Classified Catalogue of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. 1907-1911, Part 7

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Page 2143 - THE ANCIENTS HAD OF INDIA ; and the Progress of Trade with that Country prior to the Discovery of the Passage to it by the Cape of Good Hope.
Page 2028 - Y (Rev. Henry) — ANCIENT ROME AND ITS CONNECTION WITH THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION : An Outline of the History of the City from its First Foundation down to the Erection of the Chair of St. Peter, AD 42-47. With numerous Illustrations of Ancient Monuments, Sculpture, and Coinage, and of the Antiquities of the Christian Catacombs. Royal 410.
Page 1581 - AN INDEX TO THE WORKS OF SHAKSPERE. Applicable to all editions of Shakspere, and giving reference, by topics, to notable passages and significant expressions ; brief histories of the plays ; geographical names and historic incidents ; mention of all characters and sketches of important ones ; together with explanations of allusions and obscure and obsolete words and phrases. By EVANGELINE M. O'CONNOR.
Page 1539 - THE LIGHT OF ASIA ; or, THE GREAT RENUNCIATION (Mahabhinishkramana). Being the Life and Teaching of Gautama, Prince of India, and Founder of Buddhism (as told in verse by an Indian Buddhist). By Edwin Arnold, MA, CSI , &c.
Page 1549 - OSSIAN. The Poems of Ossian in the Original Gaelic. With a Literal Translation into English, and a Dissertation on the Authenticity of the Poems.
Page 2062 - A History of Our Own Times, from the Accession of Queen Victoria to the General Election of 1880.
Page 2206 - The History of North America containing A Review of the Customs and Manners of the Original Inhabitants...
Page 1537 - Mr. Jusserand's qualifications for the task which he has undertaken are of a high order. There are few foreigners, and certainly very few Frenchmen, who have so intimate a knowledge of English life ; he has already gained great distinction as an original investigator in more than one period of English literary. history ; and although his point of view in the present work is unmistakably that of a Frenchman, he shows a degree of sympathetic insight which is seldom met with in foreign critics of our...
Page 1793 - How the whale got his throat. — How the camel got his hump.
Page 1412 - Engravings of the most eminent persons now living or lately deceased in Great Britain and Ireland, from drawings accurately made from life or from the most approved original pictures, accompanied by short Biographical Notices.

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