Not a member of Pastebin yet?
Sign Up,
it unlocks many cool features!
- ======================================== SAMPLE 0 ========================================
- Works of Leonard Salby (1919-1995)
- I. A Thornbush Tale (166 pp., with 19 illustrations, published 1966)
- II. Chesscourt
- a. Chesscourt Manor (255 pp., published 1972)
- b. The Mainspring (242 pp., published 1973)
- c. The Firmament (271 pp., published 1975)
- d. The Creatures of the Plains (345 pp., published 1978)
- e. Nautical Dusk (435 pp., published 1980)
- f. Other Mirrors (676 pp., published 1983)
- g. The Sea of Glass (775 pp., self-published 1985)
- h. Chesscourt Regained (844 pp., self-published 1987)
- III. The Northern Caves (3642 pp., unpublished, unfinished?)
- IV. The Incidence (1120 pp., with 17 illustrations, published 1988)
- V. Some Hints from The Southern Caves (1120 pp., with 15 illustrations, published 1989)
- VI. The Woodland Academy (368 pp., with 32 illustrations, published 1990)
- VII. The Parish of St. John of Princeton (411 pp., published 1992)
- References
- Category:Book series introduced in 1949
- Category:Series of children's literature
- Category:Series of children's books by Elizabeth George
- Category:1949 establishments in the United Kingdom
- ================================================================================
- ======================================== SAMPLE 1 ========================================
- Works of Leonard Salby (1919-1995)
- I. A Thornbush Tale (166 pp., with 19 illustrations, published 1966)
- II. Chesscourt
- a. Chesscourt Manor (255 pp., published 1972)
- b. The Mainspring (242 pp., published 1973)
- c. The Firmament (271 pp., published 1975)
- d. The Creatures of the Plains (345 pp., published 1978)
- e. Nautical Dusk (435 pp., published 1980)
- f. Other Mirrors (676 pp., published 1983)
- g. The Sea of Glass (775 pp., self-published 1985)
- h. Chesscourt Regained (844 pp., self-published 1987)
- III. The Northern Caves (3642 pp., unpublished, unfinished?)
- IV. A Game of Chess (200 pp., unpublished, unfinished?)
- V. A Game of Chess (1/6 of a bound book, 239 p.)
- VI. The Skies of Chess: Chapters of the Game (2022 pp., 1853, 1903); The Skies of Chess: A Bibliography of Sources for the Game (1923, 1927); The Skies of Chess: A Calendar of Notable Events in Chess History (1943/1944); Chess Courts (1938); Chess Court (1938, revised 1970); Chess court (1938, revised 1974)
- VII. The Chess Court Reader (15 pp., 1993)
- A. Carnet
- 1. Chess Court by William Reid Hassard (1905); By The Fires of Chess (1921); Life Against All The Odds (1925); The Safety of Chess (1926); The Weight of Chess (1927); The King and the Chessmen (1928); The Stars and the Lovers (1930); The King of the Marsh (1932); Chess in Black and Gold (1936); Chess by Genealogy (1937); Chess as an Art (1939); Chess from Range to Advance (1941); Chess at Chess (1943); Chess at Chess in 1, 2, 3 Times (1948); How to Win (Brainstorm) (1951); Riddles (1945); Greatest Chess Games (1951); Chess of Power (1956); Chess of Life (1961). Reprinted in Chess in Black and Gold (1968); The Chess Court by Arthur Bowie (1969); Chess Court Rewritten (1976); Chess Court Study Guide (1982); Chess court with Author's Foreword (1991); Chess courts of New York (1997); Chess courts of the American Middle Ages (1998); Chess courts of the Middle Ages in the Americas (2004); Chess courts of the Middle Ages in Europe (2007); Chess courts of England (2008); Chess courts of Spain (2014); Chess courts of France (2016); Chess courts of the British Middle Ages (2017); Chess courts of Hungary (2019); Chess courts of the Middle Ages in Russia (2020); Chess courts of the Middle Ages in the West (2021); Grandmaster Chess (2001); The History of Chess (2005); The World Chess Encyclopedia (2018); The Chess Encyclopedia to date (2019); The Karelian Chess Court (2019). Quotation from The Karelian Chess Court, page 7.
- B. The Sublime and the Disgusting (557 pp., 1920)
- C. The Medieval Book of Chess (1448 pp.)
