The Spectator

The Spectator
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1410
Release: 1900
Genre: English literature
ISBN:

A weekly review of politics, literature, theology, and art.

DRAGONMAN

DRAGONMAN
Author: TED LAZARIS
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 718
Release: 2004-06-17
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 141846547X

IN A FAR AWAY ENCHANTED LAND FILLED WITH MAGIC AND UNSPEAKABLE EVIL, A NEW SUPER HERO WILL EMERGE! Sixteen year old Luke Starr appears to be living a rather dull uneventful life in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. That is until fate and a nameless, faceless mysterious dark force from a different plane of existence catapults Luke into a series of wondrous adventures, adventures that will change his life and those around him forever. Luke Starr, respected, feared and hated by many as the one born to greatness is suddenly propelled with great swiftness into a nightmare, forced to come face to face with destiny. Is it all real? A mistake perhaps? Or is this unimaginable journey into the unknown real? You''re about to find out when you embark on this unforgettable fantasy adventure, filled with wizardry, magic and mystery. So get ready to take flight on the wings of magic to bewitching lands where fairies dwell, wizards rule and witches still cast their evil spells. If you liked Dorothy''s Adventures In Oz, The Lord Of The Rings, Spider-Man or Harry Potter then you''re going to love DragonMan, The Wizard Of Oz of the 21 ST Century. It''s A Magical Adventure For All Ages

Wellington's Men: Some Soldier Autobiographies

Wellington's Men: Some Soldier Autobiographies
Author: William Henry Fitchett
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Total Pages: 579
Release:
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1465573844

This volume is an attempt to rescue from undeserved oblivion a cluster of soldierly autobiographies; and to give to the general reader some pictures of famous battles, not as described by the historian or analysed by the philosopher, but as seen by the eyes of men who fought in them. History treats the men who do the actual fighting in war very ill. It commonly forgets all about them. If it occasionally sheds a few drops of careless ink upon them, it is without either comprehension or sympathy. From the orthodox historian's point of view, the private soldier is a mere unconsidered pawn in the passionless chess of some cold-brained strategist. As a matter of fact a battle is an event which pulsates with the fiercest human passions—passions bred of terror and of daring; of the anguish of wounds and of the rapture of victory; of the fear and awe of human souls over whom there suddenly sweeps the mystery of death. But under conventional literary treatment all this evaporates. To the historian a battle is as completely drained of human emotion as a chemical formula. It is evaporated into a haze of cold and cloudy generalities. But this is certainly to miss what is, for the human imagination, the most characteristic feature of a great fight. A battle offers the spectacle of, say, a hundred thousand men lifted up suddenly and simultaneously into a mood of intensest passion—heroic or diabolical—eager to kill and willing to be killed; a mood in which death and wounds count for nothing and victory for everything. This is the feature of war which stirs the common imagination of the race; which makes gentle women weep, and wise philosophers stare, and the average hot-blooded human male turn half-frenzied with excitement. What does each separate human atom feel, when caught in that whirling tornado of passion and of peril? Who shall make visible to us the actual faces in the fighting-line; or make audible the words—stern order, broken prayer, blasphemous jest—spoken amid the tumult? Who shall give us, in a word, an adequate picture of the soldier's life in actual war-time, with its hardships, its excitements, its escapes, its exultation and despair? If the soldier attempts to tell the tale himself he commonly fails. In ninety-nine cases out of a hundred he belongs to the inarticulate classes. He lacks the gift of description. He can do a great deed, but cannot describe it when it is done. If knowledge were linked in them to an adequate gift of literary expression, soldiers would be the great literary artists of the race. For who else lives through so wide and so wild a range of experience and emotion. When, as in the case of Napier, a soldier emerges with a distinct touch of literary genius, the result is an immortal book. But usually the soldier has to be content with making history; he leaves to others the tamer business of writing it, and generally himself suffers the injustice of being forgotten in the process. Literature is congested with books which describe the soldier from the outside; which tell the tale of his hardships and heroisms, his follies and vices, as they are seen by the remote and uncomprehending spectator. What the world needs is the tale of the bayonet and of "Brown Bess," written by the hand which has actually used those weapons.