The Watchman's Cry
Title | The Watchman's Cry PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 6 |
Release | 1868 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
A Watchman's Cry
Title | A Watchman's Cry PDF eBook |
Author | Amber Albrecht |
Publisher | Page Publishing Inc |
Pages | 144 |
Release | 2022-02-03 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1635684099 |
Do you want to know what is going on in this chaotic world right now? How do these events affect you and your future? As the world around us descends into chaos at every corner, most people want to know what is going on. Believe it or not, these events were foretold thousands of years ago. In A Watchman's Cry: Exposing Deceptions and Surviving Tribulation, you will find out the following: * What these events mean * Where we are in the prophetic timeline * What you can do about it * Where to be * How to survive This book will walk you through the important things you need to know and do. It has vital information about deceptions presented by some leaders and even full-blown false prophets. You will get a play-by-play breakdown of some prophecies in the Bible and urgent warnings given by Jesus in the Holy Book. This book will show how some things being taught are not scripturally sound and meant to deceive people. This book is a must-read.
The Burden of England, Scotland,&Ireland: Or, the Watchmans Alarm. In a Plain Declaration to the Kings Most Excellent Majesty, Pointing Out the Chiefe Sins, and Causes of this Civil War ... Also Shewing the Meanes ... for the Establishing a Sound Peace ... According to the Mean Wisdome God Hath Given Unto the Author, Ed: de Claro Vado. MS. Additions
Title | The Burden of England, Scotland,&Ireland: Or, the Watchmans Alarm. In a Plain Declaration to the Kings Most Excellent Majesty, Pointing Out the Chiefe Sins, and Causes of this Civil War ... Also Shewing the Meanes ... for the Establishing a Sound Peace ... According to the Mean Wisdome God Hath Given Unto the Author, Ed: de Claro Vado. MS. Additions PDF eBook |
Author | Ed. de CLARO-VADO (pseud.) |
Publisher | |
Pages | 236 |
Release | 1646 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
The Chase Chronicle
Title | The Chase Chronicle PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 702 |
Release | 1910 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Agamemnon
Title | Agamemnon PDF eBook |
Author | Aeschylus |
Publisher | Createspace Independent Publishing Platform |
Pages | 68 |
Release | 2016-09-06 |
Genre | |
ISBN | 9781537484303 |
The sense of difficulty, and indeed of awe, with which a scholar approaches the task of translating the Agamemnon depends directly on its greatness as poetry. It is in part a matter of diction. The language of Aeschylus is an extraordinary thing, the syntax stiff and simple, the vocabulary obscure, unexpected, and steeped in splendour. Its peculiarities cannot be disregarded, or the translation will be false in character. Yet not Milton himself could produce in English the same great music, and a translator who should strive ambitiously to represent the complex effect of the original would clog his own powers of expression and strain his instrument to breaking. But, apart from the diction in this narrower sense, there is a quality of atmosphere surrounding the Agamemnon which seems almost to defy reproduction in another setting, because it depends in large measure on the position of the play in the historical development of Greek literature.
The Watchman
Title | The Watchman PDF eBook |
Author | Thomas Moore |
Publisher | |
Pages | 4 |
Release | 1827 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
The Stone Angel
Title | The Stone Angel PDF eBook |
Author | Margaret Laurence |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 319 |
Release | 2015-07-22 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 0226923878 |
The Stone Angel, The Diviners, and A Bird in the House are three of the five books in Margaret Laurence's renowned "Manawaka series," named for the small Canadian prairie town in which they take place. Each of these books is narrated by a strong woman growing up in the town and struggling with physical and emotional isolation. In The Stone Angel, Hagar Shipley, age ninety, tells the story of her life, and in doing so tries to come to terms with how the very qualities which sustained her have deprived her of joy. Mingling past and present, she maintains pride in the face of senility, while recalling the life she led as a rebellious young bride, and later as a grieving mother. Laurence gives us in Hagar a woman who is funny, infuriating, and heartbreakingly poignant. "This is a revelation, not impersonation. The effect of such skilled use of language is to lead the reader towards the self-recognition that Hagar misses."—Robertson Davies, New York Times "It is [Laurence's] admirable achievement to strike, with an equally sure touch, the peculiar note and the universal; she gives us a portrait of a remarkable character and at the same time the picture of old age itself, with the pain, the weariness, the terror, the impotent angers and physical mishaps, the realization that others are waiting and wishing for an end."—Honor Tracy, The New Republic "Miss Laurence is the best fiction writer in the Dominion and one of the best in the hemisphere."—Atlantic "[Laurence] demonstrates in The Stone Angel that she has a true novelist's gift for catching a character in mid-passion and life at full flood. . . . As [Hagar Shipley] daydreams and chatters and lurches through the novel, she traces one of the most convincing—and the most touching—portraits of an unregenerate sinner declining into senility since Sara Monday went to her reward in Joyce Cary's The Horse's Mouth."—Time "Laurence's triumph is in her evocation of Hagar at ninety. . . . We sympathize with her in her resistance to being moved to a nursing home, in her preposterous flight, in her impatience in the hospital. Battered, depleted, suffering, she rages with her last breath against the dying of the light. The Stone Angel is a fine novel, admirably written and sustained by unfailing insight."—Granville Hicks, Saturday Review "The Stone Angel is a good book because Mrs. Laurence avoids sentimentality and condescension; Hagar Shipley is still passionately involved in the puzzle of her own nature. . . . Laurence's imaginative tact is strikingly at work, for surely this is what it feels like to be old."—Paul Pickrel, Harper's