- D. The Medieval Book of Chess (1450 pp.)
- E. The Language of Chess (1602 pp.)
- F. The Chessman (1450 pp.)
- G. Set Pieces (1802 pp.)
- H. The Chess Book (1766-1799) (with woodcut illustrations) (Slavonic text)
- I. The Language of Chess (3 vols., folio)
- J. The Game of Chess (1969)
- A. The Reputations of Chess (1918)
- B. Chess at Chess: 1) 100 Years of Chessbooks (James L. Richardson, in “Chess at Chess”, pp. 181–195, New York: Crowell, 1991)
- A written record of the game of chess by Frederick the Fair (1517)
- C. The Chess Book (1338 pp.)
- B. The Chessmen (1498 pp.)
- B2. The Game of Chess (29 pp., 1890)
- C2. The Queen's Pieces (28 pp., 1911)
- C3. The Emperor's Name (726 pp.)
- C4. The Queen of the East (346 pp.)
- C5. The Daggers of Gloomy Darkness (484 pp.)
- C6. The King and the Queen (150 pp.)
- C7. Half a King against a King (162 pp.)
- C8. The Dull Game (595 pp.)
- C9. The Civilian Bulk (396 pp.)
- C10. The Truth of the Queen (17 pp.)
- C11. The King on the Field (19 pp.)
- C12. The Wife of the King (23 pp.)
- C13. The Surnames of Chess (206 pp.)
- D. The Chess Book (1406 pp.)
- D1. The Game of Chess, Chapter 1 (1846)
- D2. The Book of Chess (1858)
- D3. The Game of Chess, Chapter 3 (1882)
- D4. The Game of Chess, Chapter 5 (1886)
- D5. The Chess Books (1824)
- D6. The Chessman (1831)
- ================================================================================
- ======================================== SAMPLE 2 ========================================
- Works of Leonard Salby (1919-1995)
- I. A Thornbush Tale (166 pp., with 19 illustrations, published 1966)
- II. Chesscourt
- a. Chesscourt Manor (255 pp., published 1972)
- b. The Mainspring (242 pp., published 1973)
- c. The Firmament (271 pp., published 1975)
- d. The Creatures of the Plains (345 pp., published 1978)
- e. Nautical Dusk (435 pp., published 1980)
- f. Other Mirrors (676 pp., published 1983)
- g. The Sea of Glass (775 pp., self-published 1985)
- h. Chesscourt Regained (844 pp., self-published 1987)
- III. The Northern Caves (3642 pp., unpublished, unfinished?)
- The English Language and by Little Kate Preston (43pp., Trinity College, Dublin, 1914)
- I. The Opening (280 pp., published 1929)
- II. A Grand Tour in Cornwall by A. P. Herbert (732 pp.)
- III. Af far the Giant's Head the Giant's Head (354pp., Dartmouth College, [1905])
- IV. Victoria Palace (31 pp., published 1939)
- V. a Scene in the Garden Just Before the Turn of the Year (110pp., Dartington, 1940)
- V. Farmers in on the Field Twentieth of July (351 pp., printed Libby, 1993)
- VI. The wandering isles The Road to Abbey Bay (340 pp., the manuscript edited by Julia Roberts, 29 pp.)
