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Anonymous plays. 3rd series, comprising: Jack Juggler; King Darius; Gammer Gurton's needle; New custom; Trial of treasure; Note-book and word-list

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About the Book

Titles presenting Biographies or Autobiographies about Literary personages, include authors, poets, screenwriters, journalists, and essayists ranging from the famous to the obscure. These include: Henry David Thoreau, Peter Henry Ling, Elisha Bartlett, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Charles Dickens, Horatio Greenough, John Milton, Christopher Marlowe, Dante, Rousseau, Chateaubriand, Balzac, Stendhal, Sand-Musset, Baudelaire, Flaubert, Verlaine, Zola, Sir Walter Scott, Bentley, Wordsworth, Fitzgerald, Goethe, Robert Louis Stevenson, Byron, Robert Burns, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Oscar Wilde, Amiel, Tolstoy, Pater, Newman, Rabindranath Tagore, Walt Whitman, Shakespeare, Seneca, John Donne, Henry Wotton, Richard Hooker, George Herbert, Victor Hugo and Robert Sanderson.

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Trieste Publishing's aim is to provide readers with the highest quality reproductions of fiction and non-fiction literature that has stood the test of time. Our titles are produced from scans of the original books and as a result may sometimes have imperfections. To ensure a high-quality product we have:

thoroughly reviewed every page of all the books in the catalog repaired some of the text in some cases, and rejected titles that are not of the highest quality. You can look up "Trieste Publishing" in categories that interest you to find other titles in our large collection.

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314 pages, Paperback

First published December 27, 2009

About the author

John Stephen Farmer

173 books6 followers
John Stephen Farmer (March 7, 1854 – January 18, 1916) also known as J. S. Farmer, was a British lexicographer, spiritualist and writer. He was most well known for his seven volume dictionary of slang.

Farmer was born in Bedford, England. His lifetime work was Slang and its Analogues, published in seven volumes (1890–1904) with William Ernest Henley.

Farmer took interest in psychical research and spiritualism. He was the first editor for the spiritualist journal Light. From 1878, he also edited the Psychological Review, a spiritualist periodical.

He also defended the spiritual medium William Eglinton from accusations of fraud, and in 1886 wrote a biography on Eglinton.

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