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  • av Walter Scott
    349,-

  • av R. W. (Robert West) D. Taylor, J. Surtees Phillpotts & Walter Scott
    319 - 465

  • av Walter Scott
    405,-

  • av Walter Scott
    375,-

  • av Walter Scott
    349 - 475,-

  • av Walter Scott
    775 - 1 339,-

  • av Walter Scott
    655,-

  • av Anna Swanwick, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe & Walter Scott
    649 - 665,-

  • av Walter Scott
    735

  • av Walter Scott
    815,-

  • av Walter Scott
    325,-

    "The Existence of Evil Spirits Proved" is a 1843 treatise on the existence of evil spirits and their influence on the human race written by Sir Walter Scott. Originally presented as a series of lectures, this volume explores the realm of the supernatural and attempts to prove the existence of maleficent spirits and demons, with a heavy focus on the Old Testament. Contents include: "The Existence of Evil Spirits", "The Character, State, and Powers of Evil Spirits", "The Agency of Evil Spirits", "The Agency of Evil Spirits (continued)", "The Nature and Manner of their Intercourse with this World; Witchcraft, Divination, etc.", "Demoniacs, Especially those of the New Testament", etc. Sir Walter Scott (1771 - 1832) was a Scottish playwright, historical novelist, and poet. Other notable works by this author include: Ivanhoe (1819), Rob Roy (1817), and Old Mortality (1916). Many vintage books such as this are becoming increasingly scarce and expensive. We are republishing this volume now in an affordable, modern, high-quality edition complete with the original text and artwork.

  • av Walter Scott
    499,-

    Au xiie siècle, Cédric de Rotherwood, dit le Saxon, un thane (ou vavasseur, pour les Normands) nostalgique de l'Angleterre saxonne vaincue en 1066, rêve de rétablir sur le trône de l'Angleterre un monarque autochtone en la personne d'Athelstane de Coningsburgh, un voisin, descendant des derniers rois saxons. Dans ce but, il envisage de l'unir avec sa pupille, Lady Rowena de Hargottstandstede, princesse saxonne descendant du roi Alfred.

  • av Walter Scott
    405,-

    The Surgeon's Daughter is part of Chronicles of the Canongate which is a collection of stories by Sir Walter Scott, published in 1827 and 1828 in the Waverley novels series. They are named after the Canongate, in Edinburgh. After his financial ruin at the beginning of 1826, Scott committed himself to writing works that would produce funds for the Trustees of James Ballantyne & Co., including the massive Life of Napoleon. However, he retained the right to produce less substantial works for his own benefit, and the first result was the collection of shorter fiction known as Chronicles of the Canongate. This was in two volumes, rather than the three occupied by most of the Waverley Novels, and its disparate nature meant that it would not interfere with his official writing project. The first mention of the two-volume publication actually envisages it being totally occupied by the tale which was to be entitled The Surgeon's Daughter: in his diary for 12 May 1826 Robert Cadell records a proposal from Scott to write 'a small Eastern Tale', which he agreed to publish as part of his strategy to set up as an independent publisher after the crash which had ruined Archibald Constable, Ballantyne, Scott, and himself. In the event The Surgeon's Daughter was to share the two volumes of the first series of Chronicles of the Canongate with 'Chrystal Croftangry's Narrative' and two short stories, 'The Highland Widow' and 'The Two Drovers'. The 'Narrative' and more than half of 'The Highland Widow' were composed between May and July 1826, but for almost a year Scott then devoted his full energies to the Life of Napoleon which he finished on 7 June 1827. He apparently resumed 'The Highland Widow' on the 20th and finished it before the end of the month, as well as writing an Introduction in his own name (he had officially acknowledged his authorship of the Waverley novels on 23 February). 'The Two Drovers' was probably composed in the first half of July, completing the first volume, but while he was waiting at the end of June to find out how long that story needed to be, he had already begun The Surgeon's Daughter, the sole occupant of the second volume, resuming it on 27 July and completing it on 16 September. (wikipedia.org)

  • av Walter Scott
    375,-

    One of the Waverley Novels by Walter Scott, The Black Dwarf was part of his Tales of My Landlord, 1st series (1816). It is set in 1708, in the Scottish Borders, against the background of the first uprising to be attempted by the Jacobites after the Act of Union. On 30 April 1816 Scott signed a contract with William Blackwood for a four-volume work of fiction, and on 22 August James Ballantyne, Scott's printer and partner, indicated to Blackwood that it was to be entitled Tales of My Landlord which was planned to consist of four tales relating to four regions of Scotland. In the event the second tale, Old Mortality, expanded to take up the final three volumes, leaving The Black Dwarf as the only story to appear exactly as intended. It is not clear precisely when Scott began composition, but the tale was complete before the end of August.For the historical background Scott was particularly indebted to two books: Memoirs Concerning the Affairs of Scotland by George Lockhart of Carnwath (1714), and The History of the Late Rebellion by Robert Patten (1717). He also drew extensively on the ballads he had edited in Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (1802-03). The story is set just after the Union of Scotland and England (1707), in the Liddesdale hills of the Scottish Borders, familiar to Scott from his work collecting ballads for Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. The main character is based on David Ritchie, whom Scott met in the autumn of 1797. In the tale, the dwarf is Sir Edward Mauley, a hermit regarded by the locals as being in league with the Devil, who becomes embroiled in a complex tale of love, revenge, betrayal, Jacobite schemes and a threatened forced marriage. Scott began the novel well, "but tired of the ground I had trode so often before... I quarrelled with my story, & bungled up a conclusion."The introduction to The Black Dwarf attributes the work to Jedediah Cleishbotham, whom Scott had invented as a fictional editor of the Landlord series. It is here that we have the most complete view of this character. (wikipedia.org)

  • av Walter Scott
    239,-

  • av Walter Scott
    429,-

  • av Walter Scott
    775 - 1 049,-

  • av Walter Scott
    775 - 1 205,-

  • av Walter Scott
    775 - 1 339,-

  • av Walter Scott
    275,-

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