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diff --git a/28822-0.txt b/28822-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..373e4d9 --- /dev/null +++ b/28822-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1127 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Works Of Winston Churchill, by Winston Churchill + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and +most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions +whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms +of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at +www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you +will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before +using this eBook. + +Title: The Works Of Winston Churchill + +Author: Winston Churchill + +Release Date: May 15, 2009 [eBook #28822] +[Most recently updated: November 11, 2023] + +Language: English + +Produced by: David Widger + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF WINSTON CHURCHILL *** + + + + +THE WORKS OF + +WINSTON CHURCHILL + + + +AN ON-LINE INDEX + + + +Edited by David Widger + +Project Gutenberg Editions + + + +Winston Churchill (1871-1947) + +(The American Author who is not related to the British Sir Winston) + +A Sketch of his Life and Work + +This sketch was released by THE MACMILLAN COMPANY as part of a document +to promote Churchill's 1913 novel, "The Inside of the Cup." + +Mr. Winston Churchill, the author of "The Inside of the Cup," "The +Modern Chronicle," "Mr. Crewe's Career," "Coniston," "Richard Carvel," +"The Crisis," and "The Crossing," was born in St. Louis, Mo., November +10, 1871. He is the oldest son of Edwin Spaulding Churchill of Portland, +Me., and Emma Bell Blaine, of St. Louis. The first sixteen years of his +life he spent in his native city, which was in fact his home until he +built Harlakenden House, his present residence at Cornish, N. H. In St. +Louis, it will be remembered, the opening scenes of "The Crisis" are +laid; and St. Louis again formed the objective point of Mr. Churchill's +next novel, "The Crossing." From Smith Academy in St. Louis he went to +the Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. + +Winston Churchill had not been a year at the Naval Academy before he +became interested in American history and American problems, and before +he finished his course he had made up his mind to devote his life and +energies to these--not only with the pen, but as an active participant. +Much of the atmosphere and some of the material for "Richard Carvel" he +gathered while still a midshipman at the Naval Academy; and in the brief +intervals between scientific studies and drills he began to read some of +the history which he afterwards used. + +He resigned from the Navy on his graduation, worked for a time on the +Army and Navy Journal, and then joined the staff of The Cosmopolitan. +While he lived at Irvington-on-the-Hudson, working steadily on the +magazine, he continued his experience with fiction. He never tried to +publish any of his first work, and it is not now in existence. That year +(1895) he married Miss Mabel Harlakenden Hall, of St. Louis; and not +long after established his home at Cornish. + +He found himself at this time in a fairly enviable position. He was not +obliged to spend his life doing hack-work, and could take abundant +leisure to perfect any piece of writing which he undertook. However, he +united with his rare good fortune much rare good sense. He best +illustrated the familiar paradox that genius is a capacity for taking +infinite pains. He approached his work with an inexhaustible patience, a +dogged determination to be true to his own high exactions, both in style +and substance. + +Before he began "Richard Carvel," and also while it was on the stocks, +he visited Virginia and Maryland, and studied the country and the old +records with great thoroughness. He also read a vast amount of history +and other literature which gave the spirit of the period. During the +seven or eight months in '98 and '99, when he was writing the book from +beginning to end for the fifth time, he was living on the Hudson, about +thirty miles from New York. During those months he worked from breakfast +to one o'clock, then for some hours after luncheon. Late in the +afternoon he would take a long horseback ride, and after