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Displaying results 1–25
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Frankenstein; Or, The Modern Prometheus
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
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Demonologia : or, natural knowledge revealed; being an exposé of ancient and modern superstitions, credulity, fanaticism, enthusiasm, & imposture, as connected with the doctrine, caballa, and jargon, of amulets, apparitions, astrology, charms, demonology, devils, divination, dreams, deuteroscopia, effluvia, fatalism, fate, friars, ghosts, gipsies, hell, hypocrites, incantations, inquisition, jugglers, legends, magic, magicians, miracles, monks, nymphs, oracles, physiognomy, purgatory, predestination, predictions, quackery, relics, saints, second sight, signs before death, sorcery, spirits, salamanders, spells, talismans, traditions, trials, &c. witches, witchcraft, &c. &c. the whole unfolding many singular phenomena in the page of nature
J. S. Forsyth
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The lesser Key of Solomon, Goetia, the book of evil spirits : contains two hundred diagrams and seals for invocation and convocation of spirits, necromancy, witchcraft and black art
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Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft
Walter Scott
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Daemonologie.
King of England James I
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The King James Version of the Bible
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Grimms' Fairy Tales
Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm
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The Lady with the Dog and Other Stories
Anton Pavlovich Chekhov
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The First Book of Adam and Eve
Rutherford Hayes Platt
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The Romance of Lust: A classic Victorian erotic novel
Anonymous
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Pride and Prejudice
Jane Austen
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Myths of the Cherokee
James Mooney
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Omens and Superstitions of Southern India
Edgar Thurston
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The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
Arthur Conan Doyle
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Irish Witchcraft and Demonology
St. John D. Seymour
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Myths and Legends of Ancient Greece and Rome
E. M. Berens
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Persuasion
Jane Austen
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Romeo and Juliet
William Shakespeare
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Moby Dick; Or, The Whale
Herman Melville
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The Prince
Niccolò Machiavelli
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The Prophet
Kahlil Gibran
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War and Peace
graf Leo Tolstoy
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Ulysses
James Joyce
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Metamorphosis
Franz Kafka
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The displaying of supposed witchcraft : Wherein is affirmed that there are many sorts of deceivers and impostors, and divers persons under a passive delusion of melancholy and fancy. But that there is a corporeal league made betwixt the devil and the witch, or that he sucks on the witches body, has carnal copulation, or that witches are turned into cats, dogs, raise tempests, or the like, is utterly denied and disproved. Wherein also is handled, the existence of angels and spirits, the truth of apparitions, the nature of astral and sydereal spirits, the force of charms, and philters; with other abstruse matters
John Webster
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Displaying results 1–25