After having stammered for twenty years you have pretty well run the whole gamut of mockery.
You can acquire valuable knowledge for use in your own public speaking.
Tales of Space and Time collects together two novellas and three short stories.
Gertrude Stein's Tender Buttons: Objects, Food, Rooms from 1914 is a poetic exploration of words.
The Adventures of Caleb Williams, or Things as They Are (1794) by William Godwin is a three-volume.
Aeneas appears in The Illiad in vague snatches and starts as a traveling warrior of great piety.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge said of Ben Jonson's The Alchemist that it had one out of the three.
This book is written with the object of laying before the public a cookery book.
The Americanization of Edward Bok is an autobiography, told in the third person.
Philosopher, logician, mathematician, social reformer and historian, the renowned Nobel Prize winner.
The first point which it is necessary to make clear in describing the astral plane.
The author of The Grand Babylon Hotel, How to Live on 24 Hours a Day.
The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin, which Franklin himself called his Memoirs.
Must religion and morals go together? Can one be taught without the other?
This book takes Beauty as already existing and enjoyed, and seeks to analyze and account.
Richard Marsh's best-selling supernatural thriller The Beetle.
The Boats of the Glen Carrig is horror writer William Hope Hodgson's 1907 novel.
Whether the evolution of the human mind from the animal was by insensible gradations.
It is 1750 and Daniel, the 10-year-old foundling living with Dick Bates is worried. Dick is the owner of the Peacock Alehouse in White Cross Street, Islington.
A founding member of the Theosophical Society, and perhaps the first well-known European.