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Kankurit : 5-näytöksinen näytelmä 1840-luvulta

Gerhart Hauptmann

"Kankurit : 5-näytöksinen näytelmä 1840-luvulta" by Gerhart Hauptmann is a play written in the late 19th century. Set among Silesian weavers in the 1840s, it portrays crushing poverty, factory exploitation, and the mounting pressure toward collective defiance. The drama contrasts the hard-nosed mill owner Dreisziger and his agent Pfeifer with weavers like Baumert, Bäcker, Reimann, Heiber, and Ansorge, along with their families. The opening of the play unfolds in Dreisziger’s cloth-receiving room, where Pfeifer nitpicks faults, docks pay, and refuses advances as gaunt weavers wait in fear; Bäcker openly defies the boss, a starving child collapses, and Dreisziger delivers a self-justifying lecture before wages are cut further. At the start of the second act, in Ansorge’s squalid hut, the Baumert family weaves in exhaustion, a neighbor despairs of her nine children, and we learn they have even slaughtered their dog for food; ex-soldier Jäger arrives, drinks, and recites the fierce “Verituomio” verses that inflame their anger. The third act opens in a tavern, where townspeople argue over the weavers’ plight and the truth of official reports; Bäcker and Jäger enter with a crowd, bruised and singing the seditious song, and despite scoffing by others, the mood among the weavers hardens toward action. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Saïd the fisherman

Marmaduke William Pickthall

"Saïd the fisherman" by Marmaduke William Pickthall is a novel written in the early 20th century. It appears to be a picaresque tale set in the eastern Mediterranean, following a poor but ambitious fisherman whose superstition, pride, and quick wits drive him from his coastal town into a string of risky encounters. Through Saïd’s brushes with Ottoman soldiers, crafty villagers, a mendicant, and a Christian missionary’s household, the story weighs luck against fate and pokes at human folly with sly humor. Expect vivid local color, moral ambiguity, and an anti-hero propelled as much by vanity as by need. The opening of the novel shows Saïd losing the day’s earnings to galloping officers and then discovering his hidden savings stolen after his wife is lured out by a voice mimicking his friend Abdullah’s—who then “advises” him to flee and opportunistically claims Saïd’s home and gear. Saïd and his wife, Hasneh, set out; soldiers confiscate his donkey, he’s struck and humiliated, and on the road he learns from a beggar about a generous Frankish preacher, robs a camel-driver for ransom, and abandons the ailing Hasneh in a village, promising vaguely to send for her. Seeking the missionary’s help, he is chased off by a servant, sneaks back to steal a fine robe and fez, and escapes after the servant falls into a pit; dressed in his new finery, he bluffs his way into deference at a roadside khan. The section closes with Saïd basking in mistaken status as talk of soldiers and war stirs around him, setting the tone for a journey of gambles, imposture, and shifting fortune. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Die Flucht der Beate Hoyermann : Roman

Thea von Harbou

"Die Flucht der Beate Hoyermann : Roman" by Thea von Harbou is a novel written in the early 20th century. It likely blends travel adventure with espionage and wartime suspense, following Beate Hoyermann and her husband Gerhard as a carefree journey through Japan turns into a hazardous bid for escape under political suspicion and looming conflict. Themes of cultural encounter, natural catastrophe, and the creeping onset of war frame their peril. The opening of the novel follows Beate through bustling Japanese streets to a hilltop temple, interweaving her and Gerhard’s world travels with sharp, curious observations of Africa, America, and Japan. Gerhard confides they are being shadowed by Japanese police; at the theater their friend Tystendal brings the shattering news of the Archduke’s assassination and hints at wider war. That night an earthquake and fire destroy the nearby city; Beate drags her distraught maid Yuki from the water as boats capsize in the blazing bay, and afterward they discover Gerhard’s papers have been rifled. Weeks of rain and a mysteriously absent ship delay their departure, until a German‑speaking stranger warns that the authorities suspect Gerhard as a spy and will quietly prevent their return to Europe, revealing a pervasive, efficient surveillance that now entangles them. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The mid of the maintop