dinner he would +go at his work again, continuing sometimes far into the night. In the +midst of his work on "Richard Carvel," while he was staying at Lake +George, he ran out of historical material, and wrote "The Celebrity." +This novel was the subject of a great deal of comment on its first +appearance in 1897, and many people still regard it as the brightest and +most amusing and original piece of work which Mr. Churchill has done. + +After finishing his work on "Richard Carvel," Mr. Churchill, in the +spring of 1899, went to live at Cornish, N. H., where he had purchased a +large farm on high ground on the banks of the Connecticut, just opposite +Windsor, Vt. On the estate which he had bought Mr. Churchill then built +Harlakenden House, which is modelled upon one of the mansions of +Colonial Maryland. In 1913 Harlakenden House was selected by President +Woodrow Wilson as his summer residence. + +It was here that news of the great success of "Richard Carvel" came to +Mr. Churchill. + +The novel immediately became the most popular book in the United States, +and was more widely read and discussed during its first year than has +been the case with any other book ever published. + +"Richard Carvel" contains the great historical figures of Charles James +Fox and John Paul Jones. Perhaps the most thrilling and vividly written +passage in the book is that which describes the memorable battle between +the Bon Homme Richard and the Serapis. It was this that was accountable +for the revival of interest in John Paul Jones and led to the finding of +his burial place in France and to several biographies written largely +under the stimulus of his character and personality as graphically +revealed in "Richard Carvel." + +Two or three years later "The Crisis" appeared. This time Mr. Churchill +chose for his background the stirring days of the Civil War, through +some of its most thrilling events his hero passes. He incidently painted +supremely good pictures of Lincoln and Grant, showing how they grew out +of the conditions that produced the crisis, and how they dominated it +and brought it to such an issue that the country became better, greater +and stronger for the cataclysm that had threatened to disrupt it. Like +"Richard Carvel," "The Crisis" was dramatized, and opened its successful +run on the stage a few months after the book's publication. + +Mr. Churchill's next book, in the series of historical romances which he +began with "Richard Carvel," is entitled "The Crossing" and was +published in the spring of 1904. Its title refers to the crossing of the +Alleghanies by the tide of the American immigration after the +Revolutionary War. No annals in the world's history are more wonderful +than the story of this conquest of Kentucky and Tennessee by the +pioneers. In "The Crossing" Mr. Churchill caught the wonder of that +adventurous phase in our early history and made of it what many consider +his most delighting romance. + +Meanwhile Mr. Churchill had become actively interested in politics. In +the year 1903 he became a member of the New Hampshire Legislature. The +direct outgrowth of Mr. Churchill's interest and experiences in politics +were two important novels, "Coniston" and "Mr. Crewe's Career." + +In "Coniston"--that great prose epic of political corruption as it +existed in New England a generation or more ago--Mr. Churchill showed +his ability to write of contemporary life with a vigor and understanding +which were not surpassed in any of his other work. "Coniston" has a big, +vital, political issue for background and a unique and dominant +character for central interest. "Jethro Bass" was a farmer by origin, +taciturn, inscrutable, with his streak of sardonic humor and his slight, +unforgetable stammer, was heralded as the most important figure Mr. +Churchill had ever drawn. + +Two years later "Mr. Crewe's Career" was published, to meet with instant +success. It was a further embodiment of Mr. Churchill's observations and +experiences among the people of the political whirlpool, and showed his +increasing power as a novelist of contemporary life. The business of +politics, the sordid struggles of an election are described with a +graphic pen. Rarely has an American author portrayed with such judicial +calm and yet with such relentless realism, the sinister aspects of +political