Books by "George Gordon Byron Byron"

12 books found

The Heart of the World

The Heart of the World

by George Sumner Weaver

1883

Harp Strums

Harp Strums

by George Deans

1890

The Literary Reader

The Literary Reader

by George Rhett Cathcart

1878

Childe Harold's Pilgrimage

Childe Harold's Pilgrimage

by George Gordon Byron Baron Byron

1882

A Short History of English Literature

A Short History of English Literature

by George Saintsbury, Foreword By Mohit K. Ray

2005 · Atlantic Publishers & Dist

Professor Of English Literature Of King S College, London Observes Thus: This Is An Extremely Bold And Far-Reaching Attempt At A Comprehensive Theory Of Poetry. There Is Evidence Everywhere Of Extensive Learning And Of Acute And Sensitive Literary Mind. The Author Draws With Equal Ease On Indian Poetics And On English And European Literature, Aesthetics And Philosophy. The Candidate Stands Very Much In The Tradition Of That Manner Of Thinking Which May Be Associated With I.A. Richards, Of Whom He Is No Unworthy Follower.This Is Not An Easy Thesis On Which To Pass Judgment. I Am Impressed And Convinced By The Distinction Of Mind And The Continuity Of Thought. I Believe, It Is Worthy Of The Highest Doctoral Degree, If That Is Now D.Litt. Should Be Described And Therefore Of Publication.

Childe Harold

Childe Harold

by George Gordon Byron Baron Byron

1897

A short history of English literature. Repr

A short history of English literature. Repr

by George Edward B. Saintsbury

1903

The Franklin Sixth Reader and Speaker

The Franklin Sixth Reader and Speaker

by George Stillman Hillard, Homer Baxter Sprague

1876

The Christ in Modern English Literature

The Christ in Modern English Literature

by George Hamilton Combs

1903

The Unique

The Unique

by George Smeeton

1830

Wychwood

Wychwood

by George Mann

2017 · Titan Books (US, CA)

After losing her job and her partner in one fell swoop, journalist Elspeth Reeves is back in her mother’s house in the sleepy village of Wilsby-under-Wychwood, wondering where it all went wrong. Then a body is found in the neighbouring Wychwoods: a woman ritually slaughtered, with cryptic symbols scattered around her corpse. Elspeth recognizes these from a local myth of the Carrion King, a Saxon magician who once held a malevolent court deep in the forest. As more murders follow, Elspeth joins her childhood friend DS Peter Shaw to investigate, and the two discover sinister village secrets harking back decades.