The Path of the Law is a short essay by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
The comical Wheels of Chance was written in 1896 at the height of the golden age of the bicycle.
A enthralling story about the inequalities of the 19th-century English legal system.
Charles Dickens' Dombey and Son tells the story of the wealthy owner of a shipping company.
Everybody dreams, but there are few who place any importance to the phenomena of sleep.
Before the dawn of history mankind was engaged in the study of dreaming.
This is the story of Ab, a man of the Age of Stone, who lived so long ago.
A beautiful American girl, Daisy Miller, is pursued by the sophisticated Winterbourne.
Black Beauty (1877) is the classic children's book by English author Anna Sewell.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge's 1817 work Biographia Literaria is an autobiography in discourse.
Titus Livius, often known as Livy in English, was a Roman historian.
The Princess and the Goblin is an enduring children's fantasy novel by George MacDonald.
A mariner stops a man on his way to a wedding.
A nine year old boy's mother dies shortly after the death of his father.
First published in 1901, The Black Mask is the second collection of stories.
First published in 1905, A Thief in the Night is the third collection of stories.
Shirley was the second published novel by Charlotte Bronte, after Jane Eyre.
A young man, Olenin, is stationed in the Caucasus, where he falls in love with the place.
Robert Louis Stevenson's 1878 travelogue, An Inland Voyage, details his canoeing trip.
Robert Louis Stevenson wrote The Silverado Squatters as the travel memoir of his honeymoon.