- With the roof of considerable height
- William Godwin
William Godwin, the author of An Enquiry concerning Political Justice and of several novels, among them one now most undeservedly half forgotten, called Caleb Williams. It is seldom possible to point to any one book as the sign-post of a literary cross-roads, but there can be no doubt that in Caleb Williams we see the beginnings of self-conscious construction in story-telling. - Who passed his days in being fed by his wives
- Web of the cross spider
- weather house
- Watching the Band
- Victor Hugo
The studio and the study were very close together. Gautier, Hugo, and Mérimée were all painters in their own right, and there is a difference between the writers who have only seen life from a library, and those who have seen it from behind an easel. The writer who has once felt them can never forget the eye-delighting pleasures of the palette, but composes in colour-schemes, and feels for the tints of words as well as for their melody. - Véronique
- Varieties of the Hennin
- Tobias Smollet
I am a little ungracious to Smollett in saying so loud that he was an artist inferior to Fielding. Inferior he was, but when I set their best books side by side, I remember that there is little to choose between the pleasures they have given me, and am compelled to admit that the less scrupulous Smollett had the wider range. - They were pursued so closely
- They were kangaroos
- They made a thousand grimaces
- Théophile Gautier
Gautier was not pure dreamer. Though the world of his art was as far from the world of Paris, as the world of Mr. Yeats from the world of London or Dublin, he was not a seer, or a poet between whom and reality hung a veil of dreams. He was a solid man, one of whose proudest memories was a blow that registered five hundred and thirty-two pounds on an automatic instrument, the result of daily washing down five pounds of gory mutton with three bottles of red Bordeaux. - The Study at Down
- The Seville Orange
- The Queen of Richard II
- The natives waving palm-leaves as a sign of welcome
- The Knave of Diamonds
- The Houppelande
- The Horned Head-dress
- The counsel chose the latter alternative
- The Cape with Buttoned Sleeve
- The Beagle Laid Ashore for Repairs at River Santa Cruz, Patagonia
- The Austrian Peasant-Bride in Black
- spinnerets and foot claws of the cross spider
- Slope with erratic blocks in the North German Plain
- Sleeping siskins
- Sleeping sea scorpion
- Skeleton of the canary
- Sir Walter Scott
Scott was a part of this revivified world, and his importance in it is not that of its inventor, but of the man who brought so many of its qualities into the art of story-telling that his novels became a secondary inspiration, and moved men as different as Hugo, Balzac, and Dumas, to express themselves in narrative. - Sir Philip Sidney
This is no insult to Sir Philip Sidney, but only to the rather exorbitant demands of the form he had chosen. His own sonnets vindicate him as a poet, and some of them, even Hazlitt owned, who did not like him, 'are sweet even to a sense of faintness, luscious as the woodbine, and graceful and luxurious like it.' - Shearing Sheep
- Shawn Sheep
- Samuel Richardson
Richardson was an author of a kind quite new to English letters—neither a great gentleman like Sidney, nor a roisterer like Greene, nor a fanatic preacher like Bunyan, nor a journalist like Defoe; just a quiet, conscientious, little business man, who, after a duteous apprenticeship, had married his master's daughter like a proper Whittington, and, when she died, had married again, with admirable judgment in each case. - Salt marshes on the seashore
- Richard Steele and Joseph Addison
A wise remark will usher in an Eastern tale, and, not even in the papers of Steele or Addison are the subjects of characters, like the little beau, who would have been a 'mere indigent gallant,' magicked so deliciously to life. Finally, he did with 'The Man in Black' what Addison and Steele could so well have done with Sir Roger. Fielding and Smollett had written before him, and he saw that he could follow their art without resigning any of the graces of the essayist. - Queen Elizabeth in Full Dress
- Pursued by the arrows of the natives
- Prosper Mérimée
There is a lean athletic air about the tales of Prosper Mérimée. Their author is like a man who throws balls at the cocoa-nuts in the fair—to bring them down, and not for the pleasure of throwing. His writing was something quite outside himself, undertaken for the satisfaction of feeling himself able to do it. - Portrait of Bougainville
- Pirogue of the Marquesas islanders
- Pelargonium with flowers and fruits
- peat cutting
- Othello
- One of them tore the carrion with his teeth
- O-Too, King of Otaheite
- New Zealand utensils and weapons
- Natives of the Marquesas
- Natives of Easter Island
- Nathaniel Hawthorne
Hawthorne is one of the earliest story-tellers whom we remember as much for himself as for his books. He is loved or hated, as an essayist is loved or hated, without reference to the subjects on which he happened to write. He wrote in a community for whom a writer was still so novel as to possess some rags of the old splendours of the sage; an author was something wonderful, and no mere business man. - Mushrooms in the forest
- Most of them on horseback
- Monuments in Easter Island
- Miss Gertrude Elliot as Desdemona
- Miss Ellen Terry as Mistress Page
- Miss Constance Collier as Viola
- Miguel De Cervantes Saavedra
Cervantes, like Shakespeare, used all the resources of his time, and did not disdain to profit by other men's experiments. Don Quixote owed a triple debt to the common-sensible humorous rogue novel invented seventy years before, as well as to the more serious tales of knights and pastoral life that made his existence possible. Thieves and shepherds and paragons of chivalry assisted at his birth. The thieves in particular were responsible for the design, or lack of design, in the construction of the book. The rogue novels were made by stringing a series of disconnected 'merry quips' along the autobiography or biography of a disreputable hero. - Method of baiting guillotine trap
Guillotine traps should be baited with small pieces of Vienna sausage (Wienerwurst) or bacon. The trigger wire should be bent inward to bring the bait into proper position to permit the fall to strike the rat in the neck, as shown in the illustration. - Merkel Railway Motor Cycle