Arthur Lee Knight

"The mid of the maintop by Arthur Lee Knight" is a juvenile naval adventure story from the late 19th century Victorian era. Set during British anti-slavery patrols off East Africa, it centers on courage, seamanship, and duty as a frigate’s crew hunts slavers and faces peril ashore and afloat. The story opens with H.M.S. Forte in a storm, where midshipman Jack Villiers is swept overboard and presumed dead. Later, a cutter under young Thring discovers a dhow in the Joo-joo river and, after a rough boarding fight, learns Jack is alive but carried inland by Arab slavers. The frigate launches a naval brigade that storms a fortified village ruled by Sooltan Shah, blasting the gate and fighting hand-to-hand while their officer is wounded. Meanwhile, Jack frees himself by cunning, tunnels out of his hut, hides in a tree, and escapes by canoe downriver. He reunites with the boats as the force withdraws, and the tale closes on fellowship restored after brisk action, narrow escapes, and the disruption of the slavers’ trade. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Murder in the Gilded Cage

Samuel Spewack

"Murder in the Gilded Cage" by Samuel Spewack is a detective novel written in the early 20th century. It follows a reporter-turned-press agent who is drawn into the scandalous orbit of wealthy divorcée Dora Breese, her idle suitor Guy Thomas, her children, and her steadfast ally Gordon Rice, as a yacht trip to Havana ends in a high-society murder. The investigation pulls in Ben Smith, an American detective in Havana, and Boris Perutkin, a formidable Russian sleuth with an old case that unexpectedly overlaps this circle. The opening of the novel presents the narrator’s promise to tell the unvarnished truth of Mrs. Breese’s death, then sketches the sensational divorce that made her famous and the delicate triangle with actor Guy Thomas. Hired as her press agent, the narrator sails on her yacht with Rice and the two Breese children; tension spikes when Dora impulsively announces her engagement to Guy, Henry Jr. stages a shocking overboard plunge that Rice heroically thwarts, and that night the narrator spies Guy dumping cartridges from a pearl-handled revolver into the sea. In Havana, the narrator meets Ben Smith and the imposing Perutkin, who links this group to an unsolved Riga murder involving the Countess’s former husband, while Henry Breese Sr. quietly arrives in the city. Soon after, Dora is found shot through the heart in her opulent “Gilded Cage”; no weapon is found, the windows are locked, no shot was heard, and Guy claims he was upstairs when the butler discovered the body. Rice bursts in to accuse Guy, brandishing telegrams about a chorus-girl fiancée, talk of sudden wealth, and a check the bank deemed a forgery—setting the stage for the inquiry to begin. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Sinun kansasi on minun kansani! : Avioliittotarina eteläjyllannista

Laura Kieler

"Sinun kansasi on minun kansasi! : Avioliittotarina eteläjyllannista" by Laura Kieler is a novel written in the early 20th century. Set amid the Danish–German tensions in South Jutland, it appears to follow Danish farming families whose loyalties, livelihoods, and affections are tested under Prussian rule. The story centers on Karen, her spirited brother Esben, and their steady cousin Valdemar, with a provocative German newcomer disrupting both community pride and an expected match. The likely theme is a marriage entangled with questions of identity, language, and belonging. The opening of the novel frames the political and cultural background with a translator’s note and a prefatory overview of Schleswig’s history, Germanization policies, and the precarious status of “optants,” then moves into 1894 harvest scenes on Danish farms. We meet Esben (“Nopsa”), Karen, and Valdemar amid songs, playful camaraderie, and quiet resolve, which are jarred by the appearance of a German buyer, Ruprecht Jürgens, singing Lorelei and openly pursuing Karen. Community debate over a forced auction and the sale of Danish land to a German shows simmering anger and the call for mutual support, while domestic scenes at Højemarke introduce the stalwart matriarch, the old servant Sidsel, and friend Gyrithe. Small acts become political: a lighthearted song leads to a visit from the gendarme and an absurd interrogation, underlining how everyday Danish life, language, and love are policed from the very first chapters. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The barbarous babes : Being the memoirs of Molly

Edith Ayrton Zangwill

"The barbarous babes: Being the memoirs of Molly" by Edith Ayrton Zangwill is a children’s novel written in the early 20th century. Told in a lively first-person voice, it follows Molly and her siblings—Humphrey, Violet, and Teddy—through a string of misadventures born of fierce imaginations, pranks, and earnest but misguided attempts at virtue. Family life with their governess, visiting relatives, and an often-absent mother frames comic scrapes that turn into gentle moral lessons. The opening of this novel introduces a series of vivid episodes: Molly and Humphrey’s “torturing games” spiral into a mock martyrdom that nearly ends in disaster; jealousy of a visiting cousin’s curls leads Molly to cut them off in a Samson-and-Delilah prank; shy Violet, misreading a remark, bravely pays a formal call alone and causes social consternation; their mother must leave for her health, and Teddy tries to stow away before later being whipped for sweeping a chimney in play; Molly’s zeal to “missionary” her siblings culminates in an insulting bathroom placard that offends a visiting German musician until Humphrey mends matters; and, at last, the children’s chaotic home theatricals are rescued by their mother’s unexpected return, which steadies the household and brings the first performances off happily. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Wood Cottage : or, Sheltered at last

