The Ultimate Christmas Collection: 150+ authors & 400+ Christmas Novels, Stories, Poems, Carols & Legends , livre ebook

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If you were looking for the definitive Christmas anthology, consider yourself lucky, because you just found it!
This book is everything you want Christmas to be — loving, warm and celebratory. Timeless and adorable, beautifully designed, "The Big Book of Christmas" is a great big stocky book — stuffed with novels, novellas, short stories, poems, carols and songs.
Inside you'll find:

· Novels, novellas and short stories from Charles Dickens, Louisa May Alcott, Hans Christian Andersen, O. Henry, Lucy Maud Montgomery, E. T. A. Hoffmann, L. Frank Baum, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Leo Tolstoy, Henry Van Dyke, Oscar Wilde, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Anton Chekhov and many more!
· Poems, carols and songs from John Milton, Clement Clarke Moore, William Blake, W. B. Yeats, Rudyard Kipling, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, H. P. Lovecraft, George MacDonald, Emily Dickinson and many more!
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Date de parution

23 septembre 2024

Nombre de lectures

12

EAN13

9789897787287

Langue

English

Poids de l'ouvrage

1 Mo

THE ULTIMATE CHRISTMAS COLLECTION

 
 
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission of the publisher.
Table of Contents
 
 
 
ADE, GEORGE
ALCOTT, LOUISA MAY
ALDEN, RAYMOND MACDONALD
ALEXANDER, CECIL FRANCES
ALLEN, JAMES LANE
ANDERSEN, HANS CHRISTIAN
AUSTIN, ALFRED
AUSTIN, MARY
BARBOUR, RALPH HENRY
BAUM, L. FRANK
BENNETT, WILLIAM COX
BLAKE, WILLIAM
BOLTON, EDMUND
BRONTË, ANNE
BROOKS, ELBRIDGE S.
BROUN, HEYWOOD
BROWNE, FRANCES
BROWNING, ELIZABETH BARRETT
BUNCE, OLIVER BELL
BURNS, ROBERT
BUTLER, ELLIS PARKER
CAMPBELL, WILLIAM WILFRED
CANTON, WILLIAM
CATHER, WILLA
CHATTERTON, THOMAS
CHEKHOV, ANTON
CHESTERTON, G. K.
CLARE, JOHN
COLERIDGE, SAMUEL TAYLOR
COOK, ELIZA
COOLIDGE, SUSAN
COPPÉE, FRANÇOIS
CRASHAW, RICHARD
CRAWFORD, F. MARION
CUTTING, MARY STEWART
DALEY, VICTOR JAMES
DE VERE, AUBREY
DELAND, MARGARET
DICKENS, CHARLES
DICKINSON, EMILY
DODGE, MARY MAPES
DOMETT, ALFRED
DONNE, JOHN
DOSTOYEVSKY, FYODOR
DOYLE, ARTHUR CONAN
DRUMMOND, WILLIAM
DYKE, HENRY VAN
EWING, JULIANA HORATIA
FIELD, ANNE P. L.
FIELD, EUGENE
FREEMAN, MARY E. WILKINS
GILDER, RICHARD WATSON
GLADDEN, WASHINGTON
GOETHE, JOHANN WOLFGANG VON
GOGOL, NIKOLAI
GRAHAME, KENNETH
GRIMM, THE BROTHERS
HARDY, THOMAS
HARRISON, ELIZABETH
HARTE, BRET
HAVERGAL, FRANCES RIDLEY
HAWTHORNE, NATHANIEL
HEBER, REGINALD
HEMANS, FELICIA
HENRY, O.
HERBERT, GEORGE
HERFORD, OLIVER
HERRICK, ROBERT
HOFFMANN, E. T. A.
HOLBROOK, FLORENCE
HOOD, THOMAS
HOWELLS, WILLIAM DEAN
IRVING, WASHINGTON
JONSON, BEN
JOYCE, JAMES
KEBLE, JOHN
KIPLING, RUDYARD
KIRKLAND, WINIFRED
LAGERLÖF, SELMA
LANG, ANDREW
LEACOCK, STEPHEN
LINN, JAMES WEBER
LONGFELLOW, HENRY WADSWORTH
LOVECRAFT, H. P.
LOWELL, JAMES RUSSELL
MACDONALD, GEORGE
MACKAY, CHARLES
MCGONAGALL, WILLIAM TOPAZ
MILLER, ALICE DUER
MILLER, EMILY HUNTINGTON
MILLER, OLIVE THORNE
MILTON, JOHN
MITCHELL, S. WEIR
MONTGOMERY, LUCY MAUD
MOORE, CLEMENT C.
MORRIS, WILLIAM
MURFREE, MARY NOAILLES
MURRAY, ROBERT FULLER
NEALE, JOHN MASON
PAGE, THOMAS NELSON
PEATTIE, ELIA W.
PICKTHALL, MARJORIE
POTTER, BEATRIX
PYLE, KATHARINE
QUILLER-COUCH, ARTHUR
RILEY, JAMES WHITCOMB
ROBINSON, MARY DARBY
ROE, EDWARD PAYSON
ROSSETTI, CHRISTINA
RUNYON, DAMON
SAKI
SCOTT, WALTER
SEARS, EDMUND HAMILTON
SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM
SMITH, NORA ARCHIBALD
SOUTHWELL, ROBERT
STEVENSON, ROBERT LOUIS
STOCKTON, FRANK
STOWE, HARRIET BEECHER
SWINBURNE, ALGERNON CHARLES
SYMONDS, JOHN ADDINGTON
TABB, JOHN BANISTER
TARKINGTON, BOOTH
TATE, NAHUM
TEASDALE, SARA
TENNYSON, LORD ALFRED
THACKERAY, WILLIAM MAKEPEACE
THRING, EDWARD
TIMROD, HENRY
TOLSTOY, LEO
TROLLOPE, ANTHONY
TUSSER, THOMAS
TWAIN, MARK
TYNAN, KATHARINE
VAUGHAN, HENRY
WATTS, ISAAC
WESLEY, CHARLES
WHARTON, ANNE HOLLINGSWORTH
WHEELOCK, LUCY
WHITTIER, JOHN G.
WIGGIN, KATE DOUGLAS
WILCOX, ELLA WHEELER
WILDE, OSCAR
WINTER, JOHN STRANGE
WITHER, GEORGE
WORDSWORTH, WILLIAM
YEATS, WILLIAM BUTLER
 
