![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 25 of 87 matches in All Departments
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made available for future generations to enjoy.
This historical play follows a group of young Frenchmen from 1796-1814, as they're swept up in the Napoleonic Wars. Italy, Egypt, Austria, Russia, and France are mere signposts along the way in this epic drama, with the single unifying element being a flag woven by a group of French women in the mid-1790s, and carried by the soldiers throughout the entire length of their almost twenty-year service to the French nation. Adolphe d'Ennery was a master of theatrical spectacle who had a talent for epic and spectacle that only Alexandre Dumas could equal. He's not interested in high literature, but only in the pathos of the theatre. In Scene IX he depicts the stragglers of the defeated French Army returning from Moscow through a bare, frozen landscape, separated from their loved ones on the Russian steppes. First they pass each other, but fail to recognize their comrades-in-arms. Finally they meet, with great emotion, and just as they do...the Cossacks appear This is grand theatrical entertainment, with the same sweep as Tolstoy's War and Peace.
In 1828 a young man in rags appeared in the German city of Nurnberg, saying that he'd been kept isolated in a dungeon all of his life. Was he the bastard offshoot of some noble or royal family, secreted away to preserve the honor of the house? Within a few months he was dead under mysterious circumstances, his mystery still unsolved. CASPER HAUSER uses the uproar caused by Hauser's emergence to focus the white heat of the authors' indignation on the systematic maltreatment of individuals solely to spare the feelings of the rich and powerful elements of society. The anger of the playwrights permeates this straightforward, exceptionally powerful tale of a young man who never had a chance of living a normal life. The drama still plays well to a modern audience
Jules Verne's most famous novel was originally conceived as a play-and had its greatest 19th century success as a stage hit the author himself adapted. Running for thousands of performances in many different countries, including the United States, here is the original playscript, translated directly from the French by the producers of the original Broadway presentation, not published since 1874. Like filmmakers after him, Verne understood the need to make changes for the stage, and in collaboration with Adolphe d'Ennery created a distinct variation, a play with many different characters and episodes than are in the novel. Included in this volume is an introduction about how the play was created and staged, together with the first translation of Verne's essay, "The Meridians and the Calendar," explaining how Phileas Fogg accomplished his feat.
French dramatist Adolphe d'Ennery (1811-1899) follows the Faust story originally developed by Goethe, but with a leavening of humor that the German playwright lacked. Especially entertaining is the character of the female demon Sulphurine, who's created by Faust's servant Wagner to be his slave. Needless to say, this she-devil is no one's mistress Faust initially repels the advances of Mephistopheles, but suddenly finds himself in love with the young woman Marguerite, whom the devil has dangled in front of him. Now he wants the youth and vigor that Old Nibs has offered, and is willing to do whatever's necessary to gain the girl's love. But "love" is not part of the equation, as he discovers to his ultimate dismay. A marvelous--and highly entertaining--version of the Faust legend.
Music By Jules Massenet And Translated From The Original French By Frederic Lyster.
Michael Strogoff, a courier of the Russian Czar, is sent on a perilous mission to deliver a vital message to the Grand Duke, defending Siberia against a Tartar attack. But when Michael is captured and blinded, all appears to be lost. French playwright Adolphe d'Ennery has adapted Jules Verne's classic novel of suspense, and Frank J. Morlock has once again translated this wonderful work into modern English.
This race-against-the-clock adventure features a mutiny, castaways on a remote island, earthquakes, whale hunting, dastardly villains, man against the elements, a rescue mission, and offbeat humor. There's never a dull moment as "The Children of Captain Grant" search the globe for their long-lost father and brother. |
![]() ![]() You may like...
Satellite Formation Flying - Relative…
Danwei Wang, Baolin Wu, …
Hardcover
R4,547
Discovery Miles 45 470
Event-Triggered Sliding Mode Control - A…
Bijnan Bandyopadhyay, Abhisek K. Behera
Hardcover
R2,873
Discovery Miles 28 730
Dynamics of Disasters - Algorithmic…
Ilias S. Kotsireas, Anna Nagurney, …
Hardcover
R1,528
Discovery Miles 15 280
Sensing and Control for Autonomous…
Thor I. Fossen, Kristin Y. Pettersen, …
Hardcover
R6,281
Discovery Miles 62 810
Emerging Applications of Fuzzy Algebraic…
Chiranjibe Jana, Tapan Senapati, …
Hardcover
R8,410
Discovery Miles 84 100
Computational Intelligence and…
Maude Josee Blondin, Panos M. Pardalos, …
Hardcover
Stochastic Optimal Control in Infinite…
Giorgio Fabbri, Fausto Gozzi, …
Hardcover
R6,564
Discovery Miles 65 640
Math for the Digital Factory
Luca Ghezzi, Dietmar Homberg, …
Hardcover
R4,369
Discovery Miles 43 690
Stochastic Averaging and Stochastic…
Shu-Jun Liu, Miroslav Krstic
Hardcover
R2,887
Discovery Miles 28 870
Fuzzy Dual Numbers - Theory and…
Felix Mora-Camino, Carlos Alberto Nunes Cosenza
Hardcover
R2,873
Discovery Miles 28 730
|