More about George Arnold:
| | Books by George Arnold: Books in the extended shelves: Arnold, George, 1834-1865: Atlantic tales. A collection of stories from the Atlantic monthly. (Ticknor and Fields, 1867), also by E. H. Appleton, Bayard Taylor, James Davenport Whelpley, Rose Terry Cooke, Lucretia P. Hale, Charles Nordhoff, Caroline Chesebro', Robert Lowell, Mary Abigail Dodge, Rebecca Harding Davis, Fitz James O'Brien, and Edward Everett Hale (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: Drift : a sea-shore idyl : and other poems (Ticknor and Fields, 1866), also by William Winter (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: George Arnold's poems : including I.--Drift and other poems, II.--Poems grave and gay. (Fields, Osgood, & Co., 1871), also by William Winter (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: Heart's rest (Boston : G. D. Russell & Company, [1866], 1866), also by George Dana (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: Life and adventures of Jeff. Davis. (J. C. Haney & co., 1865), also by John Davis Batchelder Collection (Library of Congress) (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: Life and adventures of Jeff. Davis (Haney, 1865) (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: Life and adventures of Jeff. Davis. (Hunter & co., 1865) (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: The magician's own book, or, The whole art of conjuring. : Being a complete hand-book of parlor magic, and containing over one thousand optical, chemical, mechanical, magnetical, and magical experiments, amusing transmutations, astonishing sleights and subtleties, celebrated card deceptions, ingenious tricks with numbers, curious and entertaining puzzles, together with all the most noted tricks of modern performers. The whole illustrated with over 500 wood cuts, and intended as a source of amusement for one thousand and one evenings. (Dick & Fitzgerald, publishers, no. 18 Ann Street, 1857), also by John Wyman, Henry Llewellyn Williams, Wiljalba Frikell, and Frank Cahill (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: The Magician's Own Book, or, the Whole Art of Conjuring: Being a complete hand-book of parlor magic, and containing over one thousand optical, chemical, mechanical, magnetical, and magical experiments, amusing transmutations, astonishing sleights and subtleties, celebrated card deceptions, ingenious tricks with numbers, curious and entertaining puzzles, together with all the most noted tricks of modern performers., also by Frank Cahill (Gutenberg ebook) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: Poems grave and gay (Ticknor and Fields, 1867), also by William Winter (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: The poems of George Arnold. (Houghton, 1889), also by William Winter (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: The poems of George Arnold. (J. R. Osgood and company, 1880), also by William Winter (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: The sociable, or, One thousand and one home amusements : containing acting proverbs, dramatic charades, acting charades, or drawing-room pantomimes, musical burlesques, tableaux vivants, parlor games, games of action, forfeits, science in sport and parlor magic, and a choice collection of curious mental and mechanical puzzles, &c., &c. : illustrated with nearly three hundred engravings and diagrams, the whole being a fund of never-ending entertainment (Dick & Fitzgerald, 1858) (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: The sociable, or, One thousand and one home amusements : containing acting proverbs, dramatic charades, acting charades, or drawing-room pantomimes, musical burlesques, tableaux vivants, parlor games, games of action, forfeits, science in sport, and parlor magic, and a choice collection ofcurious mental and mechanical puzzles, &c., &c. : illustrated with nearly three hundred engravings and diagrams, the whole being a fund of never-endingentertainment (Dick & Fitzgerald Publishers, 1858), also by Frank Cahill (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865: The sociable : or, One thousand and one home amusements : containing acting proverbs, dramatic charades ... : illustrated with nearly three hundred engravings and diagrams, the whole being a fund of never-ending entertainment (Dick & Fitzgerald, 1858) (page images at HathiTrust) Arnold, George, 1834-1865, contrib.: Stories by American Authors, Volume 5, also contrib. by Henry James, Park Benjamin, Francis Davis Millet, and Edward Page Mitchell (Gutenberg ebook)
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