The Sorrows of Frederick


Book Description

THE STORY: Frederick the Great, King of Prussia, aged 73, rises in his tent on the morning of a battle. He is bent, snarling, formidable and sardonically funny. He addresses his army and rouses it to savage fury, then, receiving a message, commands




The Foot of the Cross


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A Rosary of the Seven Sorrows of Our Lady


Book Description

A Rosary of the Seven Sorrows of Our Lady is a guided journey with Fr. Frederick Faber in his own words. The reader walks step by step, prayer by prayer beside the Blessed Virgin Mary through each of her Sorrows as the Mother of God. This text-based rosary comes alive through excerpts taken directly from Fr. Faber's 400-plus page treatise, The Foot of the Cross, The Sorrows of Mary, written in the 1850s. Fr. Faber was the English theologian who translated St. Louis de Montfort's, True Devotion to Mary into English. If you desire to deepen your relationship with the sorrowful Mother, this collection of pearls from Fr. Faber's mystical teaching is a good start. Now with the Daily Meditation to honor Our Sorrowful Mother as she requested.







Life and Times of Frederick Douglass


Book Description

Frederick Douglass recounts early years of abuse, his dramatic escape to the North and eventual freedom, abolitionist campaigns, and his crusade for full civil rights for former slaves. It is also the only of Douglass's autobiographies to discuss his life during and after the Civil War, including his encounters with American presidents such as Lincoln, Grant, and Garfield.




A Southern Life


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A selection of letters that sums up the life of a literary Southerner, who veered away from the commonly held views of his segregated town




Overground Railroad


Book Description

From the award-winning author and illustrator of Before She Was Harriet comes an original and moving perspective of the Great Migration, as seen through the eyes of the young girl Ruth Ellen, whose family journeys from North Carolina to New York City.




The Sorrows of Mary


Book Description

WHO can have a heart so hard that it will not melt on hearing of a most lamentable event which once happened in the world? There was a noble and holy mother who had but one only Son; and he was the most amiable that could be imagined, innocent, virtuous, beautiful, and most loving towards his mother; so much so, that he never had caused her the least displeasure, but always had showed her all respect, obedience, and affection. Hence the mother had placed on this Son all her earthly affections. Now what happened? It happened that this Son, through envy, was falsely accused by his enemies and the judge, although he knew and confessed his innocence, yet, that he might not offend his enemies, condemned him to an infamous death, precisely as they had requested him to do. And this poor mother had to suffer the affliction of seeing that amiable and beloved Son so unjustly taken from her, in the flower of his age, by a barbarous death; for he was made to die in torment, drained of his blood before her own eyes in a public place, upon an infamous cross. Devout souls, what do you say? Is this case and this unhappy mother worthy of compassion? Already you know of whom I speak. This Son so cruelly slain was our loving Redeemer, Jesus, and his mother was the Blessed Virgin Mary, who, for love of us, was willing to see him offered up to the divine justice by the barbarity of men. This great pain, then, which Mary suffered for us a pain which was more than a thousand deaths, merits our compassion and gratitude. And if we can return nothing else for so much love, at least let us for a little time today stop to consider the severity of the suffering by which Mary became queen of martyrs; for her great martyrdom exceeded in suffering that of all the martyrs being, in the first place the longest martyrdom; and in the second place, the greatest martyrdom. This comes mainly from 'The Glories of Mary' by Saint Alphonsus Ligouri with additions from the Raccolta and other pious sources at the end.