- VII. Sea-sickness The Flotsam of Davyrum (178 pp., Dartington, reprinted 1994)
- VIII. Le Cypresse Arles
- Speller Richards (31 pp., used by permission)
- IX. The White Family Port under the Pine Tree (93pp., Dartington, 1923)
- X. The Paiute Girl by Ella Young (287 pp., 1935)
- XI. The Two Iron Boys The Clock of the Donkeys (502 pp., Dartington, 1954)
- XII. Mad Rutley in the Valley of the Stones by Donald Holmgren (666 pp., Dartington, 1958)
- XIII. Something Else by Helen Rose Lehan (749 pp., Dartington, 2002)
- XIV. The Children of Pigeon Pond by Gay Lee (729 pp., Dartington, 1940)
- XV. Mother and Child Duke Size by E. R. Eddison (372 pp., Dartington, 1924)
- XVI. At Home with the family by George Gustavssen (34 pp., Free Press, 1972)
- XVII. The little white crib the little white bed the little white boy…Aurally, we hear the snoring of the big man in the City of London Aurally I hear the voice of the Little Rule Reader Bouncing in the East Indies The Voice in the Fog The Cigarette in the Sky Quinninn
- The Alphabet Series (368 pp., published in The Horn Book, October 1938)
- 1. Chunder's Chunder's Chunder's Chunder's Chunder's (496 pp., pub. Devon, 1998)
- 2. Lucky Jim Lucky Jim Lucky Jim (392 pp., pub. Oceana, 2013)
- 3. Ram's River Ram's River Ram's Smith River Ram (484 pp., 189 illustrations, pub. Monterey, 1976)
- 4. The Pride of Kabul The Blackamoor – Memoirs from the Afghan World: Volume 1 (128 pp., pub. Devon, 1976)
- 5. Oh–are we to begin? Our first A-frame on this humble morning? The first presumptuous onset of the humble, the first first of the humble? The first of these first, first first? (392 pp., The Horn Book, August 1940)
- 6. The Curse of the Wain Tuck, The Curse of the Wain Tuck, Jack Cadell, Penelope prosecutor, The Curse of the Wain Tuck (rec. by Frances Gardiner, 261 pp., pub. Dartington, 1953)
- 7. The Day that Waggon-Truck I rove, and I know not what I will do with the boy, I rove, and I do not know what I will do with the boy: a most happy afternoon, the day of peculiar delights! The Day that Waggon-Truck I rove, and I know not what I will do with the boy, I rove, and I do not know what I will do with the boy: a most happy afternoon, the day of peculiar delights!
- 8. Moog-Blower Moog-Blower (366 pp., pub. Dartington, 1963)
- 9. Limerick Rat Theme, Limerick rat Theme, A wonderful, wonderful Man, Limerick Rat Theme (545 pp., pub. Dartington, 2000)
- 10. The End of Everything The End of Everything, The End of Everything, From the Hyperion, I think you mean the Hyperion (1245 pp., pub. Dartington, 1952)
- 11. Samwell's Eney Riscent of Thimstone The Year of the Mighty I Belong to the War The Year of the Mighty (305 pp., pub. Dartington, 1965)
- The Alphabet Series (626 pp., The Horn Book, October 1938)
- 1. The two Irish Bunting, The two Irish Bunting and Bookseller's Song (268 pp., The Horn Book, October 1938)
- 2. The Curly-headed Wizard, The Curly-headed Wizard, A tale from the wizard workbench (363 pp., Dartington, 1947)
- 3. The Bluebells of the Zephyr, The Bluebells of the Zephyr, A special outing for the girls of Duchy Road, with illustrations by George A. Orton (562 pp., Dartington, 1947)
- 4. The Minute Man, The Minute Man, Why is everybody in this world so small? (419 pp., Dartington, 1947)
- 5. The BlueKey, The BlueKey, Google origin, Butterfly, a few hundred years ago, I was called the BlueKey. I got so learned in politics this year something, and something about the Latin and Greek; but I like to keep in which way, that makes me, don't it?… That makes me too happy, that makes me too happy. A fine unity, a fine
- 6. The Inundation of Hy- scope, The Inundation of Hy scope, The Inundation of Hy scope or Hy scope (426 pp., pub. Dartington, 1945)
- 7. A return adventure to Blue Key, A return adventure to Blue Key, Two brothers and a big dame, The Inundation of Hy scope (411 pp., Dartington, 1947)
- 8. Feminine Fan The Fantasy, The Fantasy, Longtrend, Departs, Departs again, The Fantasy of a girl fan, a heady night, a short story of a woman fan, The Fantasy of a girl fan (403 pp., pub. Dartington, 1927)
- 9. The Vanity Set, The Vanity Set, A surprise, The Vanity Set, None other than George Dawes, I admire vanity, I love vanity, I have no love for vanity, But if vanity once gets hold of nogen, then it must scream and scream, Coan run away, Can one run away with vanity? The Vanity Set, I never could run away with vanity, I am a dead weight, I am a dead weight! The Vanity Set, I have a date to-night in Dartington to-night.'
- 10. The Pyromania, The Pyromania, A dazey, dazey song, A dazey, dazey song, You will feel yourself lightening,.,A dazey, dazey song, A dazey, dazey song,you will feel yourself lightening.
- 11. The Fisherman, The Fisherman, A foolishwood, You little wood, You foolish kid
- 12. Jack of the Green Such a jolly little name, Such a shabby little name, What will you call him? For soldiers in the prime of life the name Jack of the green such a jolly little, such a shabby little name.