life in a rural community or woven into this grimy fabric, in +gold thread, a charming love story that goes far to make us forget the +ugly and hateful features of the picture. + +It will be seen how, since the publication of "Richard Carvel," Mr. +Churchill's themes move in orderly sequence from Colonial days until +each represents the actual life and atmosphere of distinct periods in +American history. It was "A Modern Chronicle" that brought Mr. +Churchill's work to the heart of the present. The new novel dealt with +the social problems of the marriage condition, the imperfect +civilization of ultra-fashionable life, with its frequent climax of +divorce. Heretofore Mr. Churchill's leading characters are men, but in +"A Modern Chronicle" he gives us a woman--Honora Leffingwell-- +fascinating, full of illogical moods and caprices, who, taken from start +to finish, is a most consistent and convincing piece of +characterization. + +With the day of its publication, in 1910, "The Modern Chronicle" headed +the list of "Books Most in Demand" at the libraries and the Bookman list +of "Six Best Sellers" in almost every large city of this country. Its +success was confined not only to this side of the water but in Great +Britain, as well; the book was in great demand. These conditions were +due to the fact of the author's established reputation with the great +majority of American and English readers, and to the merits of a work +which received almost unanimous appreciation from the press of both +countries. + +Three years have passed since the tremendous success of "A Modern +Chronicle," and during this time Mr. Churchill has worked upon and +completed the novel which, perhaps more than any other, will create +discussion and admiration and go furthest to assure the author's +reputation as the biggest literary figure in America to-day. + +"The Inside of the Cup," Mr. Churchill's latest novel, may be rightly +called the sum of his genius. It contains the same art of his former +work, broadened, enriched and matured, and reflects the romance of +"Richard Carvel," the realism of "Coniston," and the deep social +significance of "A Modern Chronicle." From a masterly delineation of the +personal history of a young clergyman and the transformation of his +views and attitudes toward modern society, Mr. Churchill unfolds a +powerful study of the present tendencies in the Church and their new +relation to the life of to-day. + +"The Inside of the Cup" is unquestionably the most impressive novel that +Mr. Churchill has yet written, in character drawing and illuminative +disclosures of the cross sections of society, and in the portrayal of +their more delicate and crucial relation to conditions vital to the +national welfare. + + + +CONTENTS + +Click on the ## before each title to go directly to a +linked index of the detailed chapters and illustrations + + The Works of Winston Churchill + Title Year + The Unchartered Way 1940 + Dr. Jonathan (Play) 1919 +## A Traveller in War-time ¹ 1918 +## Essay on The American Contribution ¹ 1918 +## The Dwelling-Place of Light 1917 +## A Far Country 1915 +## The Inside of The Cup 1913 +## A Modern Chronicle 1910 +## Mr. Crewe's Career 1908 +## Coniston 1906 +## The Crossing 1904 + Mr. Keegan's Elopement ² 1903 +## The Crisis 1901 +## Richard Carvel 1899 +## The Celebrity ³ 1897 + +1. Both works were released in 1918 under the title A Traveller in +War-time with an Essay on the American Contribution and the Democratic +Idea. +2. Mr. Keegan's Elopement was first released in serial form for a +magazine in 1896. +3. Other sources (like Wikipedia) say this book was released in 1898. +The article above says it was released in 1897, as does the copyright +page for the book in Hathitrust. + + + +VOLUMES, CHAPTERS AND STORIES + + + + + +The Celebrity + + VOLUME 1. + CHAPTER I + CHAPTER II + CHAPTER III + CHAPTER IV + VOLUME 2. + CHAPTER V + CHAPTER VI + CHAPTER VII + CHAPTER VIII + + VOLUME 3. + CHAPTER IX + CHAPTER X + CHAPTER XI + CHAPTER XII + CHAPTER XIII + CHAPTER XIV + VOLUME 4. + CHAPTER XV + CHAPTER XVI + CHAPTER XVII + CHAPTER XVIII + CHAPTER XIX + CHAPTER XX + CHAPTER XXI + + + + + +Richard Carvel + +Volume 1. +Chapter I. Lionel Carver, of Carver Hall +Chapter II. Some Memories of Childhood +Chapter III. Caught by the Tide +Chapter IV. Grafton would heal an