used to purchase their books and partly due to its popular appeal. Roundly condemned by critics for Corelli's moralistic and prosaic style it nonetheless had strong supporters in Oscar Wilde and various members of royalty. Widely ignored in literary circles, it is increasingly regarded as an influential fin de siècle text. The book is occasionally subtitled "Or the Strange Experience of one Geoffrey Tempest, Millionaire".
  • The Spring of Sorrows

    H.V. Fisher

    language (, Jan. 18, 2014)
    The second book of the Faerie King Quartet offers the same mix of action and excitement as its predecessor, but more romance as Pete and Tarquin continue to vie for Sophelia’s affections and also get involved in some diplomatic sparring.Book 2 picks up the story with Tarquin helping to lead the fight against the Invaders who are overrunning the Greene Land. With the Fairy Prince, he captures an important centre for enemy recruitment where mesmerised Greene Landers are ‘processed’ so that they will fight for the Invasion. Things do not go their way for long, though, and soon they face defeat in several set-piece battles where their vulnerability to the Bards’ enchantment leaves them seemingly without hope. The Greene Landers are desperately short of fighting men so Tarquin and the Prince embark on the near hopeless task of persuading the King of Nothgarth to join them in the War.Pete arrives in Nothgarth to learn that the only thing that will bring the Noths into the fight is money and he is faced with having to live up to his promise to steal the treasure of the Witch of Hagroth.Even with that quest completed, there would still remain the Spring of Sorrows which is slowly drowning the beautiful city of Etherealye, but to stop it Pete must get past its terrible guardian.Anyone interested in English vocabulary and correct usage will find the Faerie King books helpful.
  • The Stone of Sorrows

    Greg James

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, March 3, 2014)
    Armies of Fellspawn march upon Highmount. The Iron Gods have awoken from their slumber. E’blis, the Prince of Pain, is preparing a very special sacrifice to raise the Fallen One from his tomb. Sarah Bean must beseech the Kay’lo to join the war and help her to save Seythe from total destruction. Will they agree to help her? Can Highmount survive such an onslaught of evil? Or will this be the beginning of the end for the Thirteen Worlds?
  • The Sorrows of Satan

    Marie Corelli

    (, March 17, 2020)
    The Sorrows of Satan is an 1895 faustian novel by Marie Corelli. It is widely regarded as one of the world's first bestsellers, partly due to an upheaval in the system British libraries used to purchase their books and partly due to its popular appeal. Roundly condemned by critics for Corelli's moralistic and prosaic style it nonetheless had strong supporters in Oscar Wilde and various members of royalty. Widely ignored in literary circles, it is increasingly regarded as an influential fin de siècle text. The book is occasionally subtitled "Or the Strange Experience of one Geoffrey Tempest, Millionaire".
  • The Sorrows of Satan

    Marie Corelli

    (, Sept. 8, 2017)
    The Sorrows of Satan is an 1895 faustian novel by Marie Corelli. It is widely regarded as one of the world's first bestsellers, partly due to an upheaval in the system British libraries used to purchase their books and partly due to its popular appeal. Roundly condemned by critics for Corelli's moralistic and prosaic style it nonetheless had strong supporters in Oscar Wilde and various members of royalty. Widely ignored in literary circles, it is increasingly regarded as an influential fin de siècle text. The book is occasionally subtitled "Or the Strange Experience of one Geoffrey Tempest, Millionaire".
  • The Sorrows of Satan

    Marie Corelli

    (Independently published, June 5, 2017)
    The Sorrows of Satan is an 1895 faustian novel by Marie Corelli. It is widely regarded as one of the world's first bestsellers, partly due to an upheaval in the system British libraries used to purchase their books and partly due to its popular appeal. Roundly condemned by critics for Corelli's moralistic and prosaic style it nonetheless had strong supporters in Oscar Wilde and various members of royalty. Widely ignored in literary circles, it is increasingly regarded as an influential fin de siècle text. The book is occasionally subtitled "Or the Strange Experience of one Geoffrey Tempest, Millionaire".
  • The Sorrows of Satan

    Marie Corelli

    (, Aug. 27, 2017)
    The Sorrows of Satan is an 1895 faustian novel by Marie Corelli. It is widely regarded as one of the world's first bestsellers, partly due to an upheaval in the system British libraries used to purchase their books and partly due to its popular appeal. Roundly condemned by critics for Corelli's moralistic and prosaic style it nonetheless had strong supporters in Oscar Wilde and various members of royalty. Widely ignored in literary circles, it is increasingly regarded as an influential fin de siècle text. The book is occasionally subtitled "Or the Strange Experience of one Geoffrey Tempest, Millionaire"