M. E. (Mary Emma) Drewsen

"Wood Cottage : or, Sheltered at last" by M. E. Drewsen is a children''s Christian novel written in the early 20th century. It centers on a lost London girl, Kit, and her devoted cousin Ben, who are taken into the loving home of the Grays at Wood Cottage, where faith, kindness, and everyday trials shape their new life. The story blends homely scenes with moral instruction, following the children’s growth, school challenges, and the gentle influence of charitable neighbors. The opening of Wood Cottage : or, Sheltered at last introduces Kit—newly found by her parents during a Sunday-school outing—and Ben, the poor but steadfast cousin who kept her alive by selling matches. Welcomed into Wood Cottage, they are clothed, fed, and tenderly guided, offering simple prayers, singing hymns, and forming habits of gratitude. Ben starts school, struggles with teasing from Jim Snow, briefly loses his temper, then repents, makes amends, and resolves to be a “brave little soldier” for Jesus. A stormy outing leads to the perambulator’s disappearance—moved by Jim for mischief—only for Ben to recover it and, when Jim is injured, magnanimously wheel his tormentor home. The children also befriend the Craigs; with Mrs. Frankham’s help, the sick son John finds peace in Christ before dying, and the families grow close, even sharing a seaside holiday where Kit’s quick temper briefly flares and is swiftly mended. A year later, Ben is working responsibly, a new baby has arrived, the father is recovering from an accident, and Kit gets into trouble for disobeying about lifting her little brother—ending the excerpt with her tearful prayer for forgiveness. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The autobiography of a seaman (volume 1 of 2)

Earl of Dundonald, Thomas Cochrane

"The autobiography of a seaman (volume 1 of 2)" by Earl of Thomas Cochrane Dundonald is a naval autobiography written in the mid-19th century. It charts the celebrated but contentious career of a British admiral known for daring operations, outspoken reformism, and political battles, set chiefly against the backdrop of the Napoleonic wars. This first volume focuses on his early life, family background, formative service, and the lead-up to the celebrated but disputed action at Aix Roads, alongside his criticisms of naval administration. The opening of the work presents a dedication to the Westminster electors and a forthright preface outlining its scope: service up to the Basque Roads attack, the ensuing court-martial of Lord Gambier, years of exclusion from command, and eventual restorations of rank and honours. Cochrane thanks prominent supporters (notably the Marquis of Lansdowne and Lord Brougham) and credits his wife’s direct appeal to the sovereign for a key turn in his fate, then states a “moral” about the personal costs of truth-telling and reform. An introductory chapter traces the Dundonald lineage—from medieval Cochranes and the rise and fall of Robert Cochran under James III, through staunch Stuart loyalties, civil-war entanglements, and the family’s elevation—before turning to the author’s own beginnings. Chapter I sketches his 1775 birth, the loss of ancestral estates, and his father’s scientific ventures (soda, alumina, British gum, sal ammoniac, white lead, and coal-tar/coke), including an early, accidental demonstration of coal-gas illumination later developed by others; these pursuits, though inventive, ruined the family finances and delayed his entry into the navy. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Illustrations of taxation

Harriet Martineau

"Illustrations of taxation" by Harriet Martineau is a collection of didactic tales written in the early 19th century. It uses lively domestic and rural scenes to show how taxes, rents, and game laws press on everyday people, beginning with the return of the Cranston heirs to their long-shuttered estate and the frictions that follow between landowners, tradespeople, and poachers. Central figures include the Cranston siblings—Richard, James, Wallace, and Fanny—alongside the horse-dealer Swallow, his identical twin daughters Anne and Sarah, and the ever-calculating assessor, Mr. Taplin. The opening of the first tale, The Park and the Paddock, follows the Cranstons as they break into their sealed house at Fellbrow, survey its desolation (owl, cobwebs, and a grim cat-and-rat relic), and set about repairs while hearing warnings of poaching. In town, Fanny’s valet meets gossiping shopkeepers whose complaints about hair-powder, rents, and house-duty introduce the book’s tax theme, while the assessor eyes the new family’s dogs, carriages, and windows. At the Paddock, Swallow hurriedly loads a van with suspect “packages” as the huntsman and then the assessor arrive, and his twin daughters—Anne and the sharper Sarah—come into view. James, a clergyman and sportsman, flirts with the twins between funerals and house-hunting, lunches with a farmer who explains the ruinous cost of game on crops and the quiet league with poachers, and debates the injustices of the land-tax. As James keeps visiting to find Fanny a horse, Sarah displaces Anne in his favor; learning of a planned night expedition, she tries to warn him off, while the Paddock readies drink, pipes, and sawdust for what looks like a poaching night and James urges his brother to act. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Hirviherrat : Kolminäytöksinen huvinäytelmä

