Books by "Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice Marquess of Lansdowne"

10 books found

The Secret of the Coup D'État

The Secret of the Coup D'État

by Henry William Edmund Petty-FitzMaurice Marquess of Lansdowne

1924

Catalogue of Engraved British Portraits Preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum

Catalogue of Engraved British Portraits Preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum

by British Museum. Department of Prints and Drawings, Freeman Marius O'Donoghue, Henry Mendelssohn Hake

1922

Elements of International Law

Elements of International Law

by Henry Wheaton

1904

The Aims of the War

The Aims of the War

by Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice Marquess of Lansdowne

1918

Dear Munificent Friends

Dear Munificent Friends

by Henry James

1999 · University of Michigan Press

Previously unpublished letters that shed light on the personal side of Henry James, and on the times in which he lived and wrote

The Titled Nobility of Europe

The Titled Nobility of Europe

by Melville Henry Massue marquis de Ruvigny et Raineval

1914

Speeches

Speeches

by Henry Charles Keith Petty-FitzMaurice Marquess of Lansdowne

1894

The Master, the Modern Major General, and His Clever Wife

The Master, the Modern Major General, and His Clever Wife

by Henry James

2012 · University of Virginia Press

As his letters attest, for nearly forty years Henry James enjoyed a warm and gratifying friendship with Britain’s foremost soldier of the last quarter of the nineteenth century and his wife. The Wolseleys were notable figures. Lord Wolseley, the field marshal who became Britain’s commander in chief of the British army, was a national hero. Both a bibliophile and an author, Wolseley was described by Henry James to his brother William as an "excellent example of the cultivated British soldier." Lady Wolseley was also well-read, as well as stylish, strong-willed, and shrewd, and in Henry’s view, a delightful correspondent—in short, as the editor writes, "precisely the kind of woman James most admired." In The Master, the Modern Major General, and His Clever Wife, Alan James offers a collection of more than one hundred letters—most of them published here for the first time—that Henry James wrote to the Wolseleys, the majority to Lady Wolseley. Included are an overall introduction to the letters; separate introductory profiles of Lord and Lady Wolseley along with commentaries on the factors that drew James and the Wolseleys together; introductions to each of four sections of the letters, divided chronologically; and annotations throughout, identifying the notable men and women to whom James refers as well as comparing what James and the Wolseleys thought of them and their work.

The First Napoleon

The First Napoleon

by Henry William Edmund Petty-FitzMaurice Marquess of Lansdowne

1925

Wheaton's Elements of International Law

Wheaton's Elements of International Law

by Henry Wheaton, Coleman Phillipson

1916