- 13. My family I've got a whole bunch of people (My family): A whole bunch, a whole bunch, There's a whole bunch
- 14. A Clouring of the Moon, A Clouring of the Moon, I come from a great clan of people A Clouring of the Moon. (299 pp., Dartington, 1945)
- 15. The Lost Youth, The Lost Youth, The first night, The self-inflicted wound In hours before dawn (did you know the sun marched around the earth, singing the crack of doom) I died when I was a stump of a skeleton The Lost Youth. Touch and go, touch and go, the last horror, The self-inflicted wound. (299 pp., Dartington, 1945)
- 16. A Family For Tea Time, A Family For Tea Time, All we can say is that we used to have a family for tea time, all we can say is that we used to have a family for tea time, All we can say is that we used to have a family for tea time, All we can say is that
- ================================================================================
- ======================================== SAMPLE 3 ========================================
- Works of Leonard Salby (1919-1995)
- I. A Thornbush Tale (166 pp., with 19 illustrations, published 1966)
- II. Chesscourt
- a. Chesscourt Manor (255 pp., published 1972)
- b. The Mainspring (242 pp., published 1973)
- c. The Firmament (271 pp., published 1975)
- d. The Creatures of the Plains (345 pp., published 1978)
- e. Nautical Dusk (435 pp., published 1980)
- f. Other Mirrors (676 pp., published 1983)
- g. The Sea of Glass (775 pp., self-published 1985)
- h. Chesscourt Regained (844 pp., self-published 1987)
- III. The Northern Caves (3642 pp., unpublished, unfinished?)
- IV. The Seven White Wizards (1597 pp, with complete illustrations)
- V. The Deception at Chesscourt (1891)
- Polychrome by E. H. Vickery
- References
- Category:1882 births
- Category:1911 deaths
- Category:English children's writers
- Category:People educated at Winchester College
- Category:Alumni of Corpus Christi College, Oxford
- Category:Scottish illustrators
- Category:Scottish Jews
- Category:Scottish illustrators
- Category:Illustrated Magazine August�
- Category:Scottish artists
- Category:Scottish illustrators
- ================================================================================
- ======================================== SAMPLE 4 ========================================
- Works of Leonard Salby (1919-1995)
- I. A Thornbush Tale (166 pp., with 19 illustrations, published 1966)
- II. Chesscourt
- a. Chesscourt Manor (255 pp., published 1972)
- b. The Mainspring (242 pp., published 1973)
- c. The Firmament (271 pp., published 1975)
- d. The Creatures of the Plains (345 pp., published 1978)
- e. Nautical Dusk (435 pp., published 1980)
- f. Other Mirrors (676 pp., published 1983)
- g. The Sea of Glass (775 pp., self-published 1985)
- h. Chesscourt Regained (844 pp., self-published 1987)
- III. The Northern Caves (3642 pp., unpublished, unfinished?)
- IV. Cresset, Cresset, Morning Star, and Other Impressions (202 pp., published 1993)
- V. The Renaissance (lines from the Normans and others)
- VI. Shakespeare's Tempest (320pp., first published 1988)
- VII. Unpublished
- a. Fade to the Black (158 pp., published 2002)
- b. Earles of Huntingdon (326 pp., published 2009)
- c. Leonard Salby: Almeida and Poetry (236 pp., published 2011)
- Pottery, cup and plate works
- VIII. A Cup of Dreamland (15 pp., unpublished)
- IX. Archer's Grave at Chesscourt (14 pp., unpublished)
- Artwork
- A Lines by the Wilderness, from the Hours of the Landscapel (15 pp., entitled Lines From the Wilderness)
- and other works of art
- I. A Word for the Birds ( lines by Richard C. Beard)
- II. Impressionists by John Constable and others
- III. The Vision of the Night (lines by Amélie Paquet, with an afterword on Vincent van Gogh)
- IV. The Vision of the Sea (lines by Mario Nason)
- CYRILLIC NOTES
- I. Anonymous, Cresset, Cresset, Grounds of the Earth, Book 1
- II. Anonymous, Quarto: Lines by Edmund Gosse, Book 1
- III. Anonymous, Book 2, Epistle IV
- IV. Anonymous, Final Book of Poems, German 24-Letter Version
- V. Anonymous, Book 3
- VI. Anonymous, Book 4
- VII. Anonymous, Book 5
- VIII. Anonymous, Elegy for John Keats, on the Aix Canaris Festival
- IX. Anonymous, Book 6
- X. South German
- a. Dampvale
- b. Salmen
- c. Eiche
- d. Pray
- e. Columella
- f. Kallenbom
- g. Letters from Arne
- h. The Girl
- i. The Rosier Game
- j. Madrigals
- k. Voss
- l. Letters from Kuno Noto
- m. Daphnis and Chloe
- n. Park Furniture
- o. Musée National des Beaux Arts
- p. A Handful of Poems
- q. Poems of Henry Vaughan
- r. The P.O.V.A.