Kl. U. (Klaus Uuno) Suomela

"Hirviherrat : Kolminäytöksinen huvinäytelmä" by Kl. U. Suomela is a stage comedy written in the early 20th century. Set around a moose hunt in rural Finland, it satirizes city swagger and country shrewdness through flirtations, fibs, and mishaps as landowner Joonas Isomaa, his daughter Inkeri, crofter family Miina–Vihto–Urho, and the Helsinki beer-merchant Kalle Maljanen with his foppish son Santeri cross paths. The likely focus is a farcical rivalry for Inkeri’s hand, a tangle of missing guns and tall tales, and a mock-heroic hunt that exposes pretensions and tests character. The opening of the play finds morning bustle at the Junnila croft: Miina manages chores, Urho tends his rifle, and Vihto grumbles awake as townsmen arrive to hunt. Santeri hilariously mistakes the household rooster for a trophy bird and begs to hide the blunder before the party—nimismies (sheriff), constable, and Isomaa—file in for coffee, wartime news, and gossip. A letter brings Siina sudden hope of a rich American half-brother’s return, only for the newspaper to hint he may have perished at sea; Kalle immediately begins courting the newly “heiress” widow, while Inkeri quietly disarms the Maljanens by hiding the father’s gun and removing the bullet from Santeri’s. At the start of Act II on Korpimäki, Inkeri and Urho reveal their mutual affection and stage a test of Santeri’s courage: she spooks him with a tale of a local brute, and Urho bursts in as the supposed menace, just as Santeri is trying to posture as her fearless protector. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The dream detective

Sax Rohmer

"The dream detective" by Sax Rohmer is a collection of detective stories written in the early 20th century. It follows the eccentric, occult-leaning sleuth Moris Klaw and his sharp-witted daughter Isis as they unravel uncanny crimes often tied to museums, relics, and legends, accompanied by a skeptical inspector and a journalist-biographer. Expect locked-room puzzles, exotic lore, and audacious disguises. The opening of this collection presents two complete cases and the start of a third. First, a night watchman dies in a locked gallery at the Menzies Museum; Klaw’s “dream” method and keen observation reveal a booby‑trapped “Athenean Harp” that lethally pricks whoever lifts it after it has been played, and the culprit proves to be the curator’s sleepwalking daughter unknowingly setting events in motion. Next, an Egyptian potsherd coveted by a suave new neighbor leads to eerie séances and a daring theft; the twist shows that “Doctor Zeda” and the phantom singer were Klaw in disguise and Isis, retrieving the artifact as a matter of poetic justice. The third tale opens with Klaw and allies called to Crespie Hall, where a new owner is found slain by a crusader’s ax in the old banqueting hall, setting the stage for another impossible‑seeming mystery. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The adventures of Twinkly Eyes the little Black Bear

Allen Chaffee

The adventures of Twinkly Eyes the little Black Bear by Allen Chaffee is a children’s nature adventure written in the early 20th century. The story follows a lively black bear cub named Twinkly Eyes (and his brother Woof) as he learns survival skills in the woods through playful mishaps and close calls. Episodic encounters with porcupines, snakes, storms, bees, rabbits, a lynx, and even a curious farm boy mix humor with gentle peril, while slipping in simple natural-history lessons. It’s a warm, instructive woodland romp designed to nurture empathy for wildlife. The opening of the story shows Twinkly shoved into a lake by his brother, rescued by their watchful mother, and hastily taught to swim—and to climb—when a black snake slithers near and a prickly porcupine family commandeers their pond and tree. A thunderstorm brings practical guidance about sheltering among safer trees, while Mother Bear warns that lightning and men with guns are the true dangers. As seasons turn, Twinkly grows bolder: he’s misled by a jay toward squirrel nests, then braves a bee tree for honey, gets badly stung, falls, and cools the swelling with clay before dozing off satisfied. He spies the secretive Cottontail clan (and later their moonlit “bunny ball”), tries to ambush a rabbit but falls asleep, and narrowly evades a fox alert. A meeting with a farm boy ends with Twinkly stealing a trout and outwitting an attempted treetop capture, while Mother Bear coolly teaches new cubs to fish. Further episodes include mistaking a wasp nest for a bee trove despite a porcupine’s warning and a young lynx learning the hard way why porcupine quills demand respect. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Twenty years in Roumania

