|
Eugen Oswald (16 October 1826 – 16 October 1912), was a German journalist, translator, teacher and philologist who participated in the German revolutions of 1848–49. (From Wikipedia) More about Eugene Oswald:
| | Books by Eugene Oswald: Oswald, Eugene, 1826-1912, contrib.: Queene Elizabethes Achademy (by Sir Humphrey Gilbert); A Booke of Precedence, The Ordering of a Funerall, &c.; Varying Versions of The Good Wife, The Wise Man, &c.; Maxims, Lydgate's Order of Fools, A Poem on Heraldry, Occleve on Lord's Men, &c. (with Essays on Early Italian and German Books of Courtesy; EETS extra series #8; London: Pub. for the Early English Text Society by N. Trübner and Co., 1869), ed. by Frederick James Furnivall, also contrib. by Humphrey Gilbert and William Michael Rossetti (multiple formats at archive.org)
Additional books by Eugene Oswald in the extended shelves: Oswald, Eugene, 1826-1912: Direct legislation by the people versus representative government (Cherry & Fletcher, 1870), also by Karl Bürkli (page images at HathiTrust) Oswald, Eugene, 1826-1912: Goethe in England and America : bibliography (published for the society by David Nutt, 1899) (page images at HathiTrust) Oswald, Eugene, 1826-1912: The legend of fair Helen as told by Homer, Goethe and others; a study (J. Murray, 1905) (page images at HathiTrust)
Find more by Eugene Oswald at your library, or elsewhere.
|