Results: 2210 books

Des postes en général, et particulièrement en France

Charles Bernède

"Des postes en général, et particulièrement en France" by Charles Bernède is a historical account written in the early 19th century. The book explores the origins, development, and significance of postal systems, with a special emphasis on France. It is structured as a scholarly essay, aiming to trace the evolution of postal services from ancient times to their organization and impact in French society. The central theme is the role of postal communication as a foundational element of social, political, and economic life. The opening of this work begins with a reflective introduction on the vital importance of poste (postal systems) to the functioning of both private and public life, highlighting how correspondence links individuals, families, rulers, and entire nations. Bernède emphasizes the connective power of the post in spreading knowledge, fostering relationships, and maintaining social cohesion. Following the preface, the text offers a detailed historical survey, beginning with the ancient methods of transmitting messages—such as signs, signals, messengers, and carrier pigeons—before describing the advancements introduced by major civilizations like the Persians and Romans. The narrative then transitions to the reestablishment and progression of postal systems in France, from Charlemagne’s initial efforts to Louis XI’s formal founding of a state postal service, emphasizing the evolving practicality and necessity of communication networks through the centuries. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Hungarian grammar

Charles Arthur Ginever

"Hungarian grammar" by Charles Arthur Ginever and Ilona De Györy Ginever is a language textbook written in the early 20th century. It presents a practical, streamlined introduction to Hungarian aimed at learners, emphasizing pronunciation, vowel harmony, suffix-based grammar, and clear usage rules, with exercises, vocabularies, and everyday phrases. The opening of this grammar explains its aim to dispel the idea that Hungarian is hard, then lays out the alphabet, sounds, and vowel harmony (flat, sharp, mediate), compound consonants, and fixed stress. It introduces articles (a/az, and the sparing use of egy), basic noun number formation (including special plural patterns and contractions), and four core cases expressed by suffixes, with possession handled via personal endings and the “van” construction instead of “to have.” It then details personal possessive suffixes, and the language’s extensive place-and-direction system through suffixes and postpositions (with pronominal forms), followed by adjectives (attributive vs. predicative, comparison with -bb and leg-), numerals, and telling time. The verb section begins with the central contrast between definite and indefinite conjugations tied to object definiteness, outlines iktelen and ikes patterns with key tenses, notes the absence of a passive, and highlights features like -lak/-lek when “I” acts on “you,” all reinforced by brief exercises and word lists. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Scottish toasts

Charles Welsh

"Scottish toasts by Charles Welsh" is a collection of toasts, sentiments, and after‑dinner anecdotes compiled in the early 20th century. It serves as a convivial handbook, offering ready-made lines for festive gatherings, with a clear focus on Scottish patriotism, fellowship, love, humor, and the social rituals around food, song, and whisky. The book opens with an introduction and a playful “Scotch Nicht” menu, then arranges its material into themed sections: Patriotic Toasts that praise Scotland’s landscapes, heroes, and symbols; a set of lively Volunteer and soldier anecdotes under Patriotic Scotsmen; affectionate and companionable lines in Toasts to Women, Love, Friendship; rollicking Convivial and Humourous Toasts celebrating John Barleycorn; and a batch of ribald, ironic whisky tales in Some After Dinner Stories. Further Miscellaneous Toasts and a closing Miscellany mix blessings, Scots dialect, and quotations (often from Burns and Scott), touching on bagpipes, St. Andrew’s Day, golf, and homely virtues. The result is a compact, browseable treasury designed to arm any toastmaster with a fitting line for almost any Scottish occasion. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The life of Abdel Kader, ex-sultan of the Arabs of Algeria