Maude Rea Parkinson

"Twenty years in Roumania" by Maude Rea Parkinson is a memoir of travel and social observation written in the early 20th century. Drawing on decades spent teaching and moving in Romanian society, it offers an intimate, often humorous portrait of the country’s people, institutions, and landscape, from the capital’s salons to village greens. Expect first-hand sketches of geography, politics, religion, and custom, framed by the author’s affectionate yet candid outlook. The opening of the memoir sets out the author’s purpose and loyalties, then follows her youthful decision to settle in Bucarest, her arduous journey via Vienna and Hungary, and her bracing first impressions of the city. It quickly widens into a clear, informal guide to the country—its mountains, rivers, railways, and the drama of the Danube—before turning to parliament, raucous elections, and a stiff but brave army shaped by the monarchy. The religious life of the Greek Orthodox majority appears through priests’ rounds, Easter rites, and the legend of Curtea d’Argesh. Bucarest is sketched as a garden-like capital of trams, the Calea Victoriei, splendid churches, and domestic habits like serving “dulceata,” followed by a stark account of land tenure, peasant hardship, and a violent rural rising that drew troops to the countryside and anxiety to the capital, where she notably kept her nerve by going to church. The section then lingers on village life—music, the hora and sârba, embroidered dress, rustic weddings, and evening songs—while noting how townsfolk sometimes exploit peasant naivety. It closes by segueing into a discussion of trade and commerce. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Wings of silver

Evelyn Gage Browne

"Wings of silver by Evelyn Gage Browne" is a collection of inspirational poems written in the early 20th century. The book centers on spiritual awakening and resilience, using images of wings, stars, sky, and the sea to explore love, faith, and the soul’s ascent beyond fear and sorrow. The poems move from an opening hymn to the life-force that urges all creation to unfold, to meditations on purposeful journeying, the omnipresence of divine Love, and the patient power of faith. A cosmic chorus calls humanity to claim its divine likeness, while a life-spanning monologue transforms loss and death into homecoming. We encounter moral parables of weaving despair through hate or contentment through love, a vow to keep the heart’s door open despite risk, and a confession that fame and gold weave only a tattered web without Love as warp and woof. The speaker answers fear with song and lifts eyes above mire to the stars, reframing victory as the sweetness kept in the soul, not the struggle itself. The collection culminates in an extended prayer to the sky for cleansing, freedom, and uplift, asking to be remade in Love and set joyfully soaring. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Gleanings in Europe : Italy, vol. 2 of 2

James Fenimore Cooper

"Gleanings in Europe : Italy, vol. 2 of 2" by James Fenimore Cooper is a travelogue written in the early 19th century. It presents an American traveler’s observations as he moves through southern Italy and into Rome, blending vivid landscape writing with sketches of antiquities, local life, and pointed political asides. The focus is on coastal routes, ruined temples, museums, and city approaches, all filtered through a reflective, often comparative American eye. The opening of the work follows the narrator from Sorrento down the precipitous Scaricatòjo to Amalfi by boat, then along the Gulf of Salerno to Eboli and the malarial plain en route to Paestum, whose massive Temple of Neptune sparks meditations on time and endurance. He contrasts desolate, fever-haunted lowlands, buffalo teams, and a tale of roadside murder with the grandeur of the ruins, then returns via Salerno, a mountain road to Pompeii, and Castel-a-Mare, where Murat’s wartime seizures prompt a sharp critique of American commercial politics. Back in Naples after a rough passage, he revels in street theaters on the mole, the softness of autumn skies, and the museum’s treasures, watching Herculaneum papyri painstakingly unrolled and musing on artifacts, taste, and even U.S. coin design. The route to Rome brings the great aqueduct and palace of Caserta, Capua, an accidental walk on a surviving stretch of the Appian Way, Gaeta and Terracina, and the Pontine Marshes (with a comic false alarm over supposed banditti). A first long view of the Roman Campagna leads to an awe-struck entrance past the Colosseum and Forum and a powerful first encounter with the immensity of St. Peter’s. The section closes with an outline of the Campagna and ancient walls, questioning the usual site of the Tarpeian Rock and weighing Rome’s wall circuits and population. (This is an automatically generated summary.)