ADE, GEORGE
(1866-1944)
 
 
 
The Set of Poe
 
The Set of Poe
First published : 1903
 
 
 
Mr. Waterby remarked to his wife: “I’m still tempted by that set of Poe. I saw it in the window today, marked down to fifteen dollars.”
“Yes?” said Mrs. Waterby, with a sudden gasp of emotion, it seemed to him.
“Yes — I believe I’ll have to get it.”
“I wouldn’t if I were you, Alfred,” she said. “You have so many books now.”
“I know I have, my dear, but I haven’t any set of Poe, and that’s what I’ve been wanting for a long time. This edition I was telling you about is beautifully gotten up.”
“Oh, I wouldn’t buy it, Alfred,” she repeated, and there was a note of pleading earnestness in her voice. “It’s so much money to spend for a few books.”
“Well, I know, but —” and then he paused, for the lack of words to express his mortified surprise.
Mr. Waterby had tried to be an indulgent husband. He took a selfish pleasure in giving, and found it more blessed than receiving. Every salary day he turned over to Mrs. Waterby a fixed sum for household expenses. He added to this an allowance for her spending money. He set aside a small amount for his personal expenses and deposited the remainder in the bank.
He flattered himself that he approximated the model husband.
Mr. Waterby had no costly habits and no prevailing appetite for anything expensive. Like every other man, he had one or two hobbies, and one of his particular hobbies was Edgar Allan Poe. He believed that Poe, of all American writers, was the one unmistakable “genius.”
The word “genius” has been bandied around the country until it has come to be applied to a longhaired man out of work or a stout lady who writes poetry for the rural press. In the case of Poe, Mr. Waterby maintained that “genius” meant one who was not governed by the common mental processes, but “who spoke from inspiration, his mind involuntarily taking superhuman flight into the realm of pure imagination,” or something of that sort. At any rate, Mr. Waterby liked Poe and he wanted a set of Poe. He allowed himself not more than one luxury a year, and he determined that this year the luxury should be a set of Poe.
Therefore, imagine the hurt to his feelings when his wife objected to his expending fifteen dollars for that which he coveted above anything else in the world.
As he went to his work that day he reflected on Mrs. Waterby’s conduct. Did she not have her allowance of spending money? Did he ever find fault with her extravagance? Was he an unreasonable husband in asking that he be allowed to spend this small sum for that which would give him many hours of pleasure, and which would belong to Mrs. Waterby as much as to him?
He told himself that many a husband would have bought the books without consulting his wife. But he (Waterby) had deferred to his wife in all matters touching family finances, and he said to himself, with a tincture of bitterness in his thoughts, that probably he had put himself into the attitude of a mere dependent.
For had she not forbidden him to buy a few books for himself? Well, no, she had not forbidden him, but it amounted to the same thing. She had declared that she was firmly opposed to the purchase of Poe.
Mr. Waterby wondered if it were possible that he was just beginning to know his wife. Was she a selfish woman at heart? Was she complacent and good-natured and kind only while she was having her own way? Wouldn’t she prove to be an entirely different sort of woman if he should do as many husbands do — spend his income on clubs and cigars and private amusement, and gave her the pickings of small change?
Nothing in Mr. Waterby’s whole experience as a married man had so wrenched his sensibilities and disturbed his faith as Mrs. Waterby’s objection to the purchase of the set of Poe. There was but one way to account for it. She wanted all the money for herself, or else she wanted him to put it into the bank so that she could come into it after he — but this was too monstrous.
However, Mrs. Waterby’s conduct helped to give strength to Mr. Waterby’s meanest suspicions.
Two or three days after the first conversation she asked: “You didn’t buy that set of Poe, did you, Alfred?”
“No, I didn’t buy it,” he answered, as coldly and with as much hauteur as possible.
He hoped to hear her say: “Well, why don’t you go and get it? I’m sure that you want it, and I’d like to see you buy something for yourself once in a while.”
That would have shown the spirit of a loving and unselfish wife.
But she merely said, “That’s right; don’t buy it,” and he was utterly unhappy, for he realized that he had married a woman who did not love him and who simply desired to use him as a pack-horse for all household burdens.
As soon as Mr. Waterby had learned the horrible truth about his wife he began to recall little episodes dating back years, and now he pieced them together to convince himself that he was a deeply wronged person.
Small at the time and almost unnoticed, they now accumulated to prove that Mrs. Waterby had no real anxiety for her husband’s happiness. Also, Mr. Waterby began to observe her more closely, and he believed that he found new evidences of her unworthiness. For one thing, while he was in gloom over his d

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