Elizabeth Robins - Works

Works

As C. E. Raimond, she wrote:

  • George Mandeville's Husband, 1894
  • The New Moon, 1895
  • Below the Salt, 1896
  • The Open Question, 1898

The success of this last novel led to her publishing under her own name:

  • The Alaska-Klondike diary of Elizabeth Robins, 1900
  • The magnetic north, 1904
  • A Dark Lantern, 1905
  • The convert, 1907

Votes for Women! (A suffrage play produced at he Royal Court Theatre, Sloane Square, London), 1907.

  • Come and Find Me, 1908, a sequel to The magnetic north
  • Camilla, 1918
  • The Messenger, 1920
  • Ancilla's share : an indictment of sex antagonism, 1924

Read more about this topic:  Elizabeth Robins

Famous quotes containing the word works:

    Every man is in a state of conflict, owing to his attempt to reconcile himself and his relationship with life to his conception of harmony. This conflict makes his soul a battlefield, where the forces that wish this reconciliation fight those that do not and reject the alternative solutions they offer. Works of art are attempts to fight out this conflict in the imaginative world.
    Rebecca West (1892–1983)

    In the works of man, everything is as poor as its author; vision is confined, means are limited, scope is restricted, movements are labored, and results are humdrum.
    Joseph De Maistre (1753–1821)

    The man who builds a factory builds a temple, that the man who works there worships there, and to each is due, not scorn and blame, but reverence and praise.
    Calvin Coolidge (1872–1933)