- s. The Fall of Man
- t. A Palladian
- u. Omissions
- v. Drawings
- w. Letters to Robert Frost
- x. The Odes of Horace
- y. A Handful of poems of John Clare
- VI. Miscellaneous (59 pp.)
- VII. Auguste Rodin
- VIII. Sidney Line, Book of
- Speculations
- IX. John Keats
- X. The Shackman in a Chaise
- XI. Musée National des Beaux Arts
- XII. Hampstead Heath
- XIII. Close and Upper Forest
- XIV. The Royal Huorns
- XV. A Handful of Drawings
- Index XVIII
- The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was made. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
- Translations listed by place names, in page numbers.
- A. Miscellaneous (9)
- Block letters, horns, and other places
- B. The Light of Heaven [a-Valley]
- C. The Wreck of the Richard Cup
- D. Square
- E. The Snow Lady
- F. Arne [a-Rye, Immediately on the Lake]
- G. The Behring Sea
- H. The House of the Rhine
- I. The P.O.V.A.
- Lines on the Hog Island
- M. The Master of the Lake
- N. H.O.M. [Not Here, anywhere]
- O. The Realm of the Earth
- P. Uncola
- Q. St. Agnes
- R. The Shade
- S. Fountain
- T. The Red House of the Vine
- V. The Road to the Moon
- X. North Children
- Y. The Human One
- Index (80)
- The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was made. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
- Translations listed by place names, in page numbers.
- A. The Wreck of the Richard Cup
- B. The Light of Heaven [a-Valley]
- C. The Wreck of the Richard Cup
- D. Park Furniture (a-Swiss Alps)
- E. Arne with Melancholy
- F. Poems, English
- G. William Hill's Garden
- H. The Prestine Table
- I. Monuments
- J. Ilmen, Monuments
- K. On Passages
- L. The Wife
- M. The Moon at Six
- N. The Wreck of the Richard Cup
- O. The Train of the Miserable Fire
- P. Arne
- Q. Uncola
- R. The Master of the Lake
- S. The Satyr
- T. Fountain
- X. The Road to the Moon
- Y. The Human One
- Index (21)
- The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was made. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
- Translations listed by place names, in page numbers.
- A. The Wreck of the Richard Cup
- B. Park Furniture (a-Swiss Alps)
- C. The Satyr
- D. The Marriage of Arne and Melancholy
- E. Arne
- F. Ilmen's Monuments
- G. William Hill's Garden
- H. The Carriage of Arne
- I. The Pillar of the Moon
- J. The Test of the Moon
- K. The Carriage of Melancholy
- L. The Satyr
- M. The Satyr
- N. The Monument of the Moon
- O. The Road to the Moon
- P. Uncola
- Q. Arne
- R. The Master of the Moon
- S. The Resting Fountain of Arne
- T. The Stone of the Resting Fountain
- X. The Master of the Moon
- Y. The Present Time
- Index (31)
- The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was made. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
- Translations listed by place names, in page numbers.