Charles Henry Churchill

"The life of Abdel Kader, ex-sultan of the Arabs of Algeria" by Churchill is a historical biography written in the mid-19th century. It charts the formation of Abdel Kader’s character and faith, his leadership of a fractured Algeria, and his principled resistance to French expansion, compiled from his own dictation and other contemporary sources. The opening of the book dedicates the work to Napoleon III, then outlines the author’s personal meetings and daily interviews with Abdel Kader in the 1850s, the sources consulted, and the aim to preserve a heroic life from oblivion. It then sketches Abdel Kader’s youth: his father’s guiding influence, early scholarship in the Koran, athletic prowess, strict morals, marriage, and pilgrimages to Mecca, Damascus, and Baghdad before a studious seclusion at home. With the French capture of Algiers, the narrative turns to turmoil in Oran, failed reliance on the Sultan of Morocco, and Abdel Kader’s sudden elevation at Mascara in 1832, where he summons the Djehad and issues a program of order and justice. Early campaigns around Oran display his courage and organization, his seizure of Tlemsen’s town (not its citadel), a failed assault on Mostaganem, and stern enforcement of discipline, even against collaborators. French vacillation leads to negotiations after sharp skirmishes, producing the Treaty of Desmichels, which Abdel Kader interprets to secure a trade monopoly at Arzew and to confine French garrisons. At the start of the ensuing peace he levies war taxes, faces a brief revolt and a setback against Mustapha-ibn-Ismail, then rapidly rallies loyal tribes as the section closes with renewed maneuvering and French attempts to manage the province through native intermediaries. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The passing of the phantoms : A study of evolutionary psychology and morals

Charles Joseph Patten

The passing of the phantoms by Charles Joseph Patten is a scientific-philosophical essay written in the early 20th century. It examines how mental capacities and moral feelings evolve from simpler organisms to humans, arguing that morality has natural, biological roots and critiquing supernatural explanations of ethics. The book moves from evidence for organic and mental evolution—via anatomy, embryology, brain development, and the role of memory—to vivid field anecdotes that reveal attention, imagination, imitation, and admiration in animals (hawks, pigeons, cats, dogs, horses). Patten shows how these faculties can even seed rudimentary superstition. He then traces the moral sense in nature through mutual aid and disciplined social organization (notably in ants and birds), sentinel behavior, mobbing of predators, and surprising forbearance among predators and prey. Turning to humans, he argues that imagination fostered belief in spirits and dualism through dreams, which grew into animism, totemism, and astronomical myths, eventually crystallizing into organized religions. He contrasts a “superstitious” order, guided by external authority and faith, with a “non-superstitious” order rooted in scientific inquiry and agnostic humility, concluding that a sound ethical life is best grounded in evolved social instincts, reason, and a naturalistic reverence for the living world. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Obstipation : a practical monograph on the disorders and diseases of the rectal valve

Thomas Charles Martin

"Obstipation" by Thomas Charles Martin is a medical monograph written in the late 19th century. It argues that the rectal valve is a real and clinically crucial structure whose pathology underlies many cases of obstructed defecation, distinguishing this from ordinary constipation. The work emphasizes careful anatomical study, direct visualization via proctoscopy, and modified treatment strategies for strictures in both infants and adults. The opening of the monograph defines obstipation versus constipation and explains the need to resolve long-standing disputes about rectal anatomy, especially the existence and role of the rectal valve. Martin reviews the literature chronologically, contrasting authorities who deny valves with those who describe them, and sets out to prove their presence with photographs, microscopic sections, and reproducible inspection methods. He traces the development of atmospheric inflation and proctoscopy (from Sims and Van Buren onward), then details how to examine the rectum noninstrumentally in the knee-chest position and instrumentally with an anoscope and proctoscope, including patient positioning and lighting. A topographic anatomy follows, distinguishing the fixed anal segment from the movable abdominal rectum, describing the sphincters, levator ani, and visible anal landmarks, and warning against common diagnostic errors. He then presents cast and histologic evidence for semilunar rectal valves, outlines their typical number and placement, and links their function to staged fecal transit during defecation. The section closes by introducing obstipation in infants, attributing their straining to immature musculature, excessive bowel mobility, obstructive valves, and a tight anus. (This is an automatically generated summary.)