Browse all books

Other editions of book The Heart of a Woman: By the Author of The Scarlet Pimpernel

  • The Heart of a Woman

    Emmuska Orczy Orczy

    language (, March 24, 2011)
    This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.
  • The Heart of a Woman

    Emmauska Orczy

    language (Start Classics, April 11, 2014)
    Baroness Emma Magdolna Rozália Mária Jozefa Borbála "Emmuska" Orczy de Orczi (23 September 1865 - 12 November 1947) was a Hungarian-born British novelist, playwright and artist of noble origin. She is most known for her series of novels featuring the Scarlet Pimpernel. This is one of her novels.
  • The Heart of a Woman: Murder Mystery Novel

    Emma Orczy

    language (e-artnow, April 11, 2018)
    Luke de Mountford is an heir to his uncle, Lord Radcliffe and he is preparing to marry beautiful Louise Harris. However, just when everything seems to be going well, another nephew with a claim to his uncle's fortune turns up unexpectedly. Luke is forced to reveal to Louise that their financial future may not be as guaranteed as he had hoped. When the intruder, Philip de Mountford, is discovered stabbed in a cab, suspicion naturally falls on Luke who certainly has a motive for murder.
  • The Heart of a Woman

    Baroness Orczy

    language (Reading Essentials, March 2, 2019)
    An ordinary, but wealthy young woman, Louise Harris, leads a prosaic luxurious life. She walks the dogs, hunts in autumn and skates in winter like hundreds of other average well-mannered English ladies. When Luke de Mountford, the nephew and Lord Radcliffe’s heir, asks her to marry him, she takes her time to think about it. Suddenly, another nephew of the uncle appears...
  • The Heart of a Woman

    Emmuska Orczy

    language (Strelbytskyy Multimedia Publishing, Sept. 5, 2018)
    Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. We are republishing these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.
  • The Heart of a Woman

    Baroness Emma Orczy

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Feb. 4, 2016)
    Baroness Emmuska Orczy (1865 – 1947) was a Hungarian-born British author and artist best known for writing the Scarlet Pimpernel series, a historical fiction that takes place during the French Revolution. Orczy was also a prolific writer of detective fiction and is still one of the most popular authors today.
  • The HEART of a Woman

    Baroness Emma Orczy, Joan Dark

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 14, 2014)
    No! No! she was not going to gush!—Not even though there was nothing in the room at this moment to stand up afterward before her as dumb witness to a moment's possible weakness. Less than nothing in fact: space might have spoken and recalled that moment… infinite nothingness might at some future time have brought back the memory of it… but these dumb, impassive objects!… the fountain pen between her fingers! The dull, uninteresting hotel furniture covered in red velvet—an uninviting red that repelled dreaminess and peace! The ormolu clock which had ceased long ago to mark the passage of time, wearied—as it no doubt was, poor thing—by the monotonous burden of a bronze Psyche gazing on her shiny brown charms, in an utterly blank and unreflective bronze mirror, while obviously bemoaning the fracture of one of her smooth bronze thighs! Indeed Louisa might well have given way to that overmastering feeling of excitement before all these things. They would neither see nor hear. They would never deride, for they could never remember. But a wood fire crackled on the small hearth… and… and those citron-coloured carnations were favourite flowers of his… and his picture did stand on the top of that ugly little Louis Philippe bureau… No! No! it would never do to gush, for these things would see… and, though they might not remember, they would remind. And Louisa counted herself one of the strong ones of this earth. Just think of her name. Have you ever known a Louisa who gushed? who called herself the happiest woman on earth? who thought of a man—just an ordinary man, mind you—as the best, the handsomest, the truest, the most perfect hero of romance that ever threw a radiance over the entire prosy world of the twentieth century? Louisas, believe me, do no such things. The Mays and the Floras, the Lady Barbaras and Lady Edithas, look beatific and charming when, clasping their lily-white hands together and raising violet eyes to the patterned ceiling paper above them, they exclaim: "Oh, my hero and my king!" But Louisas would only look ridiculous if they behaved like that… Louisa Harris, too!… Louisa, the eldest of three sisters, the daughter of a wealthy English gentleman with a fine estate in Kent, an assured position, no troubles, no cares, nothing in her life to make it sad, or sordid or interesting… Louisa Harris and romance!… Why, she was not even pretty. She had neither violet eyes nor hair of ruddy gold. The latter was brown and the former were gray… How could romance come in the way of gray eyes, and of a girl named Louisa? Can you conceive, for instance, one of those adorable detrimentals of low degree and empty pocket who have a way of arousing love in the hearts of the beautiful daughters of irascible millionaires, can you conceive such an interesting personage, I say, falling in love with Louisa Harris? I confess that I cannot. To begin with, dear, kind Squire Harris was not altogether a millionaire, and not at all irascible, and penniless owners of romantic personalities were not on his visiting list. Therefore Louisa, living a prosy life of luxury, got up every morning, ate a copious breakfast, walked out with the dogs, hunted in the autumn, skated in the winter, did the London season, and played tennis in the summer, just as hundreds and hundreds of other well-born, well-bred English girls of average means, average positions, average education, hunt, dance, and play tennis throughout the length and breadth of this country. There was no room for romance in such a life, no time for it… The life itself was so full already—so full of the humdrum of daily rounds, of common tasks, that the heart which beat with such ordinary regularity in the seemingly ordinary breast of a very ordinary girl did so all unconscious of the intense pathos which underlay this very ordinary existence.
  • The Heart of a Woman

    Baroness Emmuska Orczy Orczy

    (Bantam, July 6, 1982)
    None
  • The Heart of a Woman: By the Author of The Scarlet Pimpernel

    Baroness Orczy

    (World Library Classics, June 23, 2010)
    Louisa, living a life of luxury, got up every morning, ate a copious breakfast, walked out with the dogs, hunted in the autumn, skated in the winter, did the London season, and played tennis in the summer, just as hundreds and hundreds of other well-born, well-bred English girls of average means, average positions, average education, hunt, dance, and play tennis throughout the length and breadth of this country. Vaguely Louisa knew that somewhere, beyond even the land of dreams, there lay, all unknown, all mysterious, a glorious world of romance: a universe peopled by girlish imaginings, and the sensitive, creating thoughts of poets, by the galloping phantasies of super-excited brains, and the vague longings of ambitious souls: a universe wherein dwelt alike the memories of those who have loved and the hopes of those who suffer. But when she thought of it all, she did so as one who from the arid plain gazes on the cool streams and golden minarets which the fairy Fata Morgana conjures on the horizon far away. She looked on it as all unreal and altogether beyond her ken. She shut her eyes to the beautiful mirage, her heart against its childish yearnings. Such things did not exist. They were not for her-Louisa Harris.
  • The Heart of a Woman

    Emmuska Orczy

    (Forgotten Books, July 13, 2012)
    None
  • The Heart of a Woman

    Baroness Orczy

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Nov. 21, 2012)
    Baroness Orczy was a novelist, playwright and artist born in Hungary to Baron Felix Orczy a well known composer and conductor. Orczy became famous in 1905 when she published The Scarlet Pimpernel and still is best known for his adventures. With the background of the Reign of Terror in the French Revolution her swashbuckling hero Sir Percy Blakeney represents the original hero with a secret identity. Her novels are Racy as she frequently favors historical fiction.
  • The Heart of a Woman

    Baroness Orczy

    (FQ Books, July 6, 2010)
    The Heart of a Woman is presented here in a high quality paperback edition. This popular classic work by Baroness Orczy is in the English language, and may not include graphics or images from the original edition. If you enjoy the works of Baroness Orczy then we highly recommend this publication for your book collection.