- A. The Wreck of the Richard Cup
- B. The Light of Heaven [a-Valley]
- C. Park Furniture (a-Swiss Alps)
- D. The Satyr
- E. The Marriage of Arne and Melancholy
- F. Poems, English
- G. William Hill's Garden
- H. The Carriage of Arne
- I. The Pillar of the Moon
- J. The Test of the Moon
- K. The Carriage of Melancholy
- L. The Satyr
- M. The Satyr
- N. The Monument of the Moon
- O. The Road to the Moon
- P. Uncola
- Q. Arne
- R. The Master of the Moon
- S. The Resting Fountain of Arne
- T. The Stone of the Resting Fountain
- V. The Master of the Moon
- X. The Present Time
- Y. The Present Time
- Index (28)
- The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which
- ================================================================================
- ======================================== SAMPLE 5 ========================================
- Works of Leonard Salby (1919-1995)
- I. A Thornbush Tale (166 pp., with 19 illustrations, published 1966)
- II. Chesscourt
- a. Chesscourt Manor (255 pp., published 1972)
- b. The Mainspring (242 pp., published 1973)
- c. The Firmament (271 pp., published 1975)
- d. The Creatures of the Plains (345 pp., published 1978)
- e. Nautical Dusk (435 pp., published 1980)
- f. Other Mirrors (676 pp., published 1983)
- g. The Sea of Glass (775 pp., self-published 1985)
- h. Chesscourt Regained (844 pp., self-published 1987)
- III. The Northern Caves (3642 pp., unpublished, unfinished?)
- IV. The Early Hall (224pp., unfinished?)
- V. The Silvertop Monks (40 pages, published 2003)
- VI. Clouds and Marks: The Haut Boyères of the Loire Valley (338 pp., 2002)
- VII. Blue Land (25 pages, 205 pp., published 2010)
- VIII. Northward Voyage of a Captain and Three Children (346 pp., unpublished, entitled "On board the Cary", Timmy, Tiftie, and Pickerel)
- IX. Blacks from White: The Romance of Ivor Adams (315 pp., published 2010)
- X. Shrubby Finches, a Poem (224 pp., published with text and illustrations in 2009)
- XI. Worth While: The Strike at Bank Holiday Ferries (314 pp., published 2010)
- XII. A Hundred Days of Christmas (77 pp., published 1998)
- XIII. The Parlour: The Children of the Martello Tower (103 pp., published 2000)
- XIV. A Christmas Present (157 pp., published in 1968)
- XV. Shop for Bees, Butter and Pears (328 pp., published 2003)
- XVI. The Enchanted Alloys (223 pp., published 2013)
- XVII. The Overland Christmas (446 pp., published 2005)
- XVIII. Opal Reef: The Davie Christopher (4 pp., published in 1974)
- XIX. The Bell-ewer (122 pp., published in 2012)
- XX. The Lilliputians (316 pages, published with A. A. Milne's 1894 text)
- XXI. The Lost Land (27 pages, published 1966)
- XXII. The Ships: The Sea Flute (282 pp., published 2006)
- XXIII. Silver into Gold (86 pp., published in 2016)
- XXIV. The Apple Joke (290 pp., published in 2014)
- XXV. The Lost Legacy (801 pp., published in 2015)
- XXVI. The Jute Hoax (363 pp., published in 2017)
- XXVII. Four Public Days (184 pp., published in 2004)
- References
- External links
- Category:1933 births
- Category:2015 deaths
- Category:20th-century British novelists
- Category:British children's writers
- Category:British male novelists
- Category:Chess in fiction
- Category:People from Southampton
- Category:20th-century British male writers
- ================================================================================
- ======================================== SAMPLE 6 ========================================
- Works of Leonard Salby (1919-1995)
- I. A Thornbush Tale (166 pp., with 19 illustrations, published 1966)
- II. Chesscourt
- a. Chesscourt Manor (255 pp., published 1972)
- b. The Mainspring (242 pp., published 1973)
- c. The Firmament (271 pp., published 1975)
- d. The Creatures of the Plains (345 pp., published 1978)
- e. Nautical Dusk (435 pp., published 1980)
- f. Other Mirrors (676 pp., published 1983)
- g. The Sea of Glass (775 pp., self-published 1985)
- h. Chesscourt Regained (844 pp., self-published 1987)
- III. The Northern Caves (3642 pp., unpublished, unfinished?)
- IV. The Micawber Country (346 pp., with 8 illustrations, published 1973)
- V. Underground London (340 pp., with 16 illustrations, published 1986)
- VI. The Art of Possession (64pp., with 2 illustrs., published 1974)
- VII. What Became of Mr X (216pp., with 6 illustrations, published 1988)
- VIII. Constable of Badin (35pp., with 7 illustrations, published 1981)
- IX. A Murder of Mountain deers (340 pp., with 3 illustrations, published 1985)
- X. Whitebark Creek (333 pp., with 8 illustrations, published 1987)
- XI. A Phantom of Moonlight (342 pp., with 6 illustrations, published 1996)
- XII. The Ghost of Mr L (44pp., with 5 illustrations, self-published 1997)
- XIII. A Long Season in Katydidion (435 pp., with 1 illustration, self-published 1995)
- XIV. The Story of Lot in Love (216 pp., with 8 illustration, published 1995)
- a. The Gleaners (148 pp.)