Old Breach +Chapter V. "If Ladies be but Young and Fair" +Chapter VI. I first Suffer for the Cause +Chapter VII. Grafton has his Chance + +Volume 2. +Chapter VIII. Over the Wall +Chapter IX. Under False Colours +Chapter X. The Red in the Carvel Blood +Chapter XI. A Festival and a Parting +Chapter XII. News from a Far Country + +Volume 3. +Chapter XIII. Mr. Allen Shows his Hand +Chapter XIV. The Volte Coupe +Chapter XV. Of Which the Rector has the worst +Chapter XVI. In Which some things are Made Clear +Chapter XVII. South River +Chapter XVIII. The "Black Moll" + +Volume 4. +Chapter XIX. A Man of Destiny +Chapter XX. A Sad Home-coming +Chapter XXI. The Gardener's Cottage +Chapter XXII. On the Road +Chapter XXIII. London Town +Chapter XXIV. Castle Yard +Chapter XXV. The Rescue + +Volume 5. +Chapter XXVI. The Part Horatio Played +Chapter XXVII. In Which I am Sore Tempted +Chapter XXVIII. Arlington Street +Chapter XXIX. I Meet a Very Great Young Man +Chapter XXX. A Conspiracy +Chapter XXXI. "Upstairs into the World" +Chapter XXXII. Lady Tankerville's Drum Major +Chapter XXXIII. Drury Lane + +Volume 6. +Chapter XXXIV. His Grave Makes Advances +Chapter XXXV. In Which my Lord Baltimore Appears +Chapter XXXVI. A Glimpse of Mr. Garrick +Chapter XXXVII. The Serpentine +Chapter XXXVIII. In which I am Roundly brought to task +Chapter XXXIX. Holland House +Chapter XL. Vauxhall +Chapter XLI. The Wilderness + +Volume 7. +Chapter XLII. My Friends are Proven +Chapter XLIII. Annapolis Once More +Chapter XLIV. Noblesse Oblige +Chapter XLV. The House of Memories +Chapter XLVI. Gordon's Pride +Chapter XLVII. Visitors +Chapter XLVIII. Multum in Parvo +Chapter XLIX. Liberty Loses a Friend + +Volume 8. +Chapter L. Farewell to Gordon's +Chapter XLI. How an Idle Prophecy Came to Pass +Chapter LII. How the Gardener's Son Fought the "Serapis" +Chapter LIII. In Which I make some Discoveries +Chapter LIV. More Discoveries +Chapter LV. "The Love of a Maid for a Man" +Chapter LVI. How Good Came out of Evil +Chapter LVII. I Come to My Own Again + Afterword + + + + + +The Crisis + +Book I. +Chapter I. Which deals with Origins +Chapter II. The Mole +Chapter III. The Unattainable Simplicity +Chapter IV. Black Cattle +Chapter V. The First Spark passes +Chapter VI. Silas Whipple +Chapter VII. Callers +Chapter VIII. Bellegarde +Chapter IX. A Quiet Sunday in Locust Street +Chapter X. The Little House +Chapter XI. The Invitation +Chapter XII. "Miss Jinny" +Chapter XIII. The Party + +Book II. +Chapter I. Raw Material +Chapter II. Abraham Lincoln +Chapter III. In which Stephen learns Something +Chapter IV. The Question +Chapter V. The Crisis +Chapter VI. Glencoe +Chapter VII. An Excursion +Chapter VIII. The Colonel is warned +Chapter IX. Signs of the Times +Chapter X. Richter's Scar +Chapter XI. How a Prince came +Chapter XII. Into which a Potentate comes +Chapter XIII. At Mr. Brinsmade's Gate +Chapter XIV. The Breach Becomes too Wide +Chapter XV. Mutterings +Chapter XVI. The Guns of Sumter +Chapter XVII. Camp Jackson +Chapter XVIII. The Stone that is rejected +Chapter XIX. The Tenth of May +Chapter XX. In the Arsenal +Chapter XXI. The Stampede +Chapter XXII. The Straining of Another Friendship +Chapter XXIII. Of Clarence + +Book III. +Chapter I. Introducing a Capitalist +Chapter II. News from Clarence +Chapter III. The Scourge of War +Chapter IV. The List of Sixty +Chapter V. The Auction +Chapter VI. Eliphalet plays his Trumps +Chapter VII. With the Armies of the West +Chapter VIII. A Strange Meeting +Chapter IX. Bellegarde Once More +Chapter X. In Judge Whipple's Office +Chapter XI. Lead, Kindly Night +Chapter XII. The Last Card +Chapter XIII. From the Letters of Major Stephen Brice +Chapter XIV. The Same, Continued +Chapter XV. The Man of Sorrows +Chapter XVI. Annapolis + Afterword + + + + + +The Crossing + +Book I. The Borderland +Chapter I. The Blue Wall +Chapter II. Wars and Rumors of Wars +Chapter III. Charlestown +Chapter IV. Temple Bow +Chapter V. Cram's Hell +Chapter VI. Man proposes, but God disposes +Chapter VII. In Sight of the Blue Wall once more +Chapter VIII. The Nollichucky Trace +Chapter IX. On the Wilderness Trail +Chapter X. Harrodstown +Chapter XI. Fragmentary +Chapter XII. The Campaign begins +Chapter XIII. Kaskaskia +Chapter XIV. How the Kaskaskians were made Citizens +Chapter XV. Days of Trial +Chapter XVI. Davy goes to Cahokia +Chapter XVII. The Sacrifice +Chapter XVIII. "An' ye had been where I had been" +Chapter XIX. The Hair Buyer trapped +Chapter XX. The Campaign ends + +BOOK II. Flotsam and Jetsam +Chapter I. In the Cabin +Chapter II. "The Beggars are come to Town" +Chapter III. We go to Danville +Chapter IV. I cross the Mountains once more +Chapter V. I meet an Old Bedfellow +Chapter VI. The Widow Brown's +Chapter VII. I meet a Hero +Chapter VIII. To St. Louis +Chapter IX. "Cherchez la Femme" +Chapter X. The Keel Boat +Chapter XI. The Strange City +Chapter XII. Les Îles +Chapter XIII. Monsieur Augusteen trapped +Chapter XIV. Retribution + +BOOK III. Louisiana +Chapter I. The Rights of Man +Chapter II. The House above the Falls +Chapter III. Louisville celebrates +Chapter IV. Of a Sudden Resolution +Chapter V. The House of the Honeycombed Tiles +Chapter VI. Madame la Vicomtesse +Chapter VII. The Disposal of the Sieur de St. Gré +Chapter VIII. At Lamarque's +Chapter IX. Monsieur le Baron +Chapter X. The Scourge +Chapter XI. "In the Midst of Life" +Chapter XII. Visions, and an Awakening +Chapter XIII. A Mystery +Chapter XIV. "To Unpathed Waters, Undreamed Shores" +Chapter XV. An Episode in the Life of a Man + Afterword + + + + + +Coniston + +Book I. +Chapter I. On the Dangers of Curiosity +Chapter II. On the Wisdom of Charity +Chapter III. The Clerk and the Locket +Chapter IV. Enter a Great Man, Incognito +Chapter V. The King is Dead! Long Live the King! +Chapter VI. "Deep as First Love, and Wild with All Regret" +Chapter VII. "And Still the Ages roll, Unmoved" +Chapter VIII. It is Something to have Dreamed + +Book 2. +Chapter IX. Shake Hands with Mr. Bijah Bixby +Chapter X. How the Rebellion was Quenched +Chapter XI. Mr. Worthington becomes a Reformer +Chapter XII. "A Time to Weep, and a Time to Laugh" +Chapter XIII. Mr. Wetherell descends into the Arena +Chapter XIV. In which the Back Seats are Heard From +Chapter XV. The Woodchuck Session +Chapter XVI. "Cynthia loved You" + +Book 3. +Chapter I. In the Tannery House +Chapter II. Chiefly concerning the National Game +Chapter III. Journeys to Go +Chapter IV. "Judge Bass and Party" +Chapter V. Cousin Ephraim's Comrade +Chapter VI. Mr. Sutton talks to a Constituent +Chapter VII. An Amazing Encounter +Chapter VIII. Cynthia learns how to be Fashionable +Chapter IX. In which Mr. Merrill abandons a Habit +Chapter X. Of An Unexpected Return + +Book 4. +Chapter XI. In which Miss Sadler writes a Letter +Chapter XII. "In the Tannery Shed!" +Chapter XIII. Cynthia becomes a Teacher +Chapter XIV. In which the Lord of Brampton Returns +Chapter XV. Containing a Dramatic Climax +Chapter XVI. Miss Lucretia quotes Genesis +Chapter XVII. When the Pie was Opened +Chapter XVIII. A Biographical Episode: Hitherto Unpublished +Chapter XIX. Containing Free Transportation to Brampton +Chapter XX. "To change the Name, and not the Letter" + Afterword + + + + + +Mr. Crewe's Career + +Book I. +Chapter I. The Honorouble Hilary Vane sits for His Portrait +Chapter II. On the Treatment of Prodigals +Chapter III. Concerning the Practice of Law +Chapter IV. "Timeo Danaos" +Chapter V. The Parting of the Ways +Chapter VI. Enter the Lion +Chapter VII. The Leopard and his Spots +Chapter VIII. The Trials of an Honourable +Chapter IX. Mr. Crewe assaults the Capital +Chapter X. "For Bills may come, and Bills may go" + +Book II. +Chapter XI. The Hopper +Chapter XII. Mr. Redbrook's Party +Chapter XIII. The Realm of Pegasus +Chapter XIV. The Descendants of Horatius +Chapter XV. The Disturbance of June Seventh +Chapter XVI. The "Book of Arguments" is opened +Chapter XVII. Busy Days at Wedderburn +Chapter XVIII. A Spirit in the Woods +Chapter XIX. Mr. Jabe Jenney Entertains +Chapter XX. Mr. Crewe: an Appreciation + +Book III. +Chapter XXI. St. Giles of the Blameless Life +Chapter XXII. In which Euphrasia takes a hand +Chapter XXIII. A Falling-out in High Places +Chapter XXIV. An Adventure of Victoria's +Chapter XXV. More Adventures +Chapter XXVI. The Focus of Wrath +Chapter XXVII. The Arena and the Dust +Chapter XXVIII. The Voice of an Era +Chapter XXIX. The Vale of the Blue +Chapter XXX. P. S. + + + + + +A Modern Chronicle + +Book I. +Chapter I. What's in Heredity +Chapter II. Perdita Recalled +Chapter III. Concerning Providence +Chapter IV. Of Temperment +Chapter