1906. Illustrated. A record of Winter´s rambles in England and his useful guidance and suggestions to other American travelers, who like himself, might want to roam among the shrines of the mother land. Contents: The Voyage; The Beauty of England; Great Historic Places; Rambles in London; A Visit to Windsor; The Palace of Westminister; Warwick and Kenilworth; First View of Stratford-on-Avon; London Nooks and Corners; Relics of Lord Byron; Westminister Abbey; Shakespeare´s Home; Up to London; Ol
Von Stonehenge über Burgen und Schlösser des Mittelalters führt die Inselreise bis in die Welt- und Hauptstadt London. Weiter, eine Zeitreise in das mittelalterliche Canterbury mit seiner mächtigen Kathedrale. Die Universitätsstädte Oxford und Cambridge; die alte Römerstadt York; der Lake District ist eine der schönsten Landschaften Englands. Weitere Stationen sind: Ironbridge, das Freilichtmuseum von Blist Hill; Chester; Stratford on Avon, der Geburtsort von William Shakespeare und Salisbury. I
Ask God for a Miracle: Your Life Will Never Be the Same REVIEW & HERALD PUB
Ginger has told her story all across America about how God found her and gave her His joy. Her story of lonliness changed by a prayer and the ring of the Avon lady. Take a chance on God. He can be trusted to take you to the heights. God has a plan to grow your life. He is a God of miracles. Give your life completely to Him and expect the unexpected.
Marie Corelli: The Writer and the Woman KESSINGER PUB CO
Partial Contents: Heroine of the story; Marie Corelli´s childhood; A Romance of Two Worlds; Vendetta and Thelma; Ardath; Wormwood and the Soul of Lilith; Mr. Bentley´s encouragement; Sorrows of Satan; Barabbas; The Mighty Atom and Boy; Murder of Delicia and Ziska; The Master Christian; Temporal Power; Speeches and Lectures; Marie Corelli´s views on marriage; Some personal items; At Stratford -on-Avon.
Sevlow: Hawks Foundation Novel: Mission One Publishamerica
In the dark of the woods Avon is just a sleepy little town with friendly neighbors, happy families and peaceful nights. There hasn´t been a murder within town limits in over fifty years. Under the glow of the moon When a headless body is found, suspicions run rampant. The police try to avoid panic by silencing the story, even though a killer is on the loose. The HAWKS are ready A local gang of misfit militant teenagers think they know who did it. After following a suspicious car to a long-forgo
Next morning at eight o´clock, Paul Randolph De Forrest, a young man of some social prominence, was found murdered in the sitting room of his suite in the big Avon apartment house. He had been dead for several hours. He sat beside his desk, and death left him sprawled upon it face downward. The weapon was one of several curious daggers which had been used ornamentally on the walls of his apartments. The blade missed the heart only a quarter of an inch or so; death must have come within a couple
J.K. Lasser´s from Ebay to Mary Kay: Taxes Made Easy for Your Home Business John Wiley & Sons
Millions are making either a full or part-time living selling things on eBay. Still more are making a living selling products from their home: Think Avon, Mary-Kay, etc. Many just entering this business don´t realize that they may have a significant business tax liability. Who has noticed this? The IRS. But, those who know how to make money on eBay don´t always know how to account for their business and may run into legal trouble. Leading tax consultant and professor Gary Carter walks readers t
1906. Illustrated. A record of Winter´s rambles in England and his useful guidance and suggestions to other American travelers, who like himself, might want to roam among the shrines of the mother land. Contents: The Voyage; The Beauty of England; Great Historic Places; Rambles in London; A Visit to Windsor; The Palace of Westminister; Warwick and Kenilworth; First View of Stratford-on-Avon; London Nooks and Corners; Relics of Lord Byron; Westminister Abbey; Shakespeare´s Home; Up to London; Ol
Religion and Literature in Western England, 600-800 CAMBRIDGE UNIV PR
Even the Venerable Bede knew little about the two Anglo-Saxon kingdoms described in this book. In the sixth and seventh centuries the pagan peoples of the Hwicce and Magonsaetan occupied the frontier from Stratford-upon-Avon as far as the Welsh kingdoms west of Offa´s Dyke. They retained their own kings, aristocracy and independent monasteries into the eighth century. Using archaeological, place-name and historical sources, Dr Sims-Williams describes the early conversion to Christianity of thes