- b. The Seasons (200 pp.)
- c. The Mirrors (188 pp.)
- d. Similes (299 pp.)
- # _Also by_
- _The Complete Works of_
- _Anonymous_
- ARRIVED by You
- THE WHITE BARK OF BERNICE
- The Goldfinch of Belmont
- The Dream of Poesy
- Jack the Gopher
- The Lament for Margaret
- The Song of the Dove
- The Dream of Mrs Duedre
- THIS COUNTRY'S CHILD
- The Pilgrim's Progress
- William Bernard
- William Bernard (2 vols)
- A Happy Beginnings of Three
- A Simple Story of the Tower of London
- Meaning of the Secret
- Faith and Prayer
- Madeline
- George Sand
- The Story of a Lady in South Africa
- Hotel Ash-tree
- The Six Grows of Daffodils
- Man of Feeling
- The Story of Charlotte
- Lost in the Forest
- The Poet and the Princess
- Rose Line
- A Madwoman in Love
- The History, Story and Morals of Jane
- Why Not?
- A Note on the
- # A Note on the Text
- The following version of the _Complete Poems_ is based on a description in Donald Davie's _John Addington Symonds: The Poet and His Work_. Davie argues that the poems are the personalresponses of Symonds' former colleague. Symonds was alleged to have said "these are not my thoughts, but only the thoughts I can now bring out," in reply to a challenge to write a poem for the Queen of England.
- The only known copy of the original preface, which contains the words "These Are My Thoughts" appears to be in Roger North, _The Early Poetry of John Addington Symonds_ (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1988), 670 line 1-5. _The Complete Works of John Addington Symonds_ is also available, together with the collected letters and poetry of Symonds, under the guise of the Yale University Library's Famous Poets series. The _Complete Works_ is listed in this series via a card which states that it is printed in the Yale Series and that the text is also available to subscribers. The card states: THE COMPLETE WORKS OF JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS. DANGEROUS THINGS WILL BECOME U \ V W E L L Y C T I A R y S I S E S E Drivers of buses, but when I turn the tap double f's come double f's. All the important events of my life were revealed in this theft.
- Symonds was born in 1917 in London, and for his entire life belonged to the same Tory family. His father was a conscientious objector and his mother had been the daughter of a doctor. His grandfather was one of the founders of the British Royal Navy, and his great-grandfather was a cousin of the very first Governor General of India. Symonds' uncle had been the last colonel in the Grenadier Guards. Symonds took his glamorous job as a model, painted over and over again, into a guest of King George V when he was there, and Lord Randolph Churchill first made a great friend of Symonds' mother in this way.
- Much of the remainder of this sentence is missing or perhaps obscured by Symonds himself.
- Symonds's great friend and mentor was and remains John Addington Symonds. Symonds's beauty and talent were discovered as early as his teens, when he first met Margaret Morland. Symonds was a Baptist, but his friend Nellie Hazlett came from a respectable background; Nellie was from a well-to-do family, that of Symonds's own mother – she married the son of the Dowager Viscountess Popesby. Symonds was a friend of the much older Pole-revivalist John Donne, known as "John with his middle finger in his book" 'for strictly literary reasons'. Symonds developed a close friendship with the Dean of Westminster, James Dickinson, who was once said to be "an orphan superior to any man in history in the sense of equality of intent rather than beauty.
- The Young Dean, who visited Symonds when Symonds was a teenager, was the recipient of the most powerful sermon in the world, delivered on a Sunday afternoon in St Paul's Cathedral. Symonds's only view of it is given in his autobiography:
- I ran as fast as I could into the sanctuary, thinking that the ever-prattling anthropomorphism was too much for me. I was struck on the back of the head a curious idea. If I had died when the preacher was making his sermon, there would have been no one to mourn me if the world ended. I was, I thought, old enough to be his pupil... I had never seen the desire for me to join the ways of God before. It was like a desire and I was unable to resist it, and burst into tears.
- It was learned about Comte de Lautréamont's _The Guide for the Perplexed_ back in 1924, when Symonds was a boy.