V. In which Providence keeps Faith +Chapter VI. Honora has a Glimpse of the World +Chapter VII. The Olympian Order +Chapter VIII. A Chapter of Conquests +Chapter IX. In which the Vicomte continues his studies +Chapter X. In which Honora widens her Horizon +Chapter XI. What might have Been +Chapter XII. Which contains a Surprise for Mrs. Holt + +Book II. +Chapter I. So Long as ye Both shall Live! +Chapter II. "Stafford Park" +Chapter III. The Great Unattached +Chapter IV. The New Doctrine +Chapter V. Quicksands +Chapter VI. Gad and Meni +Chapter VII. Of Certain Delicate Matters +Chapter VIII. Of Mental Processes--Feminine and Insoluable +Chapter IX. Introducing a Revolutionizing Vehicle +Chapter X. On the Art of Lion Taming +Chapter XI. Containing Some Revelations + +Book III. +Chapter I. Ascendi +Chapter II. The Path of Philanthropy +Chapter III. Vineland +Chapter IV. The Viking +Chapter V. The Survival of the Fittest +Chapter VI. Clio, or Thalia? +Chapter VII. "Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness" +Chapter VIII. In which the Law betrays a Heart +Chapter IX. Wylie Street +Chapter X. The Price of Freedom +Chapter XI. In which it is All done over Again +Chapter XII. The Entrance into Eden +Chapter XIII. Of The World Beyond the Gates +Chapter XIV. Containing Philosophy from Mr. Grainger +Chapter XV. The Pillars of Society +Chapter XVI. In which a Mirror is held Up +Chapter XVII. The Renewal of an Ancient Hospitality +Chapter XVIII. In which Mr. Erwin sees Paris + + + + + +The Inside of The Cup + +Volume I. +Chapter I. The Warring Problems +Chapter II. Mr. Langmaid's Mission +Chapter III. The Primrose Path +Chapter IV. Some Riddles of the Twentieth Century + +Volume 2. +Chapter V. The Rector has More Food for Thought +Chapter VI. "Watchman, What of the Night?" +Chapter VII. The Kingdoms of the World +Chapter VIII. The Line of Least Resistance + +Volume 3. +Chapter IX. The Divine Discontent +Chapter X. The Messenger in the Church +Chapter XI. The Lost Parishoner +Chapter XII. The Woman of the Song + +Volume 4. +Chapter XIII. Winterbourne +Chapter XIV. A Saturday Afternoon +Chapter XV. The Crucible +Chapter XVI. Amid the Encircling Gloom + +Volume 5. +Chapter XVII. Reconstruction +Chapter XVIII. The Riddle of Causation +Chapter XIX. Mr. Goodrich becomes a Partisan + +Volume 6. +Chapter XX. The Arraignment +Chapter XXI. Alison Goes to Church +Chapter XXII. "Which say to the Seers, See not!" + +Volume 7. +Chapter XXIII. The Choice +Chapter XXIV. The Vestry Meets +Chapter XXV. "Rise, Crowned with Light!" +Chapter XVI. The Current of Life + +Volume 8. +Chapter XXVII. Retribution +Chapter XXVIII. Light + Afterword + + + + + + + +A Far Country + + BOOK 1. + I. + II. + III. + IV. + V. + VI. + VII. + VIII + IX. + + BOOK 2. + X. + XI. + XII. + XIII. + XIV. + XV. + XVI. + XVII. + + BOOK 3. + XVIII. + XVIX. + XX. + XXI. + XXII. + XXIII. + XXIV. + XXV. + XXVI. + + + + +The Dwelling Place of Light + + CHAPTER I + CHAPTER II + CHAPTER III + CHAPTER IV + CHAPTER V + CHAPTER VI + CHAPTER VII + CHAPTER VIII + CHAPTER IX + CHAPTER X + CHAPTER XI + CHAPTER XII + CHAPTER XIII + CHAPTER XIV + CHAPTER XV + CHAPTER XVI + CHAPTER XVII + CHAPTER XVIII + CHAPTER XIX + CHAPTER XX + CHAPTER XXI + + + +A Traveller in Wartime + + PREFACE + CHAPTER I + CHAPTER II + CHAPTER III + + +Essay on The American Contribution + + I. II. III. IV. V. + + + + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF WINSTON CHURCHILL *** + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will +be renamed. + +Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright +law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, +so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the +United States without permission and without paying copyright +royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part +of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project +Gutenberg™ electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG™ +concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark, +and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following +the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use +of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for +copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very +easy. 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