The Mohicans of Paris


Book Description

This Elibron Classics title is a reprint of the original edition published by George Routledge and Sons, , London and New York




The Story of Sindbad the Sailor


Book Description

'Arabian Nights' is also known as 'One Thousand and One Nights' stories. These stories are collected from different parts of the world during Islamic golden Age. Many different versions and translation of these stories are available around the world. These stories are specially crafted with folklore, magic and legends theme to capture the imagination of children and make them engage the whole day.







Alexandre Dumas' Adventures in Czarist Russia


Book Description

The four volumes of Dumas' En Russie have been brought within the scope of a single volume in a first English translation by Alma Elizabeth Murch. His impressions of St. Petersburg and Moscow, his expedition to Finland and Astrakhan, his trip down the Volga, all filled with amusing sketches and entirely lacking in convention, elevate this travel-log to a unique plane and endow it with value and pertinence today




Aladdin et la lampe merveilleuse


Book Description

Les « Classiques Junior » est une collection destinée aux élèves du primaire, consacrée aux œuvres majeures de la littérature universelle. L’objectif principal de cette collection est d’ouvrir une fenêtre sur les livres d’hier, qui ont bercé l’apprentissage des belles lettres de générations entières à travers les siècles. Ces œuvres qui ont traversé le temps et les frontières, ont été et continuent d’être de grands succès, et ont été l’objet d’intérêt au passé et au présent. Les Mille et Une Nuits est un recueil anonyme de contes populaires en arabe, d’origine persane et indienne. Il est constitué de nombreux contes enchâssés racontés par Cheherazade au roi de Perse, Shahryar, une histoire palpitante sans la terminer et, au lever du jour elle suspend son récit et le reprend la nuit suivante. Ce stratagème dura alors mille et une nuits.




Georges Auric


Book Description

Jean Cocteau, Erik Satie, Moulin Rouge - the names popularly associated with film composer Georges Auric's career conjure visions of a distant and glamorous early twentieth-century Parisian art world. Auric wrote well over 100 film scores, including the soundtrack for Roman Holiday, and was notably affiliated with Les Six, a group of French composers reacting to the musical establishment of the 1920s. But Auric's life and work spanned far beyond this limited sphere. A lifelong involvement in politics - from his leftism during the Popular Front years of the 1930s to his significant role in the French Communist Party's musical resistance of the 1940s - heavily influenced his sound and aesthetic. His advocacy on behalf of his fellow musicians led him into the fight for fair copyright laws, initially in France and then worldwide. And over the course of a seven-decade-long career, Auric took on roles as diverse as music critic, opera director, and arts administrator, revealing a deep involvement in his country's musical life that makes the label of "composer" seem inadequate. The first English-language biography of Auric, Georges Auric: A Life in Music and Politics rethinks the conventional ideas of what it means to be a composer. Drawing from an astonishing three dozen untapped archives, including the private archives of Auric's widow, author Colin Roust presents a picture of Auric that is as multifaceted as the man's career. Using Auric's life as a lens, Roust reveals the transforming role of music - and the composer - in twentieth-century society.







The Romancers


Book Description

In his play "The Romancers" Edmond Rostand satirizes the sentimentalism and escapism of Romantic literature of his times. Percinet is the only son of Bergamin and Sylvette is the only daughter of Pasquinot. Their fathers who are widowers and neighbors make a plan to marry their children with each other. In order to accomplish this, the fathers separate their children so that they may love each other the more, and desire to be re-united. As a part of their plan, Bergamin warns his son to stay away from Pasquinot and his daughter. Similarly, Pasquinot also warns his daughter that she should not be near to his mortal enemy Bergamin and his son. Inspite of their fathers' warnings, Percinet and Sylvette fall in love. They think themselves as the counterparts of Romeo and Juliet. They are worried that their love will also end in tragedy like that of Romeo and Juliet. They are emotional, daydreaming teenagers who have recently finished their school studies. They are deeply influenced by romantic literature of their times, especially by the romantic play "Romeo and Juliet" of William Shakespeare. They are so in love with each other that they desire to die rather than separate with each other. Bergamin then hires Straforel and his company for a fake kidnapping. At midnight hours, when Percinet and Sylvette are about to meet, Straforel with his company kidnap Sylvette and put her into the sedan chair. Percinet hears the cry of Sylvette, jumps over the wall and fights with his sword. At the same time, as planned, Pasquinot enters and calls Percinet a hero. He suggests Bergamin to put an end to their enmity and arrange the marriage of their children. Thus in the end the two children seem like puppets in the hands of their fathers. - MeroSpark Cloud Reference, http://www.merospark.com




La Princesse Lointaine


Book Description