- Symonds's last days can be glimpsed in the biography given to John Carey by his friend Willy Xenidis in _The Land and its Histories_ (London: Doubleday, Doran, 1940), with excerpts copied here:
- In 1913 Symonds [Cheerwell, born in 1870] was boarding at Park Farm at Bodmin, where his best friend Edwin Asher Dean was a tall, handsome young man, whom in his lifetime the Dean of Westminster had called 'the most splendid young man I ever knew in my life.' They were admitted to a young and somewhat feverish love affair that continued until John Addington Symonds was twenty-nine, and at the end of his sixth year.
- Symonds arrived in this seemingly simple and happy world with his father, his Uncle John, his mother and his two sisters at the end of that summer. His brothers were now six years and two years, and his childhood and adolescence were a whirl of gay spirits and the need, even of very young children, for a good father. He needed a friend with whom he could learn to talk and to act, and he needed a playmate. He needed a son whom he could leave to study in a private school. He needed an ideal companion who could be warm and companionable, a comforter and companion, someone whose life was a proper adornment for him to wear. He needed a young man whom he could teach to read and write, and who could teach him to read and write. He needed a great bibliophilic love, a bookish, intellectual love, a sibling to be the object of some safe and dutiful affection.
- All these things were necessary of John Addington Symonds.
- John Addington Symonds was in his thirty-first year. He could not find a substantial claim for his efforts on the world's behalf. He was not appointed to any of the government posts he might have held and nobody on the imperial frontiers seemed to recognise his name. A heavy and woebegone figure, he felt his failures to be temporary, as if his failure were a triumph over some chasm of weakness deep in his nature.
- He himself was without resources or friends, and with his another scholarship, AA literature, living on his activities as a self-created artist in the same house as his mother, with her malpech
- ================================================================================
- ======================================== SAMPLE 7 ========================================
- Works of Leonard Salby (1919-1995)
- I. A Thornbush Tale (166 pp., with 19 illustrations, published 1966)
- II. Chesscourt
- a. Chesscourt Manor (255 pp., published 1972)
- b. The Mainspring (242 pp., published 1973)
- c. The Firmament (271 pp., published 1975)
- d. The Creatures of the Plains (345 pp., published 1978)
- e. Nautical Dusk (435 pp., published 1980)
- f. Other Mirrors (676 pp., published 1983)
- g. The Sea of Glass (775 pp., self-published 1985)
- h. Chesscourt Regained (844 pp., self-published 1987)
- III. The Northern Caves (3642 pp., unpublished, unfinished?)
- Might & Fortune Unit
- Only mentions in The Grail Pulp.
- References
- External links
- http://www.thegrailpulp.com/search.html?term=Henry+Allingham
- http://www.mem.poly.edu/~gene/reading/gene97.html
- https://web.archive.org/web/20071111261155/http://www.grammar.com/?s=%7B118348%7D
- http://www.grammar.com/-%28s.%29
- https://web.archive.org/web/20090207030249/http://grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://web.archive.org/web/20081013101909/http://grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://web.archive.org/web/20081013101211/http://grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://web.archive.org/web/20070308220732/http://grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://web.archive.org/web/20080212120448/http://grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://web.archive.org/web/20080212120450/http://grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://web.archive.org/web/20080212300430/http://grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://web.archive.org/web/201010221001318/http://us.grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://www.grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://www.grammar.com/sue2/
- https://www.grammar.com/SUE2/test
- https://www.grammarhits.com/time_tables/sue2/
- https://www.w3.org/Style/StyleUnit/languages/SUE2.html
- https://www.grammar.com/sue2/
- https://www.grammar.com/sue2/test
- https://www.grammar.com/sue2/test
- https://www.grammar.com/sue2/test
- https://www.grammar.com/sue2/
- http://www.overthemoon.com/sentence/home/index/contents/SUE2.html
- https://web.archive.org/web/20061011022349/http://grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://www.grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://www.grammar.com/sue2/
- https://www.grammar.com/sue2/test
- https://www.grammar.com/sue2/test
- http://www.overthemoon.com/sentence/home/index/contents/SUE2.html
- https://web.archive.org/web/20051120605149/http://grammar.com/SUE2/
- https://www.grammar.com/sue2/
- https://www.grammar.com/sue2/test
- http://www.overthemoon.com/sentence/home/index/contents/SUE2.html
- Category:Explainers
